P
Peter_Plato
Guest
Every law imposes on the “rights” of those who believe differently. The question is which laws are sufficiently grounded in moral truths such that all human beings because we are moral agents are obligated to obey such laws whether or not we agree with them. Ultimately, it is the moral principles underpinning any law that gives it the justification it needs to be imposed on "those who believe differently. This canard of not imposing “religiously based law” on others is simply misguided. If the “religiously based law” is simply a better moral law and based upon sound ethical thinking then its imposition is one of moral necessity and obligation, whether or not is it “religiously based.”The only way for us to have true freedom of religion is to have a secular government. While I don’t agree with many other religions, I respect their right to worship as they wish… And imposing biblical law or Sharia law, or any other religiously based law would infringe on the rights of those who believe differently.
The problem arises when we seek to wave away all morality and attempt to impose a decidedly amoral system purely because it pretends to be neutral or “secular.” Let’s not fool ourselves into thinking secular morality is superior to all religiously based morality. It isn’t. it is only conducive to creating a fool’s paradise and is inherently confused, as we are quickly discovering –*and will continue to – as this “culture” of license rapidly breaks down any existing social order and renders itself unstable as a result.
We have too many narcissistic and shallow thinkers running institutions of learning, power and culture at the moment – individuals who decide where things should go based upon their own “feelings,” whims and egosim. The common good seems to have vapidly become of no consequence when the immediacy and primacy of “self-love” predominates.