saxitoxin wrote:Symmetry wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Let's make this less personal. Faced with one, and only one, of the two options, which country is in more desperate need of reform vis a vis the treatment of its citizens as regards oathtaking?Circumstance 1 - Country X has violently transitioned from a monarchy to a republic. Every day for several hundred years the new regime now requests schoolchildren publicly pledge their agreement with the revolution and the political philosophy of republicanism. While schoolchildren can choose not to, they may be subject to peer pressure from other school children to participate. This might, in the most serious cases, include dirty looks or name calling. A state-sanctioned cult of personality exists around a powerful general who died in 1799; his portrait is placed in every classroom and schools are closed down on his birthday. Schoolchildren are annually required to stage elaborate pageants in his honour. Even the most mundane moments in his life are declared heroic (e.g. children are required to write reports about a time this deceased general cleared some dead trees from an empty lot when he was 6). The year is 2011.
Circumstance 2 - Country Y has violently transitioned from a republic to a monarchy. For several hundred years the new regime demands members of the parliament pledge personal loyalty to the King - a billionaire industrialist. If they fail to do so they will be ejected from parliament and their voting rights stripped. Residents of the neighborhoods from where those members of parliament live will be collectively punished by being denied the opportunity to elect replacements, thereby suffering complete political disenfranchisement. The King's son, an alleged homosexual rapist who has lifetime immunity from prosecution for any crime, is given the authority to veto laws passed by the remaining members of the parliament who haven't been expelled for failing to pledge loyalty to his father. In school, children are required to learn the correct methods to grovel before the King if they happen to see her one day. They are required to learn the lyrics to a song calling on God to use magic tricks to transform the King into an immortal being. The year is 2011.
Number 1 is weird, bizarre and a little loopy. Number 2 is a shocking horror that demands intervention of United Nations troops under an injunction from the European Court of Human Rights. IMO.
Ah well, as it seems like this topic is well off, and that Saxi is unwilling to invite criticism of his points by actually discussing them in a relevant thread where people can view them under the auspice of a relevant conversation.
Tie this back in to the thread, or start a new one, basically.
Obviously the US Pledge of Allegiance has nothing to do with Lowe's Home Improvement stores but you decided to introduce it into the thread, at which point you transitioned the topic of the thread from Lowe's Home Improvement to oathmaking.
Clearly it's unreasonable for a person to change the topic of their thread mid-stream and then - when someone presents a contrary opinion to the new topic - demand that discussion abruptly cease and all talk immediately revert to the original topic. Don't you agree? I'm sure you do.
Now if you'd like to clarify what you mean by "no one really feels bothered" by the disenfranchisement of ethnically Irish people in the UK it would be appreciated.
I disagree, from the point of view of someone who would like to offer an opinion on a given topic, thread titles are pretty much the guideline. Do you want a discussion with me, or would you like a discussion of your points?
If you want to talk to me, then PM's are the correct option. If you want a wider discussion, perhaps burying them in a discussion of another topic is not the best option. You can start your own, and perhaps people will talk to you.
So, anyway, you have a couple of options that might get the response you want.