There is no actual proof of that, so why post it trying to give a bad name to those of us who have actual legitimate criticisms of the president?HaireWolf1 wrote:Obama believes in god but to him god is allah...small g
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There is no actual proof of that, so why post it trying to give a bad name to those of us who have actual legitimate criticisms of the president?HaireWolf1 wrote:Obama believes in god but to him god is allah...small g
Good of you to catch that.Night Strike wrote:There is no actual proof of that, so why post it trying to give a bad name to those of us who have actual legitimate criticisms of the president?HaireWolf1 wrote:Obama believes in god but to him god is allah...small g
I would believe that while we're in a war with Muslim extremists, a Muslim president would be less likely to aggressively pursue those terrorists. There are already questions about moderate Muslims politicians not taking a hard stand against militant Islamists, like people in Karsai's government taking bribes from Iran to protect the Taliban. Or them taking drug money from the Taliban directly. Granted, it's a different situation when their families are in the direct line of danger, but there would be legitimate questions raised. It would be similar to if we had a Japanese American president during World War II: would he have aggressively prosecuted the war effort?PLAYER57832 wrote:Good of you to catch that.Night Strike wrote:There is no actual proof of that, so why post it trying to give a bad name to those of us who have actual legitimate criticisms of the president?HaireWolf1 wrote:Obama believes in god but to him god is allah...small g
However, the question still remains. What would it matter if he did worship Allah instead of the Christian God? (or considered them the same?)
Just to play devil's advocate for a moment, I would suggest that a Muslim President might be MORE likely to aggressively pursue those who he believes are defaming his religion. It's a bit of a different situation than Pakistan's President, since our President would have significantly more firepower to back him up than Pakistan has (thus he's in a less tenable situation in Pakistan).Night Strike wrote:I would believe that while we're in a war with Muslim extremists, a Muslim president would be less likely to aggressively pursue those terrorists.PLAYER57832 wrote:Good of you to catch that.Night Strike wrote:There is no actual proof of that, so why post it trying to give a bad name to those of us who have actual legitimate criticisms of the president?HaireWolf1 wrote:Obama believes in god but to him god is allah...small g
However, the question still remains. What would it matter if he did worship Allah instead of the Christian God? (or considered them the same?)
for the last time, your mistake is simple, you don't listen. You are banned from reading and responding to my posts. seriously, If I am so wrong and incorrect, why do you even waste the time?PLAYER57832 wrote:This is a circular argument, because the fact is that Christianity has been much shaped by the US, by the west, in general. Compare standard US Christianity to Greek Orthodoxy, for example.Phatscotty wrote: We are not a Christian nation in a direct manner, but we were founded on Christian Principles. Without Christianity, we would have very different morals.
Also, many of those things you attribute to Christianity can be found within other religions. In particular, you can see echoes of our constitution within the Iroquois Federation. What truly made the difference was not adherence to Christianity, but the realization that we could live together without agreeing about religion. It began with diversity within Christianity, simply because Christianity was the predominant religion. However, this claim that we are supposed to be only founded upon Christian faith implies that there is no true freedom. And, make no mistake, first comes questioning other religions, next comes narrowly defining what Christianity means. You already fall into that tract, as does jay. You each have more than once either outright stated or implied that I am not fully Christian because my political or economic views differ from your own. That is very dangerous indeed!
Morality does not stem solely from Christianity. That is your mistake. Morality exists regardless of religion, even in atheism.Phatscotty wrote: Our government system was/is based on morality to a certain extent. When society becomes immoral, government becomes immoral. The culture for corruption thrives in this environment.
Simple. A "creator" means "not you." It is in direct opposition to the other dictate that "might makes right." (Or in this case "might makes rights.") These rights can be claimed by people because they can. They weren't given by other people, nor can they be taken away by other people. Like the laws of physics, they simply ARE.Woodruff wrote:I agree absolutely, and yet I do not believe in any "creator". A creator is not at all necessary to believe that certain rights are innate to every person. I honestly don't understand why some individuals believe that the "creator" is so necessary to this argument.

But are they "Christian?"PLAYER57832 wrote:I am, above all else, a Christian. Yet, few things terrify me more than the thought that a particular church's beliefs, even my very own, would be held up as law.
In the Catholic Church, the highest person (other than God) is a woman. She gets that "extra special" honor. (Hyperdulia to be precise)PLAYER57832 wrote:Women are inferior to women... or just "different" (wink, wink)
I really don't want to go here, but in a similiar manner if you flash your wallet around you are "asking for it" if you get your pocket picked. That's why mace is your best friend.PLAYER57832 wrote:Wearing revealing clothing means a woman is "asking for it" and if she gets raped, well... not good, but it is partly her fault.
That's certainly not Catholic teaching.PLAYER57832 wrote:Women who are abused usually have done something to aggravate their husbands. Even in the few cases where that is not the case, it is her role to submit and therefore condemn her husband by her sanctity.
I know a few nuns who would disagree. One set up a TV network when all the bishops tried and failed.PLAYER57832 wrote:Of course women just don't have the skills, are not as talented as men in certain areas [fill in the blank..]
I believe David was singing praises about a black lady back in the Old Testament. My Catholic Church in Key West Florida got burned down (the fire started in the middle of the pipe organ's pipes, if you can believe that) in 1890 because it was not segregated and the KKK didn't like that.PLAYER57832 wrote:Blacks and whites should be separate.. it says so in the Bible.
I pretty sure that there is a quote in the Gospels where Jesus says the Arabic equivalent of "You have got to be kidding me."PLAYER57832 wrote:If your great, great, great, great, grandfather or grandmother was a bastard, then you bear the shame of that sin.

Yet, this does not in any way counter what I said. The Creator is not necessary to recognize rights that are simply inherent to our being human.tzor wrote:Simple. A "creator" means "not you." It is in direct opposition to the other dictate that "might makes right." (Or in this case "might makes rights.") These rights can be claimed by people because they can. They weren't given by other people, nor can they be taken away by other people. Like the laws of physics, they simply ARE.Woodruff wrote:I agree absolutely, and yet I do not believe in any "creator". A creator is not at all necessary to believe that certain rights are innate to every person. I honestly don't understand why some individuals believe that the "creator" is so necessary to this argument.
Yes, but these rights need to pass generations, and stand the test of time, rather, be timeless... If it were not for the Creator, Woodrow Wilson would have lit the match and FDR would have fanned the flames in the torching of the concept of "inalienable" I mean you can just imagine what a full court press from a cherry picked Supreme Court in the early 1930 together with the White House and the media, concerning the word-smithing of "inalienable".Woodruff wrote:Yet, this does not in any way counter what I said. The Creator is not necessary to recognize rights that are simply inherent to our being human.tzor wrote:Simple. A "creator" means "not you." It is in direct opposition to the other dictate that "might makes right." (Or in this case "might makes rights.") These rights can be claimed by people because they can. They weren't given by other people, nor can they be taken away by other people. Like the laws of physics, they simply ARE.Woodruff wrote:I agree absolutely, and yet I do not believe in any "creator". A creator is not at all necessary to believe that certain rights are innate to every person. I honestly don't understand why some individuals believe that the "creator" is so necessary to this argument.
Well, hard to listen on the internet, but I do read.Phatscotty wrote:for the last time, your mistake is simple, you don't listen.PLAYER57832 wrote:This is a circular argument, because the fact is that Christianity has been much shaped by the US, by the west, in general. Compare standard US Christianity to Greek Orthodoxy, for example.Phatscotty wrote: We are not a Christian nation in a direct manner, but we were founded on Christian Principles. Without Christianity, we would have very different morals.
Also, many of those things you attribute to Christianity can be found within other religions. In particular, you can see echoes of our constitution within the Iroquois Federation. What truly made the difference was not adherence to Christianity, but the realization that we could live together without agreeing about religion. It began with diversity within Christianity, simply because Christianity was the predominant religion. However, this claim that we are supposed to be only founded upon Christian faith implies that there is no true freedom. And, make no mistake, first comes questioning other religions, next comes narrowly defining what Christianity means. You already fall into that tract, as does jay. You each have more than once either outright stated or implied that I am not fully Christian because my political or economic views differ from your own. That is very dangerous indeed!
Morality does not stem solely from Christianity. That is your mistake. Morality exists regardless of religion, even in atheism.Phatscotty wrote: Our government system was/is based on morality to a certain extent. When society becomes immoral, government becomes immoral. The culture for corruption thrives in this environment.
Because it was created by The Phat One!Army of GOD wrote:HOW IS THIS THREAD STILL ALIVE
He should've taken the agnostic approach:
""We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by some Creator, which we cannot truly know of, with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.""
WRONG. That is not what I said, as that is NOWHERE close to what I believe.PLAYER57832 wrote:Well, hard to listen on the internet, but I do read.Phatscotty wrote:for the last time, your mistake is simple, you don't listen.PLAYER57832 wrote:This is a circular argument, because the fact is that Christianity has been much shaped by the US, by the west, in general. Compare standard US Christianity to Greek Orthodoxy, for example.Phatscotty wrote: We are not a Christian nation in a direct manner, but we were founded on Christian Principles. Without Christianity, we would have very different morals.
Also, many of those things you attribute to Christianity can be found within other religions. In particular, you can see echoes of our constitution within the Iroquois Federation. What truly made the difference was not adherence to Christianity, but the realization that we could live together without agreeing about religion. It began with diversity within Christianity, simply because Christianity was the predominant religion. However, this claim that we are supposed to be only founded upon Christian faith implies that there is no true freedom. And, make no mistake, first comes questioning other religions, next comes narrowly defining what Christianity means. You already fall into that tract, as does jay. You each have more than once either outright stated or implied that I am not fully Christian because my political or economic views differ from your own. That is very dangerous indeed!
Morality does not stem solely from Christianity. That is your mistake. Morality exists regardless of religion, even in atheism.Phatscotty wrote: Our government system was/is based on morality to a certain extent. When society becomes immoral, government becomes immoral. The culture for corruption thrives in this environment.
You believe that morality comes only from religion. This is just plain wrong. And I am not the only one to say that.
Yes it does, because to explain it otherwise is ... well rather complex. More to the point is the question of why omit it in the first place. There are two answers. The first is that the person is a hard core strong athiest (as opposed to the weak almost agnostic Jefferson) who is deathly afraid of any god cootis. Obama is not that type of person. The second is the self righteous who thinks that his own might is the font of all rights to the lesser ones. (He has become his own creator if only of rights.) This one is more in touch with what Obama really believes, as he is constantly in love with himself.Woodruff wrote:Yet, this does not in any way counter what I said. The Creator is not necessary to recognize rights that are simply inherent to our being human.

First of all, if you want to compare Greek Orthodoxy to any of the Western Christian branches I would be most happy to do that on another thread. But that has a lot to do with West/East divides in attitude. There is a significant development of "freedom of religion" developed in the US that flows back into some elements of Christiantiy in the United States, but that is another topic for another thread.PLAYER57832 wrote:This is a circular argument, because the fact is that Christianity has been much shaped by the US, by the west, in general. Compare standard US Christianity to Greek Orthodoxy, for example.

This presumes, once again, that man cannot have morals or an ethical perspective outside of religion, which is clearly a false conclusion.Phatscotty wrote:Yes, but these rights need to pass generations, and stand the test of time, rather, be timeless... If it were not for the Creator, Woodrow Wilson would have lit the match and FDR would have fanned the flames in the torching of the concept of "inalienable" I mean you can just imagine what a full court press from a cherry picked Supreme Court in the early 1930 together with the White House and the media, concerning the word-smithing of "inalienable".Woodruff wrote:Yet, this does not in any way counter what I said. The Creator is not necessary to recognize rights that are simply inherent to our being human.tzor wrote:Simple. A "creator" means "not you." It is in direct opposition to the other dictate that "might makes right." (Or in this case "might makes rights.") These rights can be claimed by people because they can. They weren't given by other people, nor can they be taken away by other people. Like the laws of physics, they simply ARE.Woodruff wrote:I agree absolutely, and yet I do not believe in any "creator". A creator is not at all necessary to believe that certain rights are innate to every person. I honestly don't understand why some individuals believe that the "creator" is so necessary to this argument.
No sir, it does not. For instance, I am absolutely NOT a "hard core strong atheist"...I am much more along the lines of an agnostic atheist, and very open-minded about it. The ONLY time that I would use that phrase when stating the Declaration is if I were in a school environment of some sort, and then only because I personally believe that as a teacher I am an example in front of my students and so I should be as exact as I can be. But outside of that environment, I personally would not use that phrase, as it is unnecessary.tzor wrote:Yes it does, because to explain it otherwise is ... well rather complex. More to the point is the question of why omit it in the first place. There are two answers. The first is that the person is a hard core strong athiest (as opposed to the weak almost agnostic Jefferson) who is deathly afraid of any god cootis. Obama is not that type of person. The second is the self righteous who thinks that his own might is the font of all rights to the lesser ones. (He has become his own creator if only of rights.) This one is more in touch with what Obama really believes, as he is constantly in love with himself.Woodruff wrote:Yet, this does not in any way counter what I said. The Creator is not necessary to recognize rights that are simply inherent to our being human.
Remember this is the same guy (who also coined the term "separation of church and state" because he didn't want to proclaim a national holiday) who wrote "the God who gave us life gave us liberty at the same time." (Note that "creator" was actually a committee edit, Jefferson originally used "God.")
Thank you for making my point. The politics, many things, even climate , of a region shapes the religion as much as the religion shapes the culture.tzor wrote:First of all, if you want to compare Greek Orthodoxy to any of the Western Christian branches I would be most happy to do that on another thread. But that has a lot to do with West/East divides in attitude. There is a significant development of "freedom of religion" developed in the US that flows back into some elements of Christiantiy in the United States, but that is another topic for another thread.PLAYER57832 wrote:This is a circular argument, because the fact is that Christianity has been much shaped by the US, by the west, in general. Compare standard US Christianity to Greek Orthodoxy, for example.
More over, modern Greek Orthodoxy is based on a large part on a very rocky history and perpetual bashing by generations of Muslim empires. The current seat of original Eastern Orthodoxy in what was known as Constantinople is currently a religion under seige by the Turkish government, forced by complexity of law to die a slow and painful death. Most of the Orthodox (from a Greek derivation) are generally self governing (autoclepheous) and things gets even more complex when the Russian Orthodox are considered.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/blog/ins ... -us-motto/Members of Congress on Monday called on President Obama to issue a public correction after he incorrectly labeled E pluribus unum the U.S.'s motto in a speech last month, rather than "In God We Trust."
The lawmakers, members of the Congressional Prayer Caucus, also said the president was making "a pattern" of dropping the word "Creator" when he recites the self-evident truths of the Declaration of Independence.
well? Look at what it means for all the people who defended Obama on the grounds that it was a 1 time accident?BigBallinStalin wrote:Oh, Phatscotty... always wanting to say the last word in these threads!
hey, "everyone have their works on earth", phatscotty!Phatscotty wrote:well? Look at what it means for all the people who defended Obama on the grounds that it was a 1 time accident?BigBallinStalin wrote:Oh, Phatscotty... always wanting to say the last word in these threads!
I love looking back at what people thought at the time...
It was either this or I start an "Is Obama a Non-theist" pollBigBallinStalin wrote:hey, "everyone have their works on earth", phatscotty!Phatscotty wrote:well? Look at what it means for all the people who defended Obama on the grounds that it was a 1 time accident?BigBallinStalin wrote:Oh, Phatscotty... always wanting to say the last word in these threads!
I love looking back at what people thought at the time...