Keeping Religious Zealots Out of Power

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_Ray A

Post by _Ray A »

Hally McIlrath wrote:
I would sit out in the hall waiting my turn, trembling and feeling sick to my stomach. I had to sit in a small room with the door closed, with a man I didn't really know, and talk about my worthiness, when I was frightened of him, and felt unworthy to even be alive.

Where is compassion, and peace, and love, and mercy, in a teaching that says a person should die? I ask you, Gaz. I'm almost begging you. Please tell me.

Because all I've ever known from that teaching is fear.


And if Gaz was your bishop......................
_richardMdBorn
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Post by _richardMdBorn »

Hi Roger,

Here's a post by Mark Steyn
MARK STEYN | January 17, 2008 |

Because I've always been opposed to "human rights" commissions in theory (I like proper courts with things like "due process"), I failed to appreciate until Maclean's present predicament how much worse they are in practice. These commissions were supposedly intended to investigate discrimination in housing and the like, but then came the very poorly drafted Section XIII, which makes it a crime to communicate anything electronically "likely to expose a person or persons to hatred or contempt." "Likely," eh? What does that mean? Well, according to the key determination, subsequently endorsed by the Supreme Court, in Canadian legalese "likely" now means "highly unlikely." That's to say, notwithstanding the absence of any evidence by the plaintiffs of anyone at all ever having been exposed to actual hatred or contempt, nor even any coherent argument as to why there is a hypothetical possibility of someone unspecified being exposed to theoretical hatred or contempt in the decades ahead, a commission can still deem such hatred or contempt "likely."

In the three decades of the Canadian "Human Rights" Tribunal's existence, not a single "defendant" has been "acquitted." Would you bet on Maclean's bucking this spectacular 100 per cent conviction rate? "Sentence first, verdict afterwards," declares the queen in Alice In Wonderland. Canada's not quite there yet, but at the Human Rights Commission, it's "Verdict first, trial afterwards." So I'm guilty and Ken Whyte's guilty and Maclean's is guilty because that's the only verdict there is.

Continued Below

Who has availed themselves of the "human rights" protected by Section XIII? In its entire history, over half of all cases have been brought by a sole "complainant," one Richard Warman. Indeed, Mr. Warman has been a plaintiff on every single Section XIII case before the federal "human rights" star chamber since 2002 — and he's won every one. That would suggest that no man in any free society anywhere on the planet has been so comprehensively deprived of his human rights. Well, no. Mr. Warman doesn't have to demonstrate that he's been deprived of his human rights, only that it's "likely" (i.e. "highly un-") that someone somewhere will be deprived of some right sometime. Who is Richard Warman? What's his story? Well, he's a former employee of the Canadian Human Rights Commission: an investigator. Same as Shirlene McGovern.

Isn't there something a little odd in a supposedly necessary Canadian federal "human rights" system used all but exclusively by one lone Canadian who served as a long-time employee of that system? Why should Richard Warman be the only citizen to have his own personal inquisition? You can hardly blame the Canadian Islamic Congress and the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada and no doubt the Supreme All-Powerful Islamic Executive Council of Swift Current, Sask., for now figuring they'd like a piece of the human rights action.

In a free society, justice must not only be done, but must be seen to be done. And when you see what's being done at the CHRC it's hard not to conclude that the genius of the English legal system — the balance between prosecutor, judge, and jury — has been all but destroyed. The American website Pundita has a sharp analysis of Section XIII, comparing it to Philip K. Dick's sci-fi novel The Minority Report, set in a world in which citizens can be sentenced for "pre-crime" — for criminal acts which have not occurred but are "likely" to. Who needs futuristic novels when we're living it here and now in one of the oldest constitutional democracies on the planet? What kind of countries have tribunals with 100 per cent conviction rates that replace the presumption of innocence with the presumption of guilt and in which truth is not only no defence but compelling evidence of that guilt? Consider this statement, part of the criteria by which the star chamber determines when a Section XIII crime has occurred. What does it look for as evidence?

"Messages that make use of allegedly true stories, news reports, pictures and references to apparently reputable sources in an attempt to lend an air of objectivity and truthfulness to the extremely negative characterization of the targeted group have been found to be likely to expose members of the targeted group to hatred and contempt."
http://www.macleans.ca/canada/opinions/article.jsp?content=20080117_24131_24131&page=2
_Gazelam
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Post by _Gazelam »

Ray,

So if you were a bishop, and a member confessed to sexual molestation of a minor, as in the case of Elder George P. Lee, he should be sent before Utah firing squad?


Wihout a second thought.

Did the Prophets recommend the execution of George P. Lee?


they excommunicated them. But in a theocracy I doubt this would be the case.
Last edited by Steeler [Crawler] on Mon Jul 28, 2008 11:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. - Plato
_Ray A

Post by _Ray A »

Gazelam wrote:Ray,

So if you were a bishop, and a member confessed to sexual molestation of a minor, as in the case of Elder George P. Lee, he should be sent before Utah firing squad?


Wihout a second thought.


Do you also believe that adulterers should be executed? Or life imprisonment?
_Gazelam
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Post by _Gazelam »

Ray A wrote:
Gazelam wrote:Ray,

So if you were a bishop, and a member confessed to sexual molestation of a minor, as in the case of Elder George P. Lee, he should be sent before Utah firing squad?


Wihout a second thought.


Do you also believe that adulterers should be executed? Or life imprisonment?


Excommunication. Banishment.
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. - Plato
_Ray A

Post by _Ray A »

Gazelam wrote:Excommunication. Banishment.


How then can it be described as a "court of love", an attempt to rehabilitate a person? "Banishment" doesn't seemed to be a particularly merciful term.

But I was initially talking about civil jurisdictions, not ecclesiastical: Do you believe that adulterers should be executed. Or life imprisonment?
_Gazelam
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Post by _Gazelam »

Ray A wrote:
Gazelam wrote:Excommunication. Banishment.


How then can it be described as a "court of love", an attempt to rehabilitate a person? "Banishment" doesn't seemed to be a particularly merciful term.

But I was initially talking about civil jurisdictions, not ecclesiastical: Do you believe that adulterers should be executed. Or life imprisonment?


I think there are various circumstances involved. Under a theocracy I think they would be excecuted.

Here and now today? Are they repentant? Their chances for exaltation are gone forever. I myself would never want to see the individual again.
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. - Plato
_Hally McIlrath
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Post by _Hally McIlrath »

Gazelam wrote:Ray,

So if you were a bishop, and a member confessed to sexual molestation of a minor, as in the case of Elder George P. Lee, he should be sent before Utah firing squad?


Wihout a second thought.




Do you know, if they killed the man that did that to me, I would actually feel worse? I would feel as if I caused his death, that his death was on my hands.

I don't know if you really understand the nature of guilt, Gaz. I don't know if you can understand what happens inside the mind of someone who is hurt, how they turn that guilt upon themselves, rather than turning it into outward anger. And I'm so tired of trying to articulate these things to you, when it feels like it is impossible for me to put emotion into words, and it feels futile that you'll even listen to me and see what I'm trying to say.

There has to come a time when the killing stops. I don't know if you can see this or not, but when you decide to wipe out and annihilate everything and everyone that you don't agree with, you actually become the very kind of horror that you are trying to protect the world against. You actually become the intolerance, and death, and vigilante justice that your Mormon ancestors fled in horror from, only this time, you enact it upon someone else.

I think that is why your scriptures mention mercy so many times. It is mercy to stop, lay down the weapon, and forgive. Mercy is bigger than the vicious surging want to kill, and your God asks it of you, for that reason.
_Ray A

Post by _Ray A »

Gazelam wrote:
I think there are various circumstances involved. Under a theocracy I think they would be excecuted.

Here and now today? Are they repentant? Their chances for exaltation are gone forever. I myself would never want to see the individual again.


I'm only trying to ascertain your views, Gaz, and you've made them clear. Do you feel that your view that "I myself would never want to see the individual again", is in harmony with what the Book of Mormon teaches?
If so, can you point me to some verses?
_asbestosman
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Post by _asbestosman »

Gazelam wrote:
Ray A wrote:
Gazelam wrote:Excommunication. Banishment.


How then can it be described as a "court of love", an attempt to rehabilitate a person? "Banishment" doesn't seemed to be a particularly merciful term.

But I was initially talking about civil jurisdictions, not ecclesiastical: Do you believe that adulterers should be executed. Or life imprisonment?


I think there are various circumstances involved. Under a theocracy I think they would be excecuted.

Here and now today? Are they repentant? Their chances for exaltation are gone forever.

Chances of exaltation are gone forever? CFR that adultery is the unpardonable sin.

I agree that chastity is important. I do not see anywhere that unchastity is the unpardonable sin.
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