mrswdk wrote:jim, I found the perfect picture for you:
This is great. I feel just like the guy standing up talking to the Chinese guy with the hat on.

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mrswdk wrote:jim, I found the perfect picture for you:
jimboston wrote:mrswdk wrote:jim, I found the perfect picture for you:
This is great. I feel just like the guy standing up talking to the Chinese guy with the hat on.
mrswdk wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:mrswdk wrote:
Denmark,
Not going to tackle the others, but Denmark is hardly secular. They are not given to the religious fights we see here in the US, but that is largely because it is a very small and still fairly homogeneous society. They have a state religion, in fact, taught in the public schools to all students, and while its easy enough for kids to opt out, very few do.'
You can debate whether that means they actually follow their religion, etc, but most will still claim the title, at least officially.
Here's your chance to distinguish yourself from jimboston by actually reading the links he posted in this thread about religion in Denmark, Sweden, Finland and New Zealand.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Sticking with Denmark, because I can go on more than just internet links.
If you actually talk to Danes, as opposed to just going by polls
I would argue that while Danes might not profess particular church membership, they actually are "more Christian" than many here who attend church daily and profess great outward belief
Four of Denmark's prime ministers have identified themselves as atheists
PLAYER57832 wrote:...is just my personal opinion.
AndyDufresne wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:...is just my personal opinion.
Should be player's signature.
--Andy
PLAYER57832 wrote:Digging the exact studies up would take more time than I have for a casual discussion right now.
mrswdk wrote:Phatscotty wrote:mrswdk wrote:Yeah, there are betters way of persuading someone to behave in a civilized way than threatening that if they're naughty the sky wizard won't bring them any presents.
Like? How about some examples.
As waauw said, it's called the law.
Phatscotty wrote:mrswdk wrote:Phatscotty wrote:mrswdk wrote:Yeah, there are betters way of persuading someone to behave in a civilized way than threatening that if they're naughty the sky wizard won't bring them any presents.
Like? How about some examples.
As waauw said, it's called the law.
I suspect a lot of people used the same logic when slavery was questioned... ''It's called the law'
Why can't black people attend that all white school? 'Hey, the law is the law!'
No blacks allows in this restaurant.... 'Just following the law n stuff'
eh?
mrswdk wrote:To go back to a point jim made earlier about secularism in Denmark, I just noticed this while rereading the 'religion in Denmark' page:Four of Denmark's prime ministers have identified themselves as atheists
Turns out avowed atheists can quite easily become the head of state in Denmark.
Dukasaur wrote:mrswdk wrote:To go back to a point jim made earlier about secularism in Denmark, I just noticed this while rereading the 'religion in Denmark' page:Four of Denmark's prime ministers have identified themselves as atheists
Turns out avowed atheists can quite easily become the head of state in Denmark.
A prime minister is not a head of state.
Denmark is a parliamentary monarchy, like Britain or Canada. The Queen is the head of state, the prime minister is just a servant. A high-ranking servant to be sure, but nonetheless just a servant.
Bernie Sanders wrote:Dukasaur wrote:mrswdk wrote:To go back to a point jim made earlier about secularism in Denmark, I just noticed this while rereading the 'religion in Denmark' page:Four of Denmark's prime ministers have identified themselves as atheists
Turns out avowed atheists can quite easily become the head of state in Denmark.
A prime minister is not a head of state.
Denmark is a parliamentary monarchy, like Britain or Canada. The Queen is the head of state, the prime minister is just a servant. A high-ranking servant to be sure, but nonetheless just a servant.
Wrong, the Queen or King is just a figurehead
A parliamentary system is a system of democratic governance of a state in which the executive branch derives its democratic legitimacy from, and is held accountable to, the legislature (parliament); the executive and legislative branches are thus interconnected. In a parliamentary system, the head of state is normally a different person from the head of government. This is in contrast to a presidential system in a democracy, where the head of state often is also the head of government, and most importantly, the executive branch does not derive its democratic legitimacy from the legislature.
Countries with parliamentary systems may be constitutional monarchies, where a monarch is the ceremonial head of state while the head of government is almost always a member of the legislature (such as the United Kingdom, Sweden and Japan), or parliamentary republics, where a mostly ceremonial president is the head of state while the head of government is regularly from the legislature (such as Ireland, Czech Republic, Germany, Pakistan, India and Italy). In a few parliamentary republics, such as Botswana, South Africa and Suriname, as well as German states, the head of government is also head of state, but is elected by and is answerable to the legislature.
Bernie Sanders wrote:Countries with parliamentary systems may be constitutional monarchies, where a monarch is the ceremonial head of state while the head of government is almost always a member of the legislature (such as the United Kingdom, Sweden and Japan)
Yep, I read it.
I did.mrswdk wrote:
You should probably have read the link then.
PLAYER57832 wrote:The real truth is that the study is not conclusive. It is almost impossible to truly quantify ideas like religious belief
is the nation of people who don't think much of going to church, but are willing to pay more taxes so that his neighbor gets a decent house, food and medical care , more secular than a nation of people that do attend church, but is full of "if you don't make it its your own fault and don't ask me for help" mentality?
mrswdk wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:The real truth is that the study is not conclusive. It is almost impossible to truly quantify ideas like religious belief
Except for where people were explicitly asked 'do you believe there is a god or other power?', 'do you believe in the Christian god?', 'do you believe Jesus was the son of God?' and so on.
Yet another example of what mrswdk considers "intelligent" and "reasoned" debate.mrswdk wrote: You forgot the key measure of religiosity - people's favorite flavor of milkshake.
Paddy The Cat wrote:Well, I was going to engage in the discussion here... but I see that this thread is off the rails.
*slowly backs away*
Paddy The Cat wrote:Well, I was going to engage in the discussion here... but I see that this thread is off the rails.
mrswdk wrote:Phatscotty wrote:mrswdk wrote:Phatscotty wrote:mrswdk wrote:Yeah, there are betters way of persuading someone to behave in a civilized way than threatening that if they're naughty the sky wizard won't bring them any presents.
Like? How about some examples.
As waauw said, it's called the law.
I suspect a lot of people used the same logic when slavery was questioned... ''It's called the law'
Why can't black people attend that all white school? 'Hey, the law is the law!'
No blacks allows in this restaurant.... 'Just following the law n stuff'
eh?
lolwut
I'm saying that the law is a way of regulating people's behavior. Just because people have previously made laws that we know consider to be counterproductive doesn't make the law an ineffective tool.
jimboston wrote:mrswdk wrote:jim, I found the perfect picture for you:
This is great. I feel just like the guy standing up talking to the Chinese guy with the hat on.
owenshooter wrote:i'm sorry... i don't understand the premise of the thread... as a recovering catholic, i was under the impression that both were one in the same...-Jésus noir
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