Woodruff wrote:Night Strike wrote:Where did the Declaration even imply that we were? All it said was that the Creator gave us our rights and that England was usurping those rights. If rights don't come from the Creator, then they come from man. If they come from man, they can change.
Those Jews in Nazi had a lot of rights, did they? You see, we have natural rights, certainly...but they are granted (and taken away) by governments, not God.
No, they're supposed to be protected by governments, but governments can't grant them. That's why the writers of the Declaration knew that the English government was not protecting their rights and had lost the consent of the governed. If there were not absolute rights, things like what the Nazis did can be justified because of moral relativism. Without an absolute basis for rights, the only rights are the ones the majority chooses to define.
PLAYER57832 wrote:No Nightstrike, those arguments only apply if you are religious, and then only some religions. We are a nation of many people with diverse ideas. I, of course, agree that we have a creator. But my personnal beliefs have no place in government.
YOU wish to replace that with your particular ideas. So have many throughout history. Thankfully, the majority has successfully kept us from becoming a theocracy.
Actually, those arguments apply for everyone who knows the history of our nation, regardless of their religion. You can't rewrite history (well you can, until facts start getting in the way). The beauty of this nation is that although the framers recognized the Christian foundation of our nation, they knew that having the federal government be religious would lead to the same oppression that they had under England. They recognized the Christian foundation and then set up a government that allowed people of all faiths to participate, which was a first in that time. They never intended for a person's religion to be checked at the door: they put in safeguards so that one person's religion didn't infringe on the religious practices of others. They knew that having a personal religious basis was necessary to govern properly, but they did not require a specific religion/denomination over another.

