Originally posted by Zodiac
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Atheist Teen Gets 49 Year Old Prayer Banner Removed From School: Receives Threats
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Best regards,
Maria
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Originally posted by Errata View Postthey were Jews, thus headed for torture chambers of the Inquisition. Or the death camps in Poland.
Something tells me that the way this thread is gonna turn up, it'll soon look like there are Christians and lions out there...Best regards,
Maria
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Originally posted by mariab View PostIncidentally Errata, the nazis were atheists.
The nazis were, like any political party, comprised of a variety of people of a variety of faiths. Except one notable religious exception of course.
Let all Oz be agreed;
I need a better class of flying monkeys.
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostIf public prayer is so 'inappropriate' these days, then why did it work so well for long before becoming 'inappropriate'? The powers that be started giving in to uppity special interest groups generations ago, and now it's fully out of hand.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
How precisely did it "work well"? I mean really, what is your yardstick for it working? Did all the kiddies pass school? Did no one fail? Did all the children behave and no one had to go to the principal? Did everyone learn to read and write and do their algebra?
How precisely did the prayer "work" much less "work well"?
Let all Oz be agreed;
I need a better class of flying monkeys.
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Originally posted by Ally View PostOf course the Nazis were atheists. That's why some of their official insignia bore the slogan "God is with us". That's why Hitler made many public speeches condemning atheism.
Don't get me wrong here Ally, I'm an atheist myself at 100%, and this since I was a wee little kid.Best regards,
Maria
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Uh no. You don't get to claim that it's a generic slogan. People who are atheists don't put generic slogans honoring a GOD they don't actually believe in on their insignia. That's just weak thinking to rationalize.
The nazis were not atheists. They were a political party, that contained members of various religions. That's like saying the Republicans are atheist because their primary philosophy is Capitalism. Ones political ideology is not at all a ipso facto for their religious leanings. And the Nazis were not even primarily inspired by Nietzsche philosophy as a whole. Like any group of politicians they selectively picked out the bits that they liked while discarding the parts that didn't fit their goal. They conveniently discarded all of Nietzsche's disdain for anti-semitism and also for nationalism. Because that part doesn't fit their agenda. So no, their PRIMARY philosophy was not Nietzschean . It was one word, picked from a whole of Nietzschean thought and twisted to their own ends.Last edited by Ally; 02-06-2012, 04:38 PM.
Let all Oz be agreed;
I need a better class of flying monkeys.
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostIf public prayer is so 'inappropriate' these days, then why did it work so well for long before becoming 'inappropriate'? The powers that be started giving in to uppity special interest groups generations ago, and now it's fully out of hand.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott“Sans arme, sans violence et sans haine”
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostIf public prayer is so 'inappropriate' these days, then why did it work so well for long before becoming 'inappropriate'? The powers that be started giving in to uppity special interest groups generations ago, and now it's fully out of hand.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
To repeat and clarify, I was a devout Xtian at the time, and I believed that because the Bible expressly advocated against praying in public, it was inappropriate for me to participate in the type of prayer conducted during morning announcements. It's the equivalent of going to a bar with friends even when you don't drink--your ordering a ginger ale doesn't interfere with anyone else's right to drink themselves into unconsciousness if they so chose.“Sans arme, sans violence et sans haine”
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Originally posted by Ally View PostUh no. You don't get to claim that it's a generic slogan. People who are atheists don't put generic slogans honoring a GOD they don't actually believe in on their insignia. That's just weak thinking to rationalize.
The nazis were not atheists. They were a political party, that contained members of various religions. That's like saying the Republicans are atheist because their primary philosophy is Capitalism. Ones political ideology is not at all a ipso facto for their religious leanings. And the Nazis were not even primarily inspired by Nietzsche philosophy as a whole. Like any group of politicians they selectively picked out the bits that they liked while discarding the parts that didn't fit their goal. They conveniently discarded all of Nietzsche's disdain for anti-semitism and also for nationalism. Because that part doesn't fit their agenda. So no, their PRIMARY philosophy was not Nietzschean . It was one word, picked from a whole of Nietzschean thought and twisted to their own ends.
Hitler and his mates all had the benefit of a good brutal fundamentalist brain washing Catholic education, Mel Gibson style, where Jews were the ones who 'killed our Lord'.
As the Jesuit said,
'Give us a child til they are seven and they will be ours forever'.
Nietzsche really had nothing to do with it.allisvanityandvexationofspirit
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Not only did Nietzsche have nothing to do with it but back in the day (before Nazism) when the anti-semites were taking his Super Man concept and using it as fuel for their propaganda, Nietzsche was appalled and claimed they were perverting his ideal and theory. So you know...go figure.
Based on writings I have read, rather than being atheist, the ultimate goal of Hitler was to set himself up as the divine head of religion, the uber-messiah himself the prophet of god, which then makes him about as atheist as general christians (with Jesus), catholics (with the pope), Anglicans (the monarch) Mormons (with Joseph Smith), muslims (mohammed), Scientologists, (L. Ron) etc. Basically he wanted supreme dominance over religious thought.
No more atheist than any other religion that chooses to shape the religion around their political and personal ideologies.
Let all Oz be agreed;
I need a better class of flying monkeys.
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Originally posted by Steven Russell View PostHow can so many intelligent people believe in God? You don't believe in Father Christmas, The Tooth Fairy, or The Easter Bunny do you? Yet the sum total of evidence for the existence of all of these is the same... somebody told you.
Fear and ego. That's my opinion only.
Let all Oz be agreed;
I need a better class of flying monkeys.
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Originally posted by Steven Russell View PostHow can so many intelligent people believe in God? You don't believe in Father Christmas, The Tooth Fairy, or The Easter Bunny do you? Yet the sum total of evidence for the existence of all of these is the same... somebody told you.
Descarte, one of the great thinkers of his time, believed in God.
John Newton was a slave trader. He was made rich by the sale of human slaves and paid little attention to God. One day, in the middle of the ocean, when he had a ship's hold full of slaves beneath him, he felt the presence of God all around him. He threw himself onto the deck and prayed for forgiveness. He vowed to dedicate the rest of his life to God and His work.
John Newton later wrote the words:
Amazing Grace! How sweet the Sound!
That saved a wretch like me.
I once was lost, but now I'm found,
Was blind but now I see.
Sorry if anyone thinks I'm preaching. I'm just trying to answer the question in a way that expresses my faith BUT I have the upmost respect for people who feel differently and I often attend meetings during which people share their different faiths or explain why they have no faith at all.
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