Questions for debate:
- Does freedom of religion imply freedom from religion?
- Is freedom from religion a good idea?
- Is freedom from religion guaranteed by the constitutional law of your country?
Moderator: Moderators
McCulloch wrote:McCulloch wrote:Religion: a specific fundamental set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe often containing a moral code governing the conduct of human affairs, and practices usually involving devotional and ritual observances, generally agreed upon by a number of persons or sects.Notwithstanding that your own court disagrees, it is not relevant to this debate whether evolution is a religion. The debate is whether freedom of religion implies freedom from religion. I expect that by saying that evolution is a religion, you expect that you have the constitutional right to be free from it as I expect to have the constitutional right to be free from the Christian religion.Truth Prevails wrote:This segment you have written above and or definition could be applied to one who believes in Evolution or who is an atheist/agnostic. [...]
You are missing the point. Of course religion reflects one's beliefs. All religions include a fundamental set of beliefs. However, not all sets of beliefs are religions. I should be constitutionally free from having any set of religious beliefs or practices imposed upon me. If evolution is a religion, then everyone should be free from having it imposed on them. If democracy or arithmetic were religions then they also should be not imposed upon anyone. But while democracy and arithmetic are specific sets of fundamental beliefs, they are not religions. Are they?Truth Prevails wrote:If "religion" doesn't reflect ones beliefs then what does it reflect, that you would say you should be free from?
Here is where freedoms can come into conflict. You have the freedom of speech and the freedom of religion. That gives you the right to evangelize others. That does not give you the right to do so while supported by government funds or to use publicly financed and organized events to do so. I should not be obligated to listen to your evangelism in order to participate in government, law or other common public events.Truth Prevails wrote:What ever a person believes brings actions by them. It is what they are held to. If you are trying to say that you should be free from someone being able to evangilise to others, this would be a prohibition of religion and it would infringe on freedom of speech.
Absolutely. Is someone trying to take that away from you? However, if you are a public employee, a teacher, a judge, a legislator, a police officer, a welfare clerk, a doctor etc, you do not have the right to subject me to your religious view as a condition to providing me with the services that you are being paid to provide out of public money.Truth Prevails wrote:Christianity or evangilising doesn't infringe on another's CONSTITUTIONAL rights. One has the absolute right to express an Idea of betterment. We have the right to criticize and or express protest peaceably and freedom of speech that all evidence be heard.
No, you do not have the right not to be exposed to religion, but you most certainly do have the right not to have religion forced upon you. It's funny how many Christians claim people have no right not to be exposed to their religion, then fight their kids being exposed to any religion other than their own. Hypocrisy anyone?Chancellor wrote:I think you are in error here. There is no freedom from religion: no one has the right not to be exposed in any way whatsoever to someone else's religious expression.
Do you have any examples of this. Also a parent has an absolute right to raise their own child by their rules. This is not hypocrisy. A parent has a right to protect their child as they see fit. Whent he child becomes of age then they can make their own decisions.Cephus wrote:No, you do not have the right not to be exposed to religion, but you most certainly do have the right not to have religion forced upon you. It's funny how many Christians claim people have no right not to be exposed to their religion, then fight their kids being exposed to any religion other than their own. Hypocrisy anyone?Chancellor wrote:I think you are in error here. There is no freedom from religion: no one has the right not to be exposed in any way whatsoever to someone else's religious expression.
That's absolutely false. You cannot beat your kids, you cannot make them drink poison or handle venomous snakes regardless of your religious beliefs on the subject, you cannot abuse them physically, emotionally or sexually, etc. There are plenty of things that parents cannot do in raising their kids.Truth Prevails wrote:Do you have any examples of this. Also a parent has an absolute right to raise their own child by their rules. This is not hypocrisy. A parent has a right to protect their child as they see fit. Whent he child becomes of age then they can make their own decisions.
Freedom from religion does not mean the right not to be exposed to others' religions. Freedom from religion is the right not to have to participate or endorse other people's religions.Chancellor wrote:I think you are in error here. There is no freedom from religion: no one has the right not to be exposed in any way whatsoever to someone else's religious expression.
As already pointed out, this is not an absolute right. But then neither is the right of freedom of religion, is it? However, you have the right to raise your children and I have the freedom not to raise your children. You have the right to practice your religion and I have the freedom not to. That is freedom from religion. If I go to court, I have the freedom not to have to swear by on a book held to be holy by some but not me. If I am elected to office, I have the freedom not to have to participate in prayers to a deity I don't believe exists. When I sent my children to publicly funded schools, I have the right to expect that they will not be indoctrinated with the teachings of any religions nor that they will be made to feel excluded for not participating in religious exercises.Truth Prevails wrote:Also a parent has an absolute right to raise their own child by their rules. This is not hypocrisy. A parent has a right to protect their child as they see fit. When the child becomes of age then they can make their own decisions.
Cephus wrote:That's absolutely false. You cannot beat your kids, you cannot make them drink poison or handle venomous snakes regardless of your religious beliefs on the subject, you cannot abuse them physically, emotionally or sexually, etc. There are plenty of things that parents cannot do in raising their kids.Truth Prevails wrote:Do you have any examples of this. Also a parent has an absolute right to raise their own child by their rules. This is not hypocrisy. A parent has a right to protect their child as they see fit. Whent he child becomes of age then they can make their own decisions.
Try again.
Rathpig wrote:"As the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion;...
- U.S. Treaty with Tripoli 1796-1797 Article 11 (source)
This treaty was unanimously passed by the Senate of the United States.
One can not have freedom of religion unless one has freedom from the compulsion of religion. It is highly improbable that the vast Christian majority of the United States would sit silently by if the variety of the world's religions were given equal time and funding as their precious Christianity. The recent complaints when a Muslim Congressmen deigned to take the pro forma oath with a Koran is indicative of the attitude that many "Christians" have about religious freedom.
It is passed time that those who would stand against "freedom from religion" to realize that this protects each person's chosen faith even their own. The de facto and un-Constitutional rule of Christians in the United States is coming to an end. It is time to accept the reality of the Constitution.
McCulloch wrote:Freedom from religion does not mean the right not to be exposed to others' religions. Freedom from religion is the right not to have to participate or endorse other people's religions.Chancellor wrote:I think you are in error here. There is no freedom from religion: no one has the right not to be exposed in any way whatsoever to someone else's religious expression.
As already pointed out, this is not an absolute right. But then neither is the right of freedom of religion, is it? However, you have the right to raise your children and I have the freedom not to raise your children. You have the right to practice your religion and I have the freedom not to. That is freedom from religion. If I go to court, I have the freedom not to have to swear by on a book held to be holy by some but not me. If I am elected to office, I have the freedom not to have to participate in prayers to a deity I don't believe exists. When I sent my children to publicly funded schools, I have the right to expect that they will not be indoctrinated with the teachings of any religions nor that they will be made to feel excluded for not participating in religious exercises.Truth Prevails wrote:Also a parent has an absolute right to raise their own child by their rules. This is not hypocrisy. A parent has a right to protect their child as they see fit. When the child becomes of age then they can make their own decisions.
It says it plain as day. I provided the context of the entire document, and it states plain as day that "As the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion", and yes it goes on to explain that the U.S. is not embattled with Tripoli as a religious war. It give the specific reason why being that the U.S. "is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion".Truth Prevails wrote:You have made serious errors here.Rathpig wrote:"As the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion;...
- U.S. Treaty with Tripoli 1796-1797 Article 11 (source)
The treaty of tripoli is not saying the United States isnt founded and rooted in Christianity.
I am quite sure that an entity that ceased to exist two centuries ago is beyond defending, but you will notice, for the record, nothing in my post defended them. I merely stated the record.Truth Prevails wrote:It is addressing the Barbary pirates, who were attacking the "Christian nations" whic if you were for freedom you should be against the barbary pirates instead of deffending them.
So the Founders of the United States were willing to deny their Christianity to "appease" pirates? I think you underestimate these men.Truth Prevails wrote: this is what the treaty of tripoli was saying i order to appease these pirates. you have to read the entirety of it and look at the context.
Historians do not generally "refute" the Christian Nation lie because it is merely a fundamentalist meme that has zero academic credibility. However, the Treaty of Tripoli is one piece of evidence that does appear in the record to show that the Founders were not under any illusion that the United States was specifically "Christian".Truth Prevails wrote:There is no credible historian who uses this as a refute to Americas Christian roots and founding.
The Mayflower Compact is not a document of the U.S. founding. The first document of the U.S. founding was the Constitution. This document contains zero mention of "God" or Christianity. No document prior to this point was a foundation document.Truth Prevails wrote: The mayflowr compact
And countless quotes from the fore Fathers. This is absolute historical fact.
No one had claimed that a Christian culture did not exist among the Founders. Freedom of religion guaranteed that this culture was used as architectural decoration and is even recognized in ceremonial public prayer. However, this is vastly different from the false claim that the U.S. is a "Christian Nation". The U.S. is a secular nation that was developed by men who held a nominally Christian culture. That is a big difference.Truth Prevails wrote: American governmental buildings everywhere are covered with Bible vereses the liberty bell the capital etc...etc...etc..