Brian Peacock wrote:Seth wrote:Brian Peacock wrote:And all the time Seth keeps this discussion, like so many others, fixed on political theory he's basically avoiding having to address the issue, of the Christians attitude to the morality of abortions and its failure, as demonstrated by the likes of Mr Dear who used his religious beliefs to justify terrorism and murder -- (in the voice of John Wayne) "For surely it was the will of God." -- and the Protestant and Catholic legislators of Northern Ireland who threaten doctors with prosecution and even forbid abortion for rape victims and clinically dead foetuses.

Well, Christians are perfectly entitled to draw moral judgments about abortion based on their religious beliefs as an essential aspect of their right to the free exercise of their religion and their right to speak and express themselves freely in the public square. Moreover, Christians are perfectly entitled to allow their religious beliefs about abortion to inform their political decisions, their legislative advocacy, and their support for laws which comport with their religious beliefs. That's democracy in case you've forgotten.
And you are likewise perfectly entitled to do the same according to your religious beliefs. That you don't like their agenda is balanced by the fact that they don't like yours, and may the best man win.
That you think their beliefs and their personal and political expression of those beliefs as citizens are "failure" is your opinion, to which you are of course entitled. And theirs is theirs, to which they are entitled. But that you believe it to be so does not make it so, no matter how eruditely you may express your opinion.
I find it interesting that you tout the benefits of democratic determinism when it suits you and you revile it when it does not.
If the people of Ireland want laws prohibiting abortion, well, according to democratic socialism they are perfectly entitled to have it just exactly that way, because under all socialist systems, in the end, the rights of the individual are always subservient to the needs and desires of the majority.
In the United States however, we have an individualist construct called "The Constitution" which guarantees the absolute supremacy of certain individual rights over the will of the majority, which is a deliberate check and balance on the tendency of democracy to run amok and become majoritarian totalitarian tyranny.
The problem is of course that the religious are legislating a religious morality which is applied to everyone, whether they're of their religious persuasion or not. You don't really get secularism do you?
Well, the point is that "secularism" is not the mandate of the Constitution, nor is it the mandate of the UK, Australia or New Zealand, or a great many other countries.
You see, secularism
is not common ground and is not the default condition that society is obliged to honor.
This is particularly true in the United States, where "secularism" is strictly limited in its authority to interfere with non-secular activities, motives and political agendas.
The only things that are required to remain "secular" in the US
are government agencies and agents. That being said, it's a bit more complex than that because not only must government remain "secular" it its operations, it must also remain
religiously neutral in such operations. What this means in practice, and according to Supreme Court ruling, is that the operations of government, where they intersect with religion in any way, are not permitted to either
advance or inhibit the free exercise of religion by members of the public. Moreover, as I have said, government also has an
affirmative constitutional duty to physically and administratively protect the free exercise of religion by all persons. This is why the fire-bombing of black churches in the south are matters of federal interest that trigger the FBi's authority to investigate what would otherwise be merely a state arson investigation.
The right of minority parishioners to freely exercise their religious rights free of threats and intimidation by bigots and racists in hoods and robes is a federally-protected constitutional right, and where such threats and intimidation are occurring and can be rationally tied to deliberate attempts to interfere with the civil rights of blacks, it becomes a matter of federal jurisdiction and the federal government is obliged to take action to protect those religious rights.
The same would be true if "Christian terrorists" were bombing Freedom From Religion Foundation buildings to intimidate Atheists.
As to "the religious are legislating a religious morality which is applied to everyone," this is to some extent absolutely true because it is a universal fact that all laws, everywhere, are nothing more than the codification of the ethical and moral beliefs and practices of the culture in which they have evolved. And because quite literally every culture on earth, including Cuba and Communist China have as a foundation of their laws ethical and moral concepts and practices that flow largely very directly from the religious beliefs of the culture of the community, it is therefore true that "the religious are legislating a religious morality which is applied to everyone."
So what? As a member of a democratic socialist society you necessarily submit to the ethical and moral decisions of the majority, and as it happens the majority of people worldwide hold religious beliefs and base their ethical and moral structure on those beliefs, so you and your quest for universal secularism are just totally screwed...and always have been.
The best an Atheist can hope for is a societal framework that balances the need for secular government with the right of the people to have their religion inform their decisions and influence their government policies. In the US this is called "The Constitution," and it provides just such a balance.
As I said, secularism is not common ground to which everyone, or indeed anyone, is obliged to tread. In a civilized and diverse society however secularism is something that
government and its agents is obliged to tread in it's relations with the people of the society that it serves.
And this is why we have the
"Lemon Test" as a guide for government in balancing the inherent right of the people to have their religious moral beliefs inform their laws and social structures and the right of everyone to a government that does not rule or regulate based solely upon some particular religious doctrine...as is the case with Islam and Sharia law.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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