you may not believe this--in fact, youre very likely going to reject it out of hand--but there's an equally good chance that people concerned about the incessant attempts to erode the wall of separation are motivated by trying to protect (that's right...protect) the rights of those who permit their enthusiam for their particular sect to blind them to the dangers inherent in government entanglement with religion to any degree, even by default or implication. what may appear benign today can very easily become malignant tomorrow.
That, Danny, is EXACTLY the problem. Too many of us don't want to get involved, because we think someone else will do it. We ALL need to stand up and make our voices heard...since we are the majority in this country, we need to start acting like it, instead of letting other people drive us and our beliefs underground. We do NOT have to hide what we believe, nor should anyone in this country....and if you DON'T believe in a higher power, then by all means, feel free to tell us that, as well. THAT'S the beauty of living in a free country!!
To me, denying it to all makes the most sense. However, in many cases recently, that is not what is happening....any song referencing "Christmas" is banned, but songs about Hanukkah and Kwanzaa can be sung.....Nativity scenes are not allowed, but menorahs are. Do you see the point...85% of the population of our country is being told that their beliefs can't be sung about or displayed in schools, but that OTHER people's can.
First, the 85% are people who claim their religion to be "Christian". Jehovah Witnesses are sometimes considered Christian, but actually aren't (they pray directly to God) as do a few other religions. Saying that Christians are generally good people is a poor blanket statement. Go to the prisons and see how many Christians you meet. People try to correlate Christianity with ethics, but it's simply not the case. And, that statement would also hint that non-christians are not typically good people. Ethics and morality are not tied to religion. You could argue that church going Christians are typically good, but even that wouldn't hold water- a lot of the inner city youth attend church regularly, but still end up in jail for crime.
Buddhism is not actually a religion. They also do not believe in a single God.
If people really wanted to end this, all they would have to do is adopt a definition for a federal God. We'll call it the "giver of life". If you don't believe in the Christian God, or another "God" at least you can believe in the sun (without it there would be no life) and call it God.....Oh, wait, then you would run the risk of being called "pagan"
I'm not Christian, but aI also don't have a problem with Christian beliefs or having "God" and "Christmas" celebrated (I like my pagan tree just as much as the next person). However, I am in the minority of the minority in being "OK" with that. You see this reverse action all the time. People want "equality" even when it doesn't make sense. And, sometimes, people see "equality" as having to be "better". For instance, can you imagine if a started a "white pride" day? What about a "Straight" parade? I would be accused of being racist for the first and being filled with hate for the second. Religion is getting to be the same way. I don't believe that 85% of the country is *really* Christian. However, if you listen to the media, you would think it's only about 50%. This is the same media that would like you to believe that 20% of the people are also gay.
i dont think thats the case, and id be very interested if you could provide details.
you just earned yourself an insightful with that. too true.
The policy of the 1,200 New York City public schools is that no purely religious symbols are allowed, only ones that have a “secular dimension,” such as Christmas trees, menorahs, and the star and crescent. But the star and crescent is hardly secular. It is the symbol of Islam. And the menorah, though now losing some of its religious significance, is the symbol of an intervention by God to save the Jewish people. The Thomas More Law Center filed suit on behalf of a Roman Catholic mother of two public-school students, saying, in effect, that if the city’s public schools are allowing brief and educational use of religious symbols for Muslims and Jews, then the Christian crèche should be permitted, too. Last February, U.S. District Judge Charles Sifton ruled for the school system. The case is under appeal. The crèche, for now, remains banned. Like New York’s schools, Bay Harbor Islands in Florida refuses to allow a Nativity scene on public property but has menorahs and the Star of David on lampposts and permitted a local synagogue to erect a 14-foot-high menorah on public land.
The South Orange/Maplewood, N.J., school district banned religious Christmas songs, even in instrumental versions. In Florida, an elementary school concert included songs about Hanukkah and Kwanzaa but offered not a single note of Christmas music. A recent winter parade in Denver looked very much like a Christmas event, except for one small thing: Every reference to Christmas was banned. Unless believers and religious-liberties groups begin to push back, the anti-Christmas trend will prevail in the public square.
These events have all been reported by the national media, not just by "certain conservative opinion shows."
beat me to it independent1. responded to it in more detail than i was prepared to do (altho i did see an interview with the mayor of bay harbor island, fl earlier tonite) but to the same end.
as far as the secular nature of the crescent/star and mogen david (hexagram), both are graphic elements of national flags. the creche is definitely not secular. merchants in denver--or anywhere else--are under no legal constraint against displaying whatever the market will bear. there's no issue for a court to decide of which im aware. although i have run across complaints about restrictions at public schools regarding carols, it would appear there are plenty of non-sectarian substitutes for the christian ones. im not sure what is sung to celebrate the other winter religious holidays.