itshappening
Banned
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2007
- Messages
- 12,355
The Big spending neocons desperately want Bush evangelicalism which served them so well to make a come back, probably under the Huckster or Palin
Of course. "The Tea Party" is not Christian as a single unit, so it would be stupid to adopt that point of view. However, individual Tea Party members shouldn't have to keep quiet about the fact that their political views and their religious views happen to mesh nicely. It's a fine line. The Tea Party is not doing a good job of staying on it.
Agree completely. And the problem that we are having right now is those few people who are coming out and saying "you can't believe in Liberty, rights, the Constitution or even have morals if you are not a believer in my specific religious sect." It does nothing but divide, and the logical disconnect between this position and "liberty" is hard to understand. This has been a big issue in a local meet-up recently. For some reason this is becoming a wedge all of a sudden, and suspicion starts with the neo-conservatives... They used it in the past, and they are trying it now.
Jesus said that? What verse? And mandatory in what sense?
Philosophically speaking, there can be no basis for liberty if there is no God.
That is a basic philosophy of those on the left side of the political spectrum who always call for big government. Sadly, those of you who reject God in the Tea Party Movement are in company with them, in terms of a common philosophical worldview.
Again, your argument does not rest on logic, but the understanding of your own theological beliefs. Which is fine. I have no problem with it.
All I want is for one of you religious folk to admit that faith in God is not a prerequisite to liberty, and that as such, it would be politically stupid for the tea-party to adopt this point of view.
Sincerely,
Slutter McGee
So, I don't even understand how, rationally, a person who denies God's existence can 1) believe in liberty, (let alone define it objectively), and 2) argue that it is a universal good goal for all of mankind. When anti-theistic Tea Party proponents appeal to liberty as the chiefest goal, they are working from a different worldview than their own. That is always going to be the pervading conflict of the nonbeliever.
So I, an atheist, have to teach a church goer about Christian tithing/taxing?? Fucking priceless! Maybe it's because I read the bible that I am now an atheist, I suggest you do the same. Maybe then you'll realize what kind of bullshit nonsense you're signing up for.
Case in point...
Ok, so:
- Democrats are all "godless".
- Anyone who is "godless" should go ahead and switch to being Democrats, and vote appropriately. (Or is this just your denomination? Do Catholics count? How about Jews? Muslims? Hindus? Buddhists? etc.)
From an atheistic worldview, on what non-arbitrary basis is Liberty a worthy goal?
Evolution.
Evolution.
Evolution.
I'm getting a real laugh at the bible thumpers in this thread. Doesn't your boy JC always talk about the evils of money and how you should give it away? He even says it's manditory that you give 10% away to the church/government.
If you suckers actually read that fairy tale, you would realize how anti-capitalist JC and his spooky sky-man father really are.
Jesus said that? What verse? And mandatory in what sense?
So I, an atheist, have to teach a church goer about Christian tithing/taxing?? Fucking priceless! Maybe it's because I read the bible that I am now an atheist, I suggest you do the same. Maybe then you'll realize what kind of bullshit nonsense you're signing up for.
I'm getting a real laugh at the bible thumpers in this thread. Doesn't your boy JC always talk about the evils of money and how you should give it away? He even says it's manditory that you give 10% away to the church/government.
If you suckers actually read that fairy tale, you would realize how anti-capitalist JC and his spooky sky-man father really are.
It's newer, therefore it's correct.
That isn't illogical, and arbitrary at all now is it.
Remember, Christians are the illogical ones with no facts. Just keep repeating that to yourself, since your repetition of it seems to be all you have.
Originally posted by Theocrat That explains nothing, and it's actually a logical fallacy of reification. Evolution is not a personal being, so it's impossible for it to tell us anything about the "goodness" of liberty or the "evilness" of tyranny. As you well know, evolution is a term used to describe a natural process of how life might have come to exist. The limits of its parameters is the natural world, for evolution seeks to tell us what is the case, not what ought to be the case. Therefore, it cannot explain what liberty is.
Bump.
It only took 3 idiot illogical Christians to end this debate?
Man![]()
Maybe because everyone is tired of debating this nonsense. You do not represent all Christians. As a matter of fact, you represent a small minority of them. You really need to go debate some philosophical atheists if you want to have fun and endless, fruitless debate. Not everyone enjoys philosophy.
Maybe because everyone is tired of debating this nonsense. You do not represent all Christians. As a matter of fact, you represent a small minority of them. You really need to go debate some philosophical atheists if you want to have fun and endless, fruitless debate. Not everyone enjoys philosophy.