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
Canadian charter of rights and freedoms wrote:2. Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms:
- freedom of conscience and religion;
- freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of communication;
- freedom of peaceful assembly; and
- freedom of association.
The question being debated is whether the freedom of religion does imply or should imply a freedom from religion, in general not necessarily in one country's particular constitution.Equality Rights wrote:15. (1) Every individual is equal before and under the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination and, in particular, without discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability.
(2) Subsection (1) does not preclude any law, program or activity that has as its object the amelioration of conditions of disadvantaged individuals or groups including those that are disadvantaged because of race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability.
Not necessarily. Teaching your child is only a benefit if it helps them down the line. If you teach your kid that left is right and up is down and red is blue, you're only screwing up their life and that's certainly not beneficial. The same is true if you teach them that some invisible boogieman in the sky is going to protect them so they should handle venomous snakes and go walking in traffic with no regard for their own safety.Truth Prevails wrote:Try again you say? thats easy! Of course we arent talking of abuse. All you have listed is abuses. Teaching your child is not an abuse it is a benefit.
I guess my answers would depend on what is meant by 'freedom from religion'. If by 'freedom from religion' what is meant is that citizens are free from state-sanctioned religious intimidation and religious pressure or coercion to convert, then yes, I would say that freedom of religion by necessity implies 'freedom from religion'. However, if by 'freedom from religion' what is meant is that religious discourse cannot take place within the public sphere, I would say that such is not the case.1. Does freedom of religion imply freedom from religion?
2. Is freedom from religion a good idea?
3. Is freedom from religion guaranteed by the constitutional law of your country?
Here are some examples [excerpts from earlier posts in this thread] of what I mean by freedom from religion:MagusYanam wrote:I guess my answers would depend on what is meant by 'freedom from religion'. If by 'freedom from religion' what is meant is that citizens are free from state-sanctioned religious intimidation and religious pressure or coercion to convert, then yes, I would say that freedom of religion by necessity implies 'freedom from religion'. However, if by 'freedom from religion' what is meant is that religious discourse cannot take place within the public sphere, I would say that such is not the case.
Fair enough. I'd consider this to be a freedom from religious coercion - I would consider an imposition by the state of a certain set of religious tenets on a person to be a form of coercion, anyway; it does no service to the religion and it certainly does no service to the one on whom such tenets are imposed.McCulloch wrote:I should be constitutionally free from having any set of religious beliefs or practices imposed upon me.
Hm. I agree insofar as that someone should not be obligated to listen to evangelism in order to participate in government or law, but I think it depends here as much on who is doing the speaking as anything else. If it is someone in a position of civil authority doing the evangelising, or some other kind of political power, then I would consider it a form of religious intimidation or pressure. But if it were just some wacko who came to 'common public events' to start preaching on the street corner, I'd say he has a right to do that, and you would be free to ignore or listen at your own discretion.McCulloch wrote:I should not be obligated to listen to evangelism in order to participate in government, law or other common public events.
Agreed. That would be a kind of religious pressure. Outright denying someone service because they hold a different religious view than you would be a form of religious coercion (IMHO).McCulloch wrote: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.
Also agreed.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.
If I go to court, I expect the freedom not to have to swear at all, but to be taken at my word that my 'yes' will mean 'yes' and that my 'no' will mean 'no', and I expect the freedom not to have to pledge an oath to anything or anyone (including a flag), since my duties are to God and to whatever civil authorities which have jurisdiction over me.McCulloch wrote: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.
I think that children ought to be granted a freedom from religion, because they are impressionable and religion in the schools basically amounts to indoctrination, no matter how innocuous you think it may be.McCulloch wrote:Many democracies have included protection of religion in their constitutions. We enjoy freedom of religion. There are some who claim that there can be freedom of religion without freedom from religion. I don't see how that is possible.
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?
You might wish to review some of the previous postings in this thread. Freedom from religion is not defined as being completely insulated from religion. Freedom from religion means:4gold wrote:I think that children ought to be granted a freedom from religion, because they are impressionable and religion in the schools basically amounts to indoctrination, no matter how innocuous you think it may be.
I do not think that adults ought to be granted freedom from religion. We are above the age of indoctrination, and if we can't handle seeing or hearing other religions, perhaps the problem lies with us, and not the government.
Thank you. You are correct that I did not read the earlier postings. I agree that adults ought to be insulated from obligatory and mandatory practice of religion. In that sense only, I support freedom from religion.McCulloch wrote:You might wish to review some of the previous postings in this thread. Freedom from religion is not defined as being completely insulated from religion. Freedom from religion means:
- I should be constitutionally free from having any set of religious beliefs or practices imposed upon me.
- I should not be obligated to listen to evangelism in order to participate in government, law or other common public events.
- if you are a public employee 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.
- 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.
- 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.
Rathpig wrote: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.
If the Founders had believed the U.S. was indeed formed as a Christian nation they would have worded their first major foreign treaty a bit differently.
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.
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..
As I said before, it would behoove those fighting for this "Christian Nation" canard to gain some perspective. They are liable to find everything from Satanism to Asatru being supported from the public purse if they don't reign in their quasi-legal religious governing. They have allowed the proverbial camels nose with the Bush Administration's use of Executive funding. This will require an even distribution.
So I predict in a very few short years, even early in 2009, the Christians may change their minds about government and religion. The salad days are soon over.
Cephus wrote:Not necessarily. Teaching your child is only a benefit if it helps them down the line. If you teach your kid that left is right and up is down and red is blue, you're only screwing up their life and that's certainly not beneficial. The same is true if you teach them that some invisible boogieman in the sky is going to protect them so they should handle venomous snakes and go walking in traffic with no regard for their own safety.Truth Prevails wrote:Try again you say? thats easy! Of course we arent talking of abuse. All you have listed is abuses. Teaching your child is not an abuse it is a benefit.
So yes, try again.