Typical passive aggression.MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 27, 2023 4:35 pmThanks for your thoughts, Res Ipsa. Not sure that you actually read my post in detail…but anyway…I know you have your point of view. I do respect that.Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Mon Mar 27, 2023 4:30 pm
LOL! Claiming victim status and then more allegations about people who do not believe in God based on sheer bigotry. That's not a "debrief" -- that's quadrupling down.
What you do to nonbelievers is every bit as bad as Trump siccing his mob of sycophants against anyone who opposes him: threats of violence and actual violence. You accuse them of outrageous things like wanting pornography in public school libraries (without any evidence that the librarians and other school officials are nonbelievers), which is exactly what leads to a barrage of threats that leads them to quit those jobs. You claim to be all about civility, but your words promote thuggery and mobocracy.
It is you -- the guy who portrays folks who don't share your believes as existential threats -- who is driving the divide wider and wider.
I found it enlightening, but I suspect you weren't among the enlightened.![]()
Regards,
MG

As is also typical, you misrepresented the article you quoted from. Here is how you characterized it:
That was not the point of the article at all. In fact, the point was exactly the opposite of what you said it was:MG 2.0 wrote:It is that ultimate result of the human condition in which the elite, who have no belief in accountability to a god, are in charge of society and have the military force to dictate their whims, that we ALL ought to be concerned with. THAT was the point of the article. But then we steered towards a discussion as to whether or not the very premise of the article could be trusted and/or the results really had any basis in reality.
This is author's description of "secularism" which, unlike you, he has no problem defining in a couple of sentences. As he defines it, the term refers to a political principle, nothing else, that applies solely to government. It requires strict neutrality as to religious belief, and includes humanism and atheism. It's much more akin to what we mean by separation of church and state than anything else -- something you claim to believe in, although what you mean by it is unclear.Human rights treaties commit nations to freedom of religion or belief (including freedom of nonbelief and nonreligious beliefs). Any constraints on freedom of religion or belief should be the minimum compatible with the survival of a liberal, tolerant, democratic open society. In addition the European convention on human rights includes a commitment to the principle of nondiscrimination.
From this it appears to follow necessarily that the state, the law and the public institutions we all share must be neutral towards different religions and beliefs. On questions of profound disagreement and deep sensitivity where there is no agreed way to establish the truth or falsehood of the claims made variously by Christians, Muslims, humanists and everyone else, it is quite wrong for the state to throw its weight behind any one particular religion or belief. This neutrality is what is meant by secularism. It is a political principle applicable to states: a secular state may be supported by religious believers and be the home of widespread religious belief. Indeed, secularism is the best guarantee of freedom of religion or belief – but the enemy of religious privilege. It must be distinguished from a secular society, a term that suggests a society that has distanced itself from religion.
Your expressed concern, that "the elite, who have no belief in accountability to a god, are in charge of society and have the military force to dictate their whims" is neither stated nor implied in the article. You just made that up. One of the major criticisms in the article is that "secularism" has been made into made into a boogeyman by religious folk, which is exactly what you have repeatedly done in this thread an in others on the board.
You conceded upthread that you were using "secularism" as a stand in for some undefined thing that nonbelievers believe: some undefined existential threat. The author of the article defined "secularism" as a political theory of how the state should function -- one that protects both believers and nonbelievers alike. If we were all "secularists" as meant in the article, there would be no need to worry about whether a political leader was accountable to a God because the leader would be committed to neutrality toward religious belief and unbelief.
The one paragraph you quoted says nothing different. It occurs in the context of a discussion about how the state should act in terms of neutrality. The state should not consider arguments of the form: God, therefore X or Not God, therefore X. This is a view of government that protects religious rights, regardless of whether the people in the government are believers or not. If this doesn't represent your notion of separation of church and state, I'd like you to explain what you mean when you say you are in favor of that separation.
People of faith represent the majority of people in the United States, and have an outsized monopoly on elected offices. Our voices have been completely "drowned out" in terms of legislation privileging religion and the religious. But I guess the real "crisis" is being "outnumbered" on a small, obscure message board.MG 2.0 wrote:This dichotomy becomes evident on a board such as this. And when you have majority voices using whatever means necessary to drown out the minority voice(s) you have the perfect example of ‘uncivil society’.

Well, why don't you show us how enlighten you were. Can you write a description of our respective world views in a compare and contrast fashion that accurately describes my world view?MG 2.0 wrote:Anyway, yes, Res Ipsa, this was an interesting and even enlightening thread. If nothing else, we have a record of two differing world views being laid out for others to see and observe.