F
fix
Guest
Yes, but the USA was never a theocracy. BTW, the adultery law in NYS was used last year against a couple who were engaging in sex in a public park near children.That’s because once laws are on the books, they are difficult to get off. Take a liberal state like NY. Adultery is illegal. However, it’s just ignored. Once in a blue moon someone brings up the charge as, say, part of a divorce, but of course it gets dropped.
Sure, but again there was no theocracy in NYS. The laws were there and no one forced anyone to go to mass on Sunday or worship in a Temple or anything else.Blues laws pertaining to alcohol were on the books for hundreds of years in NY, originally for religious reasons, and it was only within the past decade that they were finally dumped. It’s stunning that they remained on the book for that long, given the liberalness and activism in that state.
There are also tons of other regulations that were never taken off the books, but simply became unenforceable by some other effect of law. My favorite is a deed restriction on one of my friend’s properties, placed there during the Civil War, stating the property owners cannot “harbor Tories.” Still in place after hundreds of years…obviously unenforceable.
I do not like that argument at all. The idea that the governemnt must not protect society because it may make a bad decision is no reason to have no protection at all.Once again, you have to be careful with government involvement in legislating behavior. In the U.S., you will not get the Catholic perspective; you will get the Protestant one. That’s effectively what you have now. I rather have the government stay out of such things, otherwise you end up with laws basically imposed immorality on the religious belief system of others.
In fact, JPII explicitly taught that a democracy not infused with proper morality is a tyranny. That is where we are going quickly.