john9blue wrote:Nope. Only someone with stellar comprehension skills would use the word "comprehension" so much.
That doesn't really make any sense.
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john9blue wrote:Nope. Only someone with stellar comprehension skills would use the word "comprehension" so much.
john9blue wrote:.
Lootifer wrote:I earn well above average income for my area, i'm educated and I support left wing politics.
jbrettlip wrote:You live in New Zealand. We will call you when we need to make another Hobbit movie.
Woodruff wrote:john9blue wrote:Nope. Only someone with stellar comprehension skills would use the word "comprehension" so much.
That doesn't really make any sense.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
john9blue wrote:Woodruff wrote:john9blue wrote:Nope. Only someone with stellar comprehension skills would use the word "comprehension" so much.
That doesn't really make any sense.
Maybe you're right. If you want, you can remove the text at the bottom and let the rest of the picture speak for itself.
Ah gee, and here I was thinking that religious tolerance is one of the foundations of our country.Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:You choose to make such an issue of it becuase you have alterier motives. This is not about Obama's words. This is about your view that Obama is some kind of "evil Satan" (though you may not have used those exact words). Obama's paraphrasing, for whatever reason was his right, as long as he did not say "I quote..". YOU, by contrast have voiced much here that indicates you believe this is to be a theocracy and that the only valid leader is one who is not just a Christian, but YOUR BRAND of Christianity. As a CHRISTIAN, I find that offensive and dangerous. It is dangerous politically, because there is no end to that road. Either we tolerate all but the outright dangerous or we become opporessive.
Furthermore, it is not what Christ instructed us to do. You take the spiritual and demean it to petty politics. That is blasphemy. (Even aside from the "false witness" bit).
I have ulterior motives? We know there are progressive organizations who wish to wipe out any reference to God or Christianity in the public sphere, so why wouldn't they try to remove it from the Declaration? Removing God means that the only place rights come from is the government, therefore it can add or remove rights on a whim. I have never said, nor even though, that Obama is an "evil Satan". I'm saying his beliefs are against what our country was founded on.
Night Strike wrote: A theocracy is a government that forces its citizens to follow a certain religious belief: i.e. Iran and colonial England. The US was specifically barred from becoming a theocracy, but that DOES NOT mean religion can't be used to influence policies and politicians.
john9blue wrote:Nope. Only someone with stellar comprehension skills would use the word "comprehension" so much.
Phatscotty wrote:john9blue wrote:Woodruff wrote:john9blue wrote:Nope. Only someone with stellar comprehension skills would use the word "comprehension" so much.
That doesn't really make any sense.
Maybe you're right. If you want, you can remove the text at the bottom and let the rest of the picture speak for itself.
A for effort
PLAYER57832 wrote:How about it just does not matter, UNLESS you are trying to insist that we are to be a theocracy.


Ray Rider wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:How about it just does not matter, UNLESS you are trying to insist that we are to be a theocracy.
I find it interesting that you (and certain others) consistently mischaracterize what John9blue, Nightstrike, and Phatscotty are saying. As far as I know, non of them have said the US was to be a theocracy, and yet you continually throw up this straw-man argument. Three times in the last month Obama omitted an integral phrase when quoting/paraphrasing--whatever you want to call it--the constitution, so it was definitely a purposeful omission and not just a slip of the tongue (especially considering that Obama used to hold a professor's position teaching constitutional law). Criticism of his adjustment to the wording of the US' founding document is justified.
PLAYER57832 wrote:john9blue wrote:Nope. Only someone with stellar comprehension skills would use the word "comprehension" so much.
As opposed to the fact that the man is a teacher.. and therefore prone to taking the time to actually explain things? Or just that he is quick to see and point out when others fail in their comprehension skills.
You instead decide that consistant use of a word means he fails to understand it?
Woodruff wrote:Ray Rider wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:How about it just does not matter, UNLESS you are trying to insist that we are to be a theocracy.
I find it interesting that you (and certain others) consistently mischaracterize what John9blue, Nightstrike, and Phatscotty are saying. As far as I know, non of them have said the US was to be a theocracy, and yet you continually throw up this straw-man argument. Three times in the last month Obama omitted an integral phrase when quoting/paraphrasing--whatever you want to call it--the constitution, so it was definitely a purposeful omission and not just a slip of the tongue (especially considering that Obama used to hold a professor's position teaching constitutional law). Criticism of his adjustment to the wording of the US' founding document is justified.
But that word is NOT "integral"...it's NOT "a key word" in the statement. It just is not. The statement stands perfectly fine without those three words there (by our Creator). It's significance is not changed.
Ray Rider wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:How about it just does not matter, UNLESS you are trying to insist that we are to be a theocracy.
I find it interesting that you (and certain others) consistently mischaracterize what John9blue, Nightstrike, and Phatscotty are saying. As far as I know, non of them have said the US was to be a theocracy, and yet you continually throw up this straw-man argument.
Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:john9blue wrote:Nope. Only someone with stellar comprehension skills would use the word "comprehension" so much.
As opposed to the fact that the man is a teacher.. and therefore prone to taking the time to actually explain things? Or just that he is quick to see and point out when others fail in their comprehension skills.
You instead decide that consistant use of a word means he fails to understand it?
I notice they weren't very quick to complain when it was your comprehension skills I was complaining about. I guess that was different.
Of course, the obvious difference may be that you recognized that you mis-read what was typed and admitted it. I haven't really seen that from significant others.
Night Strike wrote:Woodruff wrote:Ray Rider wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:How about it just does not matter, UNLESS you are trying to insist that we are to be a theocracy.
I find it interesting that you (and certain others) consistently mischaracterize what John9blue, Nightstrike, and Phatscotty are saying. As far as I know, non of them have said the US was to be a theocracy, and yet you continually throw up this straw-man argument. Three times in the last month Obama omitted an integral phrase when quoting/paraphrasing--whatever you want to call it--the constitution, so it was definitely a purposeful omission and not just a slip of the tongue (especially considering that Obama used to hold a professor's position teaching constitutional law). Criticism of his adjustment to the wording of the US' founding document is justified.
But that word is NOT "integral"...it's NOT "a key word" in the statement. It just is not. The statement stands perfectly fine without those three words there (by our Creator). It's significance is not changed.
Actually, as has already been discussed in this thread, that phrase is completely integral. The fact that rights do NOT come from a government was the entire basis for beginning the revolution. If rights are granted by a government, then everything the King of England was doing was legitimate and the revolution had no higher purpose. If rights come from a Creator, then it is realized that all of us are the same in regards to our rights and no one person or group of persons can justly infringe upon them.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Belief in a creator is not necessary to know that we have fundamental rights. In fact, that belief has as often been used to suppress rights as to uphold them, so your entire argument is just false.
Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Belief in a creator is not necessary to know that we have fundamental rights. In fact, that belief has as often been used to suppress rights as to uphold them, so your entire argument is just false.
Where does "fundamental" come from then? There has to be a basis for them as they weren't just made up out of thin air.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
Use of the word "creator" is religious expression. When you question a political leader on ground of religious expression, it is approaching theocracy and definitely means you are advocating religious involvement in the government.john9blue wrote:Just because I speculate as to Obama's motivations for removing the word, doesn't mean I advocate a theocracy or even any religious involvement in government at all. It's called questioning authority and it's part of being an informed citizen and human being.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Use of the word "creator" is religious expression. When you question a political leader on ground of religious expression, it is approaching theocracy and definitely means you are advocating religious involvement in the government.john9blue wrote:Just because I speculate as to Obama's motivations for removing the word, doesn't mean I advocate a theocracy or even any religious involvement in government at all. It's called questioning authority and it's part of being an informed citizen and human being.
Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Use of the word "creator" is religious expression. When you question a political leader on ground of religious expression, it is approaching theocracy and definitely means you are advocating religious involvement in the government.john9blue wrote:Just because I speculate as to Obama's motivations for removing the word, doesn't mean I advocate a theocracy or even any religious involvement in government at all. It's called questioning authority and it's part of being an informed citizen and human being.
The Constitution never barred religious involvement in government. It barred the government establishing a national religion. Those are HUGE differences.
Phatscotty wrote:
not to mention a complete miss on the reference to a power "higher" than the government. That's is why rights come from our creator (whoever/whatever any religion chooses that crator to be.) The rights come from a higher power, therefore, the government can NEVER take them away. They are inalienable. government is below the "creator", no matter how much you worship gov't Player.
Metsfanmax wrote:Our Creator needs to have made them "inalienable" for us to respect them? We can't just all agree that they are inalienable and live by that?
Night Strike wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Our Creator needs to have made them "inalienable" for us to respect them? We can't just all agree that they are inalienable and live by that?
Actually, no, we can't just agree. By humans agreeing that certain rights are inalienable, you are actually living by majority rules. If humans are the ones who define which rights are inalienable, then they can change those definitions based on the culture or time period. If these rights come from something greater than humans, then they actually exist no matter what kind of government or desire of the people comes along.
Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:
not to mention a complete miss on the reference to a power "higher" than the government. That's is why rights come from our creator (whoever/whatever any religion chooses that crator to be.) The rights come from a higher power, therefore, the government can NEVER take them away. They are inalienable. government is below the "creator", no matter how much you worship gov't Player.
Our Creator needs to have made them "inalienable" for us to respect them? We can't just all agree that they are inalienable and live by that?
Phatscotty wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:
not to mention a complete miss on the reference to a power "higher" than the government. That's is why rights come from our creator (whoever/whatever any religion chooses that crator to be.) The rights come from a higher power, therefore, the government can NEVER take them away. They are inalienable. government is below the "creator", no matter how much you worship gov't Player.
Our Creator needs to have made them "inalienable" for us to respect them? We can't just all agree that they are inalienable and live by that?
about as naive as you can get.