Mercutio
Fatwah on Western Digital
Stereodude said:We live in a representative republic, and much to the chagrin of people like yourself you are in the minority. As such it's not surprising that the laws and traditions of this country reflect the values of the majority. Either way, I fail to see how any of the single cases you reference are violation of the first ammendment. Either Congress did not enable the act (law) you are complaining about, or it doesn't interfere with someone's ability to practice his religion, nor is it a federally mandated religion (which is what it says).
Sigh.
So what you're saying is, because I'm not part of the majority, there's no reason to serve my interests as a citizen of the representative republic.
I'd say that says a lot about you and your beliefs.
See, if we went very far down the path that viewpoint leads us, we would get to a place where handicapped people wouldn't have reserved parking spaces. Can you accept that something like that is in fact a good thing?
At a previous point in our history, not protecting the rights of minorities led to "separate but equal" - different entrances, water fountains and rules for voting for people of different colors.
That's an easy one. It's pretty hard to say "I'm in favor of segregation" in 2004. But up to the 1960s (and perhaps later, the deeper you go into the South), that did in fact represent a majority viewpoint.
So: I have a number of objections to religious expressions that exist because of actions by our federal government. One of those is the somewhat offensive phrase "One Nation, Under God" on the pray^H^H^H^Hpledge of alliegiance public schoolchildren and freshly-minted citizens are taught to say. The "Under God" bit was added by act of Congress, and serves as a patent endorsement of a Judeo-Christian god. We aren't one nation under Ganesh or Allah, after all!
That one phrase isn't needed. The pledge works fine without it, but by including it, we're making thousands of people swear an oath that they
can't even fully believe! You don't think that's harmful?
Would you feel at all bound if you were forced to swear an oath to Krishna?
(Actually, here's a secret to finding empathy: Put yourself in someone else's shoes for a minute. Ask yourself, "How would I feel if...", then pretend it actually happened.)
Me? I think I'd rather have a pledge that either recognizes more deities, or perhaps a pledge that doesn't recognize any divine power, and therefore doesn't force someone to say something counter to the beliefs his or her parents taught him or her.
But maybe that's just me.
With regard to the differences between US "liberal" and "conservative", and without the name-calling some people resorted to...
What I see from the right wing in the US is an "I got mine" attitude that really seems to be sold with the expectation of some kind of future of wealth that can't possibly be for the vast majority of its adherents, or on maintaining "values" straight out of the Eisenhower administration (and/or the Bible. I'm not sure if there's a difference).
It's really funny to run into a republican die-hard making $12 an hour in a factory job, trying to explain how repealing the estate tax is going to benefit him and his children.
Putting aside some of the conservative statements about "values", which are scary to me all on their own (a lot of the fiscal-type conservatives are kind of scared/embarassed about the religious right-types, too), I think the biggest thing that bothers me about the conservative philosophy is its willingness to cede certain rights and controls to big businesses, organizations which ultimately have no responsibilities to citizens or employees or even customers.
Another issue I have - and this may just be my impression from all the abrasive talking heads who get 95% of the media exposure - but the right seems to have a pretty strong tradition of anti-intellectualism, something I generally find appalling. I see this with lot of religious right types especially. Maybe because conservative christians are less likely to have attended college? Regardless, it's hard to watch Fox News for 15 minutes without hearing something derisive about "ivory tower eggheads".
Conservative Republicans also seem to be very exclusionary, going out of their way to distance themselves from minorities even within their own party. There are exceptions - they're pretty happy with Clarence Thomas, for instance (who, by the way, almost never speaks during Supreme Court hearings and, IIRC, votes in line with Scalia something like 95% of the time), but by opposing the social programs (e.g affirmative action, Drug Treatment, rather than enforcement, programs) that might help poor urban minorities lift themselves up, they really lose any hope of gaining ground in those communities. And imagine how happy members of "The Log Cabin Republicans" must be since the president announced that he's all for a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage.
I can see where Fiscal Conservatives are coming from. Not wanting to spend money on social programs or regulatory agencies, wanting lower taxes for their friends in high tax brackets - I don't agree with it, but I can understand it.
However, the minute someone starts talking about returning the nation to Jesus, I'm gone. In my experience, people who take that tack are utterly unable to comprehend that there are other people - many of US Citizens, who don't believe or wish to act in complete accordance with their morality. I've found that it's almost impossible to communicate with anyone advocating that point of view.