Well - I can see that when one of us rational ones hasn’t stepped in, yet, it devolves into self-idolotry and demonization of the opponent.
On a serious note, the push for religion (particularly christianity) in US political policy and culture is disturbing on many fronts. There are many people of faith - non-atheists - who would like to see less religion on the campaign trail. Many of these as well as atheists and non-monotheists alike don’t believe the Bible should be sworn over, at all. The book doesn’t mean that much to me, personally. Have me swear over the Constitution or my grandmother’s grave, in a court of law. Either one would be more suiting. As for ‘In God We Trust’ - I certainly don’t, and I don’t believe I should have to pay tax money for the ink to print it. It’s a tawdry stupid point, but it’s to illustrate that point further. This is something that is meant to be representative of our population, and there’s a large portion of it that these practices alienate.
And a serious point of contention on our founding fathers. Many of them were deists - the better majority of those, christians. But many, including George Washington, we simply theists. This is all well documented in Martha’s letters to her pastor - she was Unitarian, and George did find some solace in the teachings of that church, but never so much as to attend regularly. Many more of the founding fathers fit this same profile give or take a few details. Jefferson was a Christian Universalist - there is no trinity, only oneness. Samuel Adams was an avid atheist, though some letters suggest he was pantheist, though more out of lack of scientific knowledge than actual belief. He frequently argued, via pen (because the two would always get drunk and come to blows, in the face to face) with his cousin John Adams (a devout Catholic) about theology. The Ten Commandments are no more embedded in the Bill of Rights (btw - there’s nothing in the Constitution prohibiting murder - that’s all done by state and municipal statute) than Hammurabi’s Code (read: not at all). The laws were determined by committee, not divine ordinance. Benjamin Franklin (a protestant…can’t remember which sect, but very faithful) didn’t come down from a mountain with the Bill of Rights in ink and parchment. If he had, being the notoriously clumsy and inappropriate man that he was, would’ve enacted a scene out of a Mel Brooks movie and we’d originally have had 15 Ammendments to start outright.
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He once wrote in his monthly almanac:
“I once asked a fair maid on the streets of Philadelphia, about the age of 30 and had child - What say you to a thousand dollars in exchange for relations? She replied, Why I think that a fair bargain. So I say to her, What say you to one dollar for the same contract? She replied, Heavens, no! What kind of girl do you take me for!? To which I said: I thought we had already established that. I was assessing the going rate.”
- not necessarily verbatim.
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I don’t compare the christian right in America to Islamic fundamentalism - but I can see the escalation path. I don’t believe the catholic church is the problem in the least. It’s mostly the born-again sects. The most ignorant mouths are often the loudest. I don’t believe this brand of fundamentalism (and I’ve seen it here at f.c.c, too) is truly christianity. Christianity in it’s pure form is good and powerful. The majority of the christianity that’s practiced today, however, is a bastardized form. Jesus would be rolling over in his proverbial grave (though, I’m sure the analogy ‘he tosses and turns in his sleep, about us’ would strike a positive chord with most of you).