Author Topic: Progressives unseated all 59 Republican judges up for re-election in Houston in the midterms  (Read 14850 times)

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Offline sneakypete

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@sneakypete
No, they were rendered 'unconstitutional' by fiat, after hundreds of years. In fact, the precedent denies the verdict. There is no basis for the decision EXCEPT a reinterpretation. The very same 'penumbras' that Conservatives always abhor.

We are not free. We have (had) liberty.
Liberty has responsibilities.
Freedom has consequences.

We are currently experiencing those consequences.

@roamer_1

I might as well be discussing Islam with a Muslim. The replies I get would be identical.

ANY justification you people can come up with is ok as long as everyone else is forced by law to live according to the brain farts said to be the words of some mystical creature no one has ever seen.
Anyone who isn't paranoid in 2021 just isn't thinking clearly!

Offline libertybele

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So that we wouldn't have another Church of England situation where the head of state is also the head of the church.

That is what the Framers meant by "Congress shall establish no law".


It wasn't put in there to prevent a natavity scene on the front lawn of city hall or a prayer before a football game.

Its quite the opposite...it's there to protect those things...not prevent them.

 :patriot: :amen:
Romans 12:16-21

Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly, do not claim to be wiser than you are.  Do not repay anyone evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.  If it is possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all…do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

Offline libertybele

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@libertybele

These Bible Thumpers are the primary members of the Never Trump Movement. They/you see him as an unrepentant sinner,and nothing he accomplishes while president will ever change your opinions of him.

It just occurred to me that one reason you hate him so much as you see his successes as a threat to the political power of the Religious Right.

??? I don't know what you've been smokin' or drinkin' but I think you need to go back and read my posts ... I have NEVER stated or implied that I hate Trump ... and I'm not going to further defend myself to someone who obviously either didn't read my posts or is just making assumptions.
Romans 12:16-21

Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly, do not claim to be wiser than you are.  Do not repay anyone evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.  If it is possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all…do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

Offline libertybele

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I have wasted my time trying to explain to one who either can't or won't get it. The Republicans will never be the Democrats as long as they support the Constitution and, within those bounds, Social Conservatism, either. Democrats, typical of socialists will always find ways for the more wealthy in their ranks to keep theirs, while stripping the middle class like gleaners and buying votes with the loot. I'm not supporting the Democrats, they're even further down the road to embracing totalitarianism than the GOP, I'm just wondering if there is a Party who supports the Constitution any more.

If you could go back in time and try, how would you make the argument before the Founders that a woman has the "right" to kill her unborn child?
 
How would you make the argument that homosexuals have the right to, with the aid of the State, co-opt the Sacrament of Matrimony and claim to be married?

How would you justify all the social programs that are presented as Robin Hood good deeds of taking from "the rich" (successful) and giving to the "poor" (recall, if  you will, Robin of Loxley robbed tax collectors and gave the money back--less operational expenses, of course. I don't recall an instance of him robbing a merchant).

How would you justify Social Programs which permit and even demand that the State take custody and control of children?--whether or not there is evidence to support any 'abuse', and that often defined by the thinnest of reasoning, supported only by anonymous complaint.

How would you justify the State routinely monitoring all the communications and business of everyone?

That's pretty much it, in a nutshell.   888high58888
Romans 12:16-21

Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly, do not claim to be wiser than you are.  Do not repay anyone evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.  If it is possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all…do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

Offline sneakypete

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??? I don't know what you've been smokin' or drinkin' but I think you need to go back and read my posts ... I have NEVER stated or implied that I hate Trump ... and I'm not going to further defend myself to someone who obviously either didn't read my posts or is just making assumptions.

@libertybele

I don't want to shock you,but the entire internet is NOT about you.
Anyone who isn't paranoid in 2021 just isn't thinking clearly!

Offline Jazzhead

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Actually, most of us "conservatives" are classical liberals as in individual liberty through smaller government. The left has bastardized the terms "liberal" and "conservative". "Liberals" really leftests demand the exact opposite of liberty these days. They demand more government, more taxation, more laws, more adherence to their way or else.

Well said.   But it should not be forgotten that, for some, the social conservative impulse is indistinguishable from leftism - engaging the government to enforce "adherence to their way or else".   
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Offline Jazzhead

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You just described a christian value.

The golden rule is espoused by just about all the world's religions.   And one doesn't need to be religious at all to see the morality and logic behind it and live one's life accordingly.
 
As for me, I voice no objection to "Christian values" whatsoever,  except with respect to such hot button issues like abortion and gay rights, where social conservatives demand that government enforce their particular values at the expense of Constitutional priorities like individual liberty and the equal protection of the law.   
« Last Edit: November 17, 2018, 02:05:49 pm by Jazzhead »
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Offline Dexter

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The golden rule is espoused by just about all the world's religions.

That's because it's a human value. Humanity is good. The idea that humanity as a whole is bad and unworthy is just depressing and wrong in my opinion.
« Last Edit: November 17, 2018, 02:04:40 pm by Dexter »
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Offline Smokin Joe

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Oh bullshit. Look at the founding of Maryland. That'll shut you up.
Right. Like the Protestant Reformation didn't hit MD, too--Like a Cromwell.
How God must weep at humans' folly! Stand fast! God knows what he is doing!
Seventeen Techniques for Truth Suppression

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.

C S Lewis

Offline GrouchoTex

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I have wasted my time trying to explain to one who either can't or won't get it. The Republicans will never be the Democrats as long as they support the Constitution and, within those bounds, Social Conservatism, either. Democrats, typical of socialists will always find ways for the more wealthy in their ranks to keep theirs, while stripping the middle class like gleaners and buying votes with the loot. I'm not supporting the Democrats, they're even further down the road to embracing totalitarianism than the GOP, I'm just wondering if there is a Party who supports the Constitution any more.

If you could go back in time and try, how would you make the argument before the Founders that a woman has the "right" to kill her unborn child?
 
How would you make the argument that homosexuals have the right to, with the aid of the State, co-opt the Sacrament of Matrimony and claim to be married?

How would you justify all the social programs that are presented as Robin Hood good deeds of taking from "the rich" (successful) and giving to the "poor" (recall, if  you will, Robin of Loxley robbed tax collectors and gave the money back--less operational expenses, of course. I don't recall an instance of him robbing a merchant).

How would you justify Social Programs which permit and even demand that the State take custody and control of children?--whether or not there is evidence to support any 'abuse', and that often defined by the thinnest of reasoning, supported only by anonymous complaint.

How would you justify the State routinely monitoring all the communications and business of everyone?

Interesting to me that if a person chooses the not to abort, the child that is born, along with the parents, will be subject, to all the freedom-stifling laws you've mentioned after it.
Government subsidizes or outright pays for the behavior it wants, and taxes or punishes the behavior it does not want.

Offline GrouchoTex

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The golden rule is espoused by just about all the world's religions.   And one doesn't need to be religious at all to see the morality and logic behind it and live one's life accordingly.
 
As for me, I voice no objection to "Christian values" whatsoever,  except with respect to such hot button issues like abortion and gay rights, where social conservatives demand that government enforce their particular values at the expense of Constitutional priorities like individual liberty and the equal protection of the law.

@Jazzhead

I would like just the opposite to be true.

I would not ask the federal government to enforce any particular value, "Christian" or otherwise, to Gay Rights or Abortion, but that these issues are defined by the constitution as a 10th amendment issue, and the individual states decide, or have it ratified through the amendment process, as also written in the constitution.

It is the federal overreach that is my objection, the wholesale abandonment of the 10 amendment, and my objection is not limited to Gay Rights or Abortion.

Online roamer_1

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I would like just the opposite to be true.

I would not ask the federal government to enforce any particular value, "Christian" or otherwise,

Me too.

 :beer:

Offline Smokin Joe

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@Smokin Joe

Joe,nothing personal,but just about every word in your rant above describes perfectly why it is so hard for Republicans to win. The left wants a communist police state,and the right as defined by you want a religious police state.

Either way you end up with a police state,and very few people want that.

The Dims are just better at lying about it. They always seem to be advocating more freedoms and less government control,and in YOUR police state it's always about LESS freedoms and and MORE government control.
Let's get one thing straight, pete. I don't want any damn police state--from either side. Power has always corrupted, no matter how allegedly benevolent it claims to be. How many evils have been perpetrated against people or even whole populations under the assertion it was being done for benevolent purposes?


You may see left/right, Marxist/Capitalist, or any of a dozen spectra, but in government, for me the line, the spectrum of government is not so much what power it exerts, but that it can exert power at all.

The dark side is a totalitarian police state AKA 1984, with some 20th century governments coming close, and others still in play. The more power a government has, the more I don't like it, no matter how benevolent.
The less power a government has, the better ("The government which governs best governs least".)

But the only time NO government is preferable to some government is when your neighbors are distant, honorable,  and do not outnumber you (and don't want your stuff).

Now, you have a definite burr under your saddle over religion, but what better government than a man govern himself?
In this country, no one is gonna whack your head off because you won't hump a rug five times a day pointing your head at some rock in the desert. If you Love Jesus, that's up to you. If you want to worship otherwise, that is a guaranteed Right.

But we do have some rules, oddly enough, rules which were included in the rules other religions have had, rules which generally work in all societies, help keep bloodshed to a minimum, and allow folks the freedom (if widely practiced) to carry on their lives as they see fit without hunting each other down in reprisal.

If someone is bad enough at following those basic rules, one or more people will do what they can/must to not suffer the depredations of someone who won't follow those rules. If the actions of others truly aren't having any effect on other people, then they are generally left alone. That doesn't mean I can't reserve the right to disagree with or disapprove of what they are doing, and it doesn't mean I have to change my worldview to give approval if I disagree. It only stands to reason that If I don't want to be compelled to believe something, I can't compel someone else to do so either.
A society is just a bunch of people who agree about most things, about rules, and what conventions they will or will not agree (and thus give power) to. History is rife with cultures which self-destruct, and the means by which (if honestly examined) are usually the same: either a breakdown in those social conventions, or poor choices of social conventions to begin with. We don't agree murder is a good idea, so we prohibit it. We don't consider it murder, generally, to execute those who have committed crimes so heinous we wouldn't want them in the general population (same reason we have prisons). But I find it incongrous that if someone took an axe and chopped up a 6 month old baby we'd likely give them 'the needle', but yet some demand the "right" for women to choose to have the same done to a baby within their womb that is only 6 months in development. In a living room, it would be a crime scene, in a uterus, it's a "choice". (What greater way to control a people than to convince them it is okay to execute their children, those who are the only 'innocents' in the cast of characters surrounding that murder.) YMMV, but that's how I see it. All religion aside, it isn't right.

What you don't seem to get about Religion, and especially Christianity (properly practiced) is that the rules of Christianity are a matter of choice, not imposition. You choose to believe these rules are good, that they work for you, that you sleep better at night, are healthier, happier, etc. --or you don't. You choose to follow them--or you don't.
The only time Jesus unloaded a can of whoop-ass was chasing the money changers out of the Temple. If I walked into my father's house and saw some bunch had turned it into a tourist trap, likely I'd have a similar reaction.
But the Son of God who had calmed a storm at sea, made the blind to see, the lame walk, and raised a man from the dead would be theoretically capable of calling down fire and brimstone from the heavens, but didn't.
The whole human thing, from Adam and Eve, has been a matter of choice on the part of the humans, not compulsion. The Almighty let humans make their choices from the Tree in the Garden on--and suffer the consequences, and only intervened directly to express His distaste for what was going on by kicking them out of The Garden, with the Flood, and the destruction of a couple of cities. Almost all other human misery was the product of them not listening to what amounts to good advice, the natural result of choosing badly.

A careful examination of history of religions reveals that whenever that religion is abused to justify theft of other people's stuff (including land and resources), enslavement, or slaughter, religion is only a thin veil cast over the greed of someone else, or even someone directly involved with the religion, to take, enslave, or manipulate, for fun and, of course, profit. Often, the most reprehensible and bloody acts undertaken in the name of god (not capitalized because many gods have been thus named in the course of human history), are undertaken to clinch or retain power, not for God, (capitalized) who already can do or have whatever He wants, but for the person calling the shots--someone who might claim to speak for God, but who have their own interests in the forefront.

If The Almighty is already fully capable of wiping the enclaves of what He objects to off the map, (there are a couple of examples which come to mind), then He can do this any time He so chooses, He does not need for me to do that. He is fully capable of any punishment on anyone He chooses, no police state necessary. It is only the most objectionable acts which compel societies to make rules about what they are willing to tolerate (in the way of behaviour) in their midst, and likely the idea of having your stuff stolen, your daughter raped, your labor compelled, and other such things would not go over well regardless of the presence of Christianity, Judaism, or any other religion--or even the absence thereof. But religion presents its adherents with ready-made sets of rules for living in a culture, not perfect rules, often waved about and selectively enforced by the vipers who seek power, but which if properly and humbly practiced produce a culture that can get along. That's the reason, that despite numerous failures in earthly leadership along the way, those religions and the cultures which embrace them have survived for millennia. At the base level, those who really practice what they preach get along well enough to pass that set of beliefs and standards on.
As for defending my right to believe in Him, though, that is a human to human problem, and a Right worthy of defense against those who would impose their beliefs on me, who just wants the freedom to choose what I will believe.
Consider:
My ancestors left their homeland to believe as they would, for that freedom, and helped establish a colony on these shores based on the freedom to worship as one chose. As Catholics, they were already persecuted back home, and here they found that freedom. Of course, if you are going to have true freedom of worship, you have to let in people of other beliefs, or it isn't real freedom, just the freedom to do it your way.
So they let in people of other faiths as well. By the time the Colony was 100 years old, Priests were being hunted (literally) by the purveyors of the Protestant Reformation--one such sold himself to my ancestor, and as a slave enjoyed the protection of being property of the Manor Lord, untouchable without the Manor Lord's protection. He later purchased his own freedom when things had settled down. Now, was that Reformation, the looting of monasteries and burning of libraries in England under Cromwell, an offshoot of the desire for Henry Tudor to retain POWER by being able to present a legitimate heir, which apparently he thought required a different wife (repeatedly) or any of a number of sackings and lootings (including the Templars) conducted for any other reason than an excuse to steal wealth and acquire power? Where did Jesus ever say to do that???

The bit about "Thou Shalt not suffer a witch to live" came from Exodus, not Jesus' teachings in the New Testament, and even the thingy about putting those who had sex with animals to death came from that same set of rules.   Here, the Christians get blamed for what the Jews wrote down. How funny is that? Or is it because some scribe came up with an angle by which the destruction of people the Crown/Prince/Nobles/bankers/Clergy considered a threat could be removed from the equation by asserting their will was the "Will of God"? A situation where even the accusation of such perfidy could result in being stripped of title and assets and burned at the stake?

Everyone asserts during a war that "Gott mit uns". But someone wins and someone loses--and sometimes the winners leave you wondering what god they worship.
In the end, it is not the religion as a rule (especially where Christianity is involved) but the corruption of individuals by the power represented in using that religion (including Christianity) to control others,  even though there is no call in Christianity to do so. (In fact, Christians are admonished to 'test the spirits' in the sense that every Christian is called upon to be knowledgeable in scripture, and to weigh that which they are told against what is proposed as a safeguard against False Prophets and abusers of scripture. That doesn't always work in practice, obviously, whether that failing is from people imposing their desires on the words or just ignorance, at some point when it goes astray there is something in it for them.) I don't have a dog in that fight, except I don't like the idea of my culture sanctioning the murder of innocents, and I'm not exactly ecstatic about someone calling a union as productive as marrying a rock and a tree "marriage" with the expectation of the full faith and credit given to a marriage capable of producing progeny and the next generation. 
But the closest the Christian gets is the idea that you don't hang with people who are determined to live badly and you don't embrace those bad choices--especially the very choices you were warned about. You disapprove of then, you admonish their practitioners among you, you advise them otherwise, you can even indoctrinate them from an early age, but you can't FORCE someone to believe. You leave them to their own devices and in the hands of The Almighty. It's simple as that.
If you read the book, you'll find no one was killed by those following Jesus or his teachings, not while He was around. Some were killed for following those teachings, even more so for spreading them, because they were a definite threat to the power of a Roman emperor who was ready to declare himself divine.

In fact, if you follow the rivers of blood which carve the history of nations upstream, you will find at their source a man, woman, or small group who use every means at their disposal (and religion is often thus used) to motivate others to do the dirty work which gives them more wealth and power.
None of those leaders are/were  hanging out at the waterfront with the fishermen (except for a photo op), they're in opulent palaces trimmed with marble and gold. They pay lip service to this or that, but in the end, they're all the same. They want to be on top of the heap, they want wealth and the power to keep or enhance that, they will eliminate any threat to those ends, not by the goodness or kindness of their hearts, but at the point of a weapon and standing on the dead bodies of those who they feel are a threat.

We were perhaps the most fortunate people in history to have a group of founders who understood full well human nature, who had, at least in one instance turned down being King, who desired to leave as a legacy a society which afforded to others the Rights to worship (or not) as one chose, and which valued a host of other Rights to property, belief, personal security, and ultimately the security of those freedoms. They were not perfect, but their guiding philosophies sprang from the very idea that we all stand equal before Our Creator and that no man has the Right to infringe upon the very Rights Our Creator has endowed us with. In human history that is rare indeed.

Like I said, they were not perfect, there were unresolved issues, but it was the closest anyone has come, and was inspired by the philosophies with which they were well familiar, derived from Christian thinkers and thought.

Definitely not a totalitarian state, and I would bleed alongside you to prevent such.
How God must weep at humans' folly! Stand fast! God knows what he is doing!
Seventeen Techniques for Truth Suppression

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.

C S Lewis

Offline txradioguy

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Let's get one thing straight, pete. I don't want any damn police state--from either side. Power has always corrupted, no matter how allegedly benevolent it claims to be. How many evils have been perpetrated against people or even whole populations under the assertion it was being done for benevolent purposes?


You may see left/right, Marxist/Capitalist, or any of a dozen spectra, but in government, for me the line, the spectrum of government is not so much what power it exerts, but that it can exert power at all.

The dark side is a totalitarian police state AKA 1984, with some 20th century governments coming close, and others still in play. The more power a government has, the more I don't like it, no matter how benevolent.
The less power a government has, the better ("The government which governs best governs least".)

But the only time NO government is preferable to some government is when your neighbors are distant, honorable,  and do not outnumber you (and don't want your stuff).

Now, you have a definite burr under your saddle over religion, but what better government than a man govern himself?
In this country, no one is gonna whack your head off because you won't hump a rug five times a day pointing your head at some rock in the desert. If you Love Jesus, that's up to you. If you want to worship otherwise, that is a guaranteed Right.

But we do have some rules, oddly enough, rules which were included in the rules other religions have had, rules which generally work in all societies, help keep bloodshed to a minimum, and allow folks the freedom (if widely practiced) to carry on their lives as they see fit without hunting each other down in reprisal.

If someone is bad enough at following those basic rules, one or more people will do what they can/must to not suffer the depredations of someone who won't follow those rules. If the actions of others truly aren't having any effect on other people, then they are generally left alone. That doesn't mean I can't reserve the right to disagree with or disapprove of what they are doing, and it doesn't mean I have to change my worldview to give approval if I disagree. It only stands to reason that If I don't want to be compelled to believe something, I can't compel someone else to do so either.
A society is just a bunch of people who agree about most things, about rules, and what conventions they will or will not agree (and thus give power) to. History is rife with cultures which self-destruct, and the means by which (if honestly examined) are usually the same: either a breakdown in those social conventions, or poor choices of social conventions to begin with. We don't agree murder is a good idea, so we prohibit it. We don't consider it murder, generally, to execute those who have committed crimes so heinous we wouldn't want them in the general population (same reason we have prisons). But I find it incongrous that if someone took an axe and chopped up a 6 month old baby we'd likely give them 'the needle', but yet some demand the "right" for women to choose to have the same done to a baby within their womb that is only 6 months in development. In a living room, it would be a crime scene, in a uterus, it's a "choice". (What greater way to control a people than to convince them it is okay to execute their children, those who are the only 'innocents' in the cast of characters surrounding that murder.) YMMV, but that's how I see it. All religion aside, it isn't right.

What you don't seem to get about Religion, and especially Christianity (properly practiced) is that the rules of Christianity are a matter of choice, not imposition. You choose to believe these rules are good, that they work for you, that you sleep better at night, are healthier, happier, etc. --or you don't. You choose to follow them--or you don't.
The only time Jesus unloaded a can of whoop-ass was chasing the money changers out of the Temple. If I walked into my father's house and saw some bunch had turned it into a tourist trap, likely I'd have a similar reaction.
But the Son of God who had calmed a storm at sea, made the blind to see, the lame walk, and raised a man from the dead would be theoretically capable of calling down fire and brimstone from the heavens, but didn't.
The whole human thing, from Adam and Eve, has been a matter of choice on the part of the humans, not compulsion. The Almighty let humans make their choices from the Tree in the Garden on--and suffer the consequences, and only intervened directly to express His distaste for what was going on by kicking them out of The Garden, with the Flood, and the destruction of a couple of cities. Almost all other human misery was the product of them not listening to what amounts to good advice, the natural result of choosing badly.

A careful examination of history of religions reveals that whenever that religion is abused to justify theft of other people's stuff (including land and resources), enslavement, or slaughter, religion is only a thin veil cast over the greed of someone else, or even someone directly involved with the religion, to take, enslave, or manipulate, for fun and, of course, profit. Often, the most reprehensible and bloody acts undertaken in the name of god (not capitalized because many gods have been thus named in the course of human history), are undertaken to clinch or retain power, not for God, (capitalized) who already can do or have whatever He wants, but for the person calling the shots--someone who might claim to speak for God, but who have their own interests in the forefront.

If The Almighty is already fully capable of wiping the enclaves of what He objects to off the map, (there are a couple of examples which come to mind), then He can do this any time He so chooses, He does not need for me to do that. He is fully capable of any punishment on anyone He chooses, no police state necessary. It is only the most objectionable acts which compel societies to make rules about what they are willing to tolerate (in the way of behaviour) in their midst, and likely the idea of having your stuff stolen, your daughter raped, your labor compelled, and other such things would not go over well regardless of the presence of Christianity, Judaism, or any other religion--or even the absence thereof. But religion presents its adherents with ready-made sets of rules for living in a culture, not perfect rules, often waved about and selectively enforced by the vipers who seek power, but which if properly and humbly practiced produce a culture that can get along. That's the reason, that despite numerous failures in earthly leadership along the way, those religions and the cultures which embrace them have survived for millennia. At the base level, those who really practice what they preach get along well enough to pass that set of beliefs and standards on.
As for defending my right to believe in Him, though, that is a human to human problem, and a Right worthy of defense against those who would impose their beliefs on me, who just wants the freedom to choose what I will believe.
Consider:
My ancestors left their homeland to believe as they would, for that freedom, and helped establish a colony on these shores based on the freedom to worship as one chose. As Catholics, they were already persecuted back home, and here they found that freedom. Of course, if you are going to have true freedom of worship, you have to let in people of other beliefs, or it isn't real freedom, just the freedom to do it your way.
So they let in people of other faiths as well. By the time the Colony was 100 years old, Priests were being hunted (literally) by the purveyors of the Protestant Reformation--one such sold himself to my ancestor, and as a slave enjoyed the protection of being property of the Manor Lord, untouchable without the Manor Lord's protection. He later purchased his own freedom when things had settled down. Now, was that Reformation, the looting of monasteries and burning of libraries in England under Cromwell, an offshoot of the desire for Henry Tudor to retain POWER by being able to present a legitimate heir, which apparently he thought required a different wife (repeatedly) or any of a number of sackings and lootings (including the Templars) conducted for any other reason than an excuse to steal wealth and acquire power? Where did Jesus ever say to do that???

The bit about "Thou Shalt not suffer a witch to live" came from Exodus, not Jesus' teachings in the New Testament, and even the thingy about putting those who had sex with animals to death came from that same set of rules.   Here, the Christians get blamed for what the Jews wrote down. How funny is that? Or is it because some scribe came up with an angle by which the destruction of people the Crown/Prince/Nobles/bankers/Clergy considered a threat could be removed from the equation by asserting their will was the "Will of God"? A situation where even the accusation of such perfidy could result in being stripped of title and assets and burned at the stake?

Everyone asserts during a war that "Gott mit uns". But someone wins and someone loses--and sometimes the winners leave you wondering what god they worship.
In the end, it is not the religion as a rule (especially where Christianity is involved) but the corruption of individuals by the power represented in using that religion (including Christianity) to control others,  even though there is no call in Christianity to do so. (In fact, Christians are admonished to 'test the spirits' in the sense that every Christian is called upon to be knowledgeable in scripture, and to weigh that which they are told against what is proposed as a safeguard against False Prophets and abusers of scripture. That doesn't always work in practice, obviously, whether that failing is from people imposing their desires on the words or just ignorance, at some point when it goes astray there is something in it for them.) I don't have a dog in that fight, except I don't like the idea of my culture sanctioning the murder of innocents, and I'm not exactly ecstatic about someone calling a union as productive as marrying a rock and a tree "marriage" with the expectation of the full faith and credit given to a marriage capable of producing progeny and the next generation. 
But the closest the Christian gets is the idea that you don't hang with people who are determined to live badly and you don't embrace those bad choices--especially the very choices you were warned about. You disapprove of then, you admonish their practitioners among you, you advise them otherwise, you can even indoctrinate them from an early age, but you can't FORCE someone to believe. You leave them to their own devices and in the hands of The Almighty. It's simple as that.
If you read the book, you'll find no one was killed by those following Jesus or his teachings, not while He was around. Some were killed for following those teachings, even more so for spreading them, because they were a definite threat to the power of a Roman emperor who was ready to declare himself divine.

In fact, if you follow the rivers of blood which carve the history of nations upstream, you will find at their source a man, woman, or small group who use every means at their disposal (and religion is often thus used) to motivate others to do the dirty work which gives them more wealth and power.
None of those leaders are/were  hanging out at the waterfront with the fishermen (except for a photo op), they're in opulent palaces trimmed with marble and gold. They pay lip service to this or that, but in the end, they're all the same. They want to be on top of the heap, they want wealth and the power to keep or enhance that, they will eliminate any threat to those ends, not by the goodness or kindness of their hearts, but at the point of a weapon and standing on the dead bodies of those who they feel are a threat.

We were perhaps the most fortunate people in history to have a group of founders who understood full well human nature, who had, at least in one instance turned down being King, who desired to leave as a legacy a society which afforded to others the Rights to worship (or not) as one chose, and which valued a host of other Rights to property, belief, personal security, and ultimately the security of those freedoms. They were not perfect, but their guiding philosophies sprang from the very idea that we all stand equal before Our Creator and that no man has the Right to infringe upon the very Rights Our Creator has endowed us with. In human history that is rare indeed.

Like I said, they were not perfect, there were unresolved issues, but it was the closest anyone has come, and was inspired by the philosophies with which they were well familiar, derived from Christian thinkers and thought.

Definitely not a totalitarian state, and I would bleed alongside you to prevent such.

@Smokin Joe

Our freaking standing!
The libs/dems of today are the Quislings of former years. The cowards who would vote a fraud into office in exchange for handouts from the devil.

Here lies in honored glory an American soldier, known but to God

THE ESTABLISHMENT IS THE PROBLEM...NOT THE SOLUTION

Republicans Don't Need A Back Bench...They Need a BACKBONE!

Offline txradioguy

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That's because it's a human value. Humanity is good.

And how do you think humans got the idea for "humanity" as you put it?

Where do you think they got the idea to love their fellow man and treat others as they would want to be treated?



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The idea that humanity as a whole is bad and unworthy is just depressing and wrong in my opinion.

Look at the countries where religion and religious beliefs are cast aside like you want for our country...then tell me how "humane" they are.

There is a connection between Christianity...the values it espouses and this country and why we are the only one who does things like we do them and have lasted for so long.
The libs/dems of today are the Quislings of former years. The cowards who would vote a fraud into office in exchange for handouts from the devil.

Here lies in honored glory an American soldier, known but to God

THE ESTABLISHMENT IS THE PROBLEM...NOT THE SOLUTION

Republicans Don't Need A Back Bench...They Need a BACKBONE!

Offline Dexter

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And how do you think humans got the idea for "humanity" as you put it?

Where do you think they got the idea to love their fellow man and treat others as they would want to be treated?



Look at the countries where religion and religious beliefs are cast aside like you want for our country...then tell me how "humane" they are.

There is a connection between Christianity...the values it espouses and this country and why we are the only one who does things like we do them and have lasted for so long.

I don't believe Christianity invented good. People were capable of good long before Christianity. We're slowly becoming more and more civilized as the good in humanity gains dominance over the bad. Good will win in the end because at its core humanity is good.
« Last Edit: November 17, 2018, 08:48:30 pm by Dexter »
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I don't believe Christianity invented good. People were capable of good long before Christianity. We're slowly becoming more and more civilized as the good in humanity gains dominance over the bad. Good will win in the end because at its core humanity is good.

As I said before... Those that do not know history are doomed to repeat it.