dartagnan wrote:Did anyone read the Time Magazine article this month?
Are evangelical christians equally Ethical?
dartagnan wrote:Did anyone read the Time Magazine article this month?
Mercury wrote:dartagnan wrote:Did anyone read the Time Magazine article this month?
Are evangelical christians equally Ethical?
Gadianton wrote:There's an interesting article I read a few years ago, not sure if I'm going to be able to dig it up, but it talked about the difference between morality in America and Europe. America has this idea of intimate contact with the poor and downtrodden, personal service in soup kitchens and so on while Europe has a more secular influenced abstract idea of human equality. Which is better? Well, if you're a stranger in America or even a poor American and break your leg, you'll have Coggins and his Christian buddies protesting your treatment on the government's dime. Whereas in Europe, and many other countries, it's just a really weird idea that Americans don't have the basic human value of healthcare for everyone.
Gadianton wrote:I think Europe is far more socially aware than the American religious right, and for that reason, when it comes to providing for the stranger, I would say by leaps and bounds secular or "atheistic" morality does a better job than Christian hit and miss soup kitchens and bread runs to Africa.
cksalmon wrote:Mercury wrote:dartagnan wrote:Did anyone read the Time Magazine article this month?
Are evangelical christians equally Ethical?
Compared to whom? Yes, and no, I'd guess. Again, I think individual comparisons would be more useful than blanket statements (but that's not particularly feasible). But, I don't think we can stereotype entire cross-sections of the population.
CKS
Mercury wrote:cksalmon wrote:Mercury wrote:dartagnan wrote:Did anyone read the Time Magazine article this month?
Are evangelical christians equally Ethical?
Compared to whom? Yes, and no, I'd guess. Again, I think individual comparisons would be more useful than blanket statements (but that's not particularly feasible). But, I don't think we can stereotype entire cross-sections of the population.
CKS
I find the same to be true when one asks for a blanket statements abut atheists.
Coggins7 wrote:When I was a believer I was very concerned about sin.
Yes...
Why?
Religious Indoctrination.
I was worried about me sinning sexually,
Why?
Religious Indoctrination.I was concerned with other people sinning sexually,
Why?
Religious Indoctrination.I was concerned that being gay was a sin.
Why?
Religious indoctrination.All that worrying about sexual sin is gone.
How convenient...
I'm a monogamous, married, heterosexual wife and mother. Not sure what you see as convenient. My point was illustrating how my though processes changed from being consumed with my own behavior to being focused outside what was just happening to me. Much like a person with OCD spends so much time washing their clothes that their house becomes deplorable.For instance I'm not overly fond of cohabitation but at the same time I realize this is not hurting anyone.
So you say...It's not hurting me if a committed couple is living together without being married.
Oh?
Yes, that's right. Do you have any proof that it's hurting me?It's not hurting the world or society.
Oh really?
Yes, that's right. Do you have any proof it's hurting the world?Where I used to feel being gay was a sin I now feel that legislated prejudice against gay people is a sin.
Unless homosexuality is a sin, in which case, any prejudice for it is a sin.
Yeah, but it's not.You are the one who brought up Africa - how much money has this administration put into passing the Marriage Amendment? How much time and effort have been put into making double-safe laws that these committed couples will never have the legal rights that other citizens have? How much good could we have done in Africa with those recourses? No, no, gay couples MUST be stopped at whatever cost. Society as we know it will be destroyed if we don't.
Since "gay" couples who have either any intention or, historically, any ability to form lasting unions is a vanishingly small subset of the whole, what is your point? Gay "marriage" is an artifact of the gay rights movement of the nineties. Before that, one never heard of such a thing because it wasn't a part of the gay subculture at all.
So freaking what. If a tax paying, law abiding citizen wants to marry a person they love who cares when they started asking for it. Women didn't ask for the right to vote till a certain time in history, should women then not have the right to vote?I think there is MORE morals outside of religion. To bring up the gay situation again - there is no legal reason to deny these citizens marriage. None.
There are both legal, moral, philosophical, and theological reasons to deny them precisely this.
And those legal, moral and philosophical reasons would be?????Every single argument I've heard has been religious. Religion makes it impossible to sit down and discuss things rationally and decide to change the rules if necessary.
Nonsense. It is fanatical political ideology that makes it impossible to discuss anything rationally. All religion is not created equal, and the patterns inherent in the core of the great religions are, in fact, the only things that make rational discourse possible at all. To the extent that that religion qua religion is fused with politics, to that extent is it corrupted. The fact of the matter is that there is no substantive intellectual argument for homosexuality that is not anti-religious, and the reason for this is that only in the absence of moral and metaphysical standards does homosexuality stand a chance; only in a relativistic and arbitrary epistemic world can such a mode of life hold its own.
Once again, we're talking about tax paying, law abiding citizens that want the same right as the next tax paying, law abiding citizen. I'm willing to hear your non-religious arguments against it. I stated I have yet to hear one. That is still the case.Religion is very ingrained and flies in the face of reason. Have you noticed what happened this week with the English teacher who allowed her student to name a teddy bear Mohammad? She's lucky she's alive. Over a freaking teady bear.
Did you notice what the atheistic Nazis did to Jews, what communists did to poets, journalists, philosophers, theologians, entrepreneurs, and middle class farmers, and what the ACLU is has been doing to Christians for the last 40 years?
I'm not debating that people are really crappy to other people. I don't see any cure in religion. Funny how when a Christian group kills for religion (like the thousands of women burned at the stake for witchcraft) it's a few misguided people. When a person has no religion and does something crappy it's all the atheists - who don't even meet in groups or have common beliefs. I guess vast generalization are only okay when it's not you being generalized. Unethical behavior is unethical behavior period. This exists outside any of the many religions in the world today.
This level of analysis begs for mercy. Let there be none.