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Old 04-28-2005, 08:33 PM   #41 (permalink)
 
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Quote:
Here's one of those "imaginary" attacks I was talking about. I will say it's refreshing to see someone so smug and feeling superior about being a bigot. I'm sure many Klansmen also thing that the mud races suffer from collective intellectual handicaps.
huh?
if you actually read and understood the post--which seems unlikely from the response---o forget it, alansmithee. just forget it.
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Old 04-29-2005, 12:27 AM   #42 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by roachboy
huh?
if you actually read and understood the post--which seems unlikely from the response---o forget it, alansmithee. just forget it.
Again with the condesending tone. I understand that you assume that everyone who doesn't agree with you is inherently less intellegent than you. But that only shows your bias. I read your earlier post, and you clearly are bigoted against Christians. You stated that you think they have a intellectual handicap, and then state that Jesus would be a bigot. It was in your post. Maybe instead of trying to impress everyone with your pseudo-intellect, you should try engaging in discussion and not just lecture down to people. But that would require acknowledging someone as your intellectual peer, something you seemingly cannot do.
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Old 04-29-2005, 05:19 AM   #43 (permalink)
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An important thing to consider here is that the percentage of Americans who consider themselves to be "born again" or "evangelical" Christians increased substantially in 1990s, from about a third of respondents to close to half by 1999, and it's been holding steady since then.

Nevertheless, (1) the proportion of the population that considers itself "religious right" during the same period has always been lower, never more than 20%; and (2) the proportion goes down as educational level goes up.

So although the country seems to have become more religious in the last 10-20 years, that increase has not been due to any demographic increases in the religious right.

This indicates to me that any pandering that the Republican party does to this small and marginal religious group is going to hurt the party in the long run, and maybe in the short run too, as we approach the elections next year.

Here's a 1992 poll:
Quote:
QUESTION:
QD14 Would you describe yourself as a 'born-again' or evangelical Christian, or not?

RESULTS:


Yes - 36%

No - 60

Don't know/Refused - 5

DEMOGRAPHICS:

YES NO DONT KNOW/REFUSED
718 Male 32 63 5
723 Female 39 56 5
1K+ White 35 61 4
269 Black 53 39 9
67 Hispanic 19 79 2
22 Asian 21 74 5
139 < HS grad 44 49 7
519 HS Graduate 39 57 4
357 Some college 34 61 5
417 College Grad 22 76 2
286 East 21 72 7
364 Midwest 35 59 6
542 South 49 46 5
249 West 29 69 2
373 Republican 40 57 3
482 Democrat 37 61 2
526 Independent 32 62 6
271 < $ 15,000 40 57 4
151 $ 15,000-19,999 43 53 4
234 $ 20,000-29,999 39 55 6
359 $ 30,000-49,999 32 67 1
208 $ 50,000-74,999 30 67 3
146 $ 75,000 & Over 29 68 3
254 Liberal 28 71 1
641 Moderate 33 63 5
487 Conservative 44 53 3
302 18-29 33 60 7
357 30-39 32 66 2
302 40-49 34 63 3
188 50-59 42 54 4
160 60-69 39 57 4
121 70 and Over 40 53 7
849 Protestant 50 47 4
327 Catholic 10 85 4
26 Jewish 1 96 3
89 None 12 81 7
255 Union Household 39 58 2
1K+ Non-Union 35 60 4

ORGANIZATION CONDUCTING SURVEY: GALLUP ORGANIZATION

POPULATION: National adult

NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS: 1,441

INTERVIEW METHOD: Telephone

SURVEY SPONSOR: Cable News Network, U.S.A. Today

BEGINNING DATE: September 11, 1992

ENDING DATE: September 15, 1992

SOURCE DOCUMENT: GALLUP, C.N.N., U.S.A. TODAY

DATE OF RELEASE OF SOURCE DOCUMENT: September 1992

QUESTION ID: USGALLUP.322018, QD14
Here's the same question, asked in 1999:
Quote:
QUESTION:
QD08 Would you describe yourself as a 'born again' or evangelical Christian, or not?

RESULTS:


Yes, would - 46%

No, would not - 52

Don't know/refused - 2

ORGANIZATION CONDUCTING SURVEY: PRINCETON SURVEY RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

POPULATION: National adult

NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS: 1,205

INTERVIEW METHOD: Telephone

SURVEY SPONSOR: Pew Research Center

BEGINNING DATE: September 1, 1999

ENDING DATE: September 12, 1999

SOURCE DOCUMENT: NEW INTEREST INDEX POLL
And the same question asked last month:
Quote:
QUESTION:
Do you consider yourself an evangelical or born-again Christian?

RESULTS:


Yes - 43%

No - 52

Don't know - 3

Refused - 1

ORGANIZATION CONDUCTING SURVEY: Schulman, Ronca, & Bucuvalas

POPULATION: National adult

NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS: 1,010

INTERVIEW METHOD: Telephone

SURVEY SPONSOR: Time

BEGINNING DATE: March 22, 2005

ENDING DATE: March 24, 2005

SOURCE DOCUMENT: Time/SRBI Poll

DATE OF RELEASE OF SOURCE DOCUMENT: March 25, 2005
Here's a 2004 poll on the "Religious Right":
Quote:
QUESTION:
Do you think of yourself as part of the conservative Christian political movement, also known as the Religious Right?

RESULTS:


Yes - 13%

No - 78

Not sure - 9

ORGANIZATION CONDUCTING SURVEY: Hart and McInturff Research Companies

POPULATION: National adult

NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS: 1,003

INTERVIEW METHOD: Telephone

SURVEY SPONSOR: NBC News, Wall Street Journal

BEGINNING DATE: December 9, 2004

ENDING DATE: December 13, 2004

SOURCE DOCUMENT: NBC News/Wall Street Journal Poll
And a similar question with similar responses in 1998. Note that this is a huge poll with 11,000 respondents, and it has the complete demographic breakdown. About 14% of Democrats consider themselves "religious right", but the highest demographic groups were uneducated, poor, and conservative.
Quote:
QUESTION:
QEE1 Do you consider yourself part of the conservative Christian political movement, also known as the religious right?

RESULTS:


Yes - 18%

No - 82

DEMOGRAPHICS:

YES NO
1K+ Male 18 82
1K+ Female 19 81
1K+ White 18 82
1K+ Black 21 79
586 Hispanic 24 76
125 Asian 14 86
250 < HS grad 29 71
1K+ HS graduate 24 76
1K+ Some college 18 82
1K+ College grad 15 85
992 Post grad 12 88
1K+ East 12 88
1K+ Midwest 18 82
1K+ South 27 74
1K+ West 15 85
1K+ Republican 25 75
1K+ Democrat 14 86
1K+ Independent 14 86
739 < $ 15,000 30 70
1K+ $ 15,000-29,999 24 76
1K+ $ 30,000-49,999 20 80
1K+ $ 50,000-74,999 17 83
1K+ $ 75,000 & over 11 89
1K+ Liberal 14 86
1K+ Moderate 12 88
1K+ Conservative 31 69
1K+ 18-29 years old 20 80
1K+ 30-39 21 79
1K+ 40-49 18 82
1K+ 50-59 17 83
869 60-64 16 84
1K+ 65 & over 16 84
1K+ Protestant 22 78
1K+ Catholic 12 88
170 Jewish 3 97
395 None 7 93
1K+ Union household 18 82
1K+ Non-union hh 18 82

ORGANIZATION CONDUCTING SURVEY: VOTER NEWS SERVICE

POPULATION: National adult exiting voters

NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS: 11,387

INTERVIEW METHOD: Self-administrated

SURVEY SPONSOR: ABC News, Associated Press, CBS News, C.N.N., Fox News, NBC News

SURVEY NOTES: There were two versions of the questionnaire which included some questions in common.

BEGINNING DATE: November 3, 1998

ENDING DATE: November 3, 1998

SOURCE DOCUMENT: 1998 ELECTION DAY EXIT POLL
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Old 04-29-2005, 07:35 AM   #44 (permalink)
 
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alansmithee:
i have no interest in engaging in some goofball ad hominem thing with you.
what i have to say about your position on this issue is spread across the posts i made.
if you want to discuss that, then fine, let's do that.

suffice it to say that what i see as interesting about your posts here is the extent to which they operate entirely inside of what i argue is a basic logical problem--the inability to make distinctions between levels of generalilty (in this case between your sense of things as--presumably--an individual believer and how you choose to drag that across reactions to the politics of the extreme (evangelical protestant-domeinated) right).

and that's it.

whether you like or do not like who you imagine me to be across the material of your take on my written voice is of no interest to me. sorry.

but feel free to go on about it, if you would prefer that to actually addressing arguments.

i am under no obligation to reply.
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Old 04-29-2005, 09:16 AM   #45 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
Again with the condesending tone. I understand that you assume that everyone who doesn't agree with you is inherently less intellegent than you. But that only shows your bias. I read your earlier post, and you clearly are bigoted against Christians. You stated that you think they have a intellectual handicap, and then state that Jesus would be a bigot. It was in your post. Maybe instead of trying to impress everyone with your pseudo-intellect, you should try engaging in discussion and not just lecture down to people. But that would require acknowledging someone as your intellectual peer, something you seemingly cannot do.
He is trying to engage in discussion. I think the problem is that you have a difficult time seeing the difference between valid criticism of the religious right and broad sweeping generalizations about christianity in general. If someone criticizes those who work on behalf of the religious right, they are not necessesarily criticizing christianity in general. You readily criticize pat robertson for his hypocrisy, yet it seems to me that if you heard someone else point to him as an example of the moral bankruptcy of the religious right in general you'd automatically assume that said person was commenting on christianity as a whole. The christian right is a minority group within the body of christianity.

I think the problem roachboy is having is that you refuse to address his criticisms of the religious right, instead choosing to pretend that he is making some brash generalization about christianity in general. Then you play the "woe is me, my faith is under attack" card, which doesn't really apply. This is, however the standard operating procedure of those who own the religious right movement. If you can't see this, than why are you pretending to engage in a discussion when you aren't willing to be honest with yourself about someone else's perspective?
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Old 04-29-2005, 10:08 AM   #46 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by filtherton
He is trying to engage in discussion. I think the problem is that you have a difficult time seeing the difference between valid criticism of the religious right and broad sweeping generalizations about christianity in general....

..........I think the problem roachboy is having is that you refuse to address his criticisms of the religious right, instead choosing to pretend that he is making some brash generalization about christianity in general. Then you play the "woe is me, my faith is under attack" card, which doesn't really apply. This is, however the standard operating procedure of those who own the religious right movement. If you can't see this, than why are you pretending to engage in a discussion when you aren't willing to be honest with yourself about someone else's perspective?
roachboy and filtherton, is it any wonder that, although we live in the same country as conservatives and politically conservative christians, we don't seem to be able to read each others sentences and successfully extract the
author's intended meaning, when the following passes for commnetary, in "their" world. I don't read this stuff because I don't access the sites and the media personalities that attract a conservative or a christian following.

I know that recently, all six of the holders of the highest national political offices declared themselves to be of the chrisitian faith, predominately of the
southern baptist denomination. Knowing this, and not until recently being exposed to the repetitive message that "the persecution of christians is on the increase", I would have no understanding of the comtradiction that exists between perception and political reality.

If this message of persecution can be advanced and instilled under today's circumstances, what would the message be if those at the top of the political pyramid were jews or muslims?
Quote:
<a href="http://www.townhall.com/columnists/davidlimbaugh/dl20050428.shtml">http://www.townhall.com/columnists/davidlimbaugh/dl20050428.shtml</a>
Left never tires of Christian bashing
David Limbaugh (archive)

April 28, 2005 | printer friendly version Print | email to a friend Send

If I didn't know better, I would think liberal politicians and columnists were out to prove the thesis of my book -- that there truly is a war being waged against Christianity and Christians in the United States.

Oh, yes, they deny it and attempt to turn the tables, saying it's Christians who are the belligerent ones, trying to take over the country and establish a theocracy. If it's not the New York Times' Maureen Dowd, it's her colleague Paul Krugman. It it's not them, it's John Kerry. They are all up in arms about Christianity and its influence in politics, governance and the public square.

What are these people so exercised about? Why must they insist on demonizing Christians? Why do they fear them so? Why are they so paranoid about them participating in politics and government? Why do they seem to think that only Christians must keep their views to themselves once they are elected to office?

Failed presidential candidate John Kerry said, "I am sick and tired of a bunch of people trying to tell me that God wants a bunch of conservative judges on the court." Just for the record, Senator Kerry, conservatives and Christian conservatives aren't saying they want conservative judges on the court, but originalists: judges who will interpret the Constitution according to the Framers' original intent.

The war against Christians has intensified with the recent controversy over ending the Democrats' (nearly) unprecedented filibustering of judicial nominees. Senate Democrats and their enablers apparently see the Christian right as the main bogeyman in the effort to restore majority rule to the judicial confirmation process.

They are especially upset with Senate majority leader Bill Frist for agreeing to participate in "Justice Sunday," an event organized by Christian groups to rally Christians to support politicians trying to end the judicial filibuster. Frist's opponents, from Ralph Neas, president of the People for the American Way, to junior Senator Mark Pryor, have registered disgust that Christian politicians and Christian groups would presume to approach this issue from the perspective of their Christian worldview.

Before the judicial filibuster flap, it was the Terri Schiavo case. During that acrimonious, national debate, Dowd accused Christian conservatives of trying to establish a theocracy. Actually, she said, "Oh, my God, we really are in a theocracy." She also paid homage to the "credo" that "a person's relationship with God should remain a private matter." And, she compared Christian conservatives to Muslim "religious fundamentalists" in Iraq.

Krugman, similarly, compared Christian "extremists" in America to "religious extremists" in Israel who "have already killed one prime minister." In fairness, Krugman said such assassinations aren't occurring here yet, but "unless moderates take a stand against the growing power of domestic extremists, it can happen here."

Dowd's suggestion that we have a theocracy isn't serious enough to warrant a rebuttal. Most Christians I know are radically opposed to theocracy, which is antithetical to religious freedom, a principle at the apex of their priorities.

But Dowd's wrongheaded notion that "a person's relationship with God should be a private matter," needs to be vigorously challenged.

If Christians are to honor Christ's Great Commission of spreading the Gospel to all nations, they must engage in the political arena and governance if for no other reason than that the Gospel cannot flourish as well in the absence of political and religious liberty. Christians have a duty to be involved to promote liberty.

Where did we get this crazy idea that Christians can't base their support and opposition of candidates, issues and even laws on Christian morality? Dowd's specious assertion ignores that the overwhelming majority of our Founding Fathers formed this government on Christian principles. Most of our laws, civil and criminal -- from trespassing, to stealing, assault, rape and murder -- are grounded in morality, and it is an astonishing deception to suggest otherwise.

This idea that Christians must keep their views to themselves, and that politicians must keep their Christian worldview in a lockbox has caught on even among many Christians. But a Christian inhibits his Christian walk if he places his religion on just one "shelf" of his life. His worldview must inform his politics, just as everyone else's does.

What the secular Left wants to do is marginalize Christian conservatives by suggesting they are hell-bent on reserving religious liberty (and presumably other types of freedom) only for themselves.

But all we have to do to refute that lie is to point to the history of this great nation, which owes its freedom largely to the religious liberties enshrined in the Constitution by Christians. The Left will never tire of castigating Christians, so we might as well get used to that. But in the meantime, it is important that Christians be neither duped nor intimidated from participating aggressively in politics and governance, which is their sacred right and their unquestionable duty.
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Old 04-29-2005, 12:24 PM   #47 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by filtherton
He is trying to engage in discussion. I think the problem is that you have a difficult time seeing the difference between valid criticism of the religious right and broad sweeping generalizations about christianity in general. If someone criticizes those who work on behalf of the religious right, they are not necessesarily criticizing christianity in general. You readily criticize pat robertson for his hypocrisy, yet it seems to me that if you heard someone else point to him as an example of the moral bankruptcy of the religious right in general you'd automatically assume that said person was commenting on christianity as a whole. The christian right is a minority group within the body of christianity.
I can see and respond to valid criticism of the religious right, and separate those criticisms from attacks on Christianity as a whole. He was making an attack at Christianity. IIRC, you were the one who brought up Robertson as someone who reflects negatively on the religious right, yet I didn't accuse you of attacking the whole of Christianity. The problem is that many other people don't separate the two. They use the actions of the religious right as a stepping point for broad based attacks on Christianity as a whole. As was done above.

Quote:
I think the problem roachboy is having is that you refuse to address his criticisms of the religious right, instead choosing to pretend that he is making some brash generalization about christianity in general. Then you play the "woe is me, my faith is under attack" card, which doesn't really apply. This is, however the standard operating procedure of those who own the religious right movement. If you can't see this, than why are you pretending to engage in a discussion when you aren't willing to be honest with yourself about someone else's perspective?
He wasn't just criticizing the religious right. I will not address baseless bigoted attacks, because no matter what is said you won't change a bigot's mind. And not just my faith, but Christianity as a whole was attacked, I didn't just imagine his words, they are there for all to see.

As for my "pretending to engage" in discussion, if what you said were true, I would be saying that everyone who made negative comments was anti-Christian. I did not, I pointed to a specific example of bigotry. And comments such as those point to someone who has no intrest in discussion or understanding, they show bigotry and bias. Maybe some of the vitriol you direct at me should be directed elsewhere.
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Old 04-29-2005, 12:38 PM   #48 (permalink)
 
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ok so alansmithee-----so far as i can tell you prefer to willfully misinterpret what i was posting in a manner so thoroughgoing that there is no point in going on with any kind of interaction with you.

that you would choose to see in what i wrote any example of "bigotry" is simply absurd: what is clear is that you did not like what you understood of it--which is apparently not much---and proceeded from there to yet another typical rightwing tactic---the baseless personal accusation.

if you would prefer at some point to actually talk about argument, i'll consider entering into conversation with you. but this------this is stupid

i dont really know what else to say to you about this wholesale misunderstanding of the post.


checking out now.
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Old 04-29-2005, 06:33 PM   #49 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
He wasn't just criticizing the religious right. I will not address baseless bigoted attacks, because no matter what is said you won't change a bigot's mind. And not just my faith, but Christianity as a whole was attacked, I didn't just imagine his words, they are there for all to see.

As for my "pretending to engage" in discussion, if what you said were true, I would be saying that everyone who made negative comments was anti-Christian. I did not, I pointed to a specific example of bigotry. And comments such as those point to someone who has no intrest in discussion or understanding, they show bigotry and bias. Maybe some of the vitriol you direct at me should be directed elsewhere.
If you read his post, he is clearly referring to the evangelical christian right. Please tell me how that amounts to an attack upon christianity as a whole. Besides, aren't conservatives usually the ones who complain about being labeled as bigots by people who can't actually address the contents of their perspective? Haven't you complained about such things when discussing the topic of gay marriage? You of all people should know that calling someone a bigot is a cop-out when in the realm of comparing and competing ideas. If you don't like what he's saying, tell him how he's wrong, otherwise you're really not accomplishing anything other than being the only one to pull out the bigot card.

Try coming up with examples of how the religious right encourages people to think for themselves. Try coming up with examples of how the religious right doesn't completely misrepresent the facts. You could explain, for instance, why the democratic refusal to approve a handful of judges amounts to anything remotely resembling an attack on christianity.
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Old 04-29-2005, 08:40 PM   #50 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by filtherton
If you read his post, he is clearly referring to the evangelical christian right. Please tell me how that amounts to an attack upon christianity as a whole. Besides, aren't conservatives usually the ones who complain about being labeled as bigots by people who can't actually address the contents of their perspective? Haven't you complained about such things when discussing the topic of gay marriage? You of all people should know that calling someone a bigot is a cop-out when in the realm of comparing and competing ideas. If you don't like what he's saying, tell him how he's wrong, otherwise you're really not accomplishing anything other than being the only one to pull out the bigot card.
You're right, I've complained about people being labelled bigots without their points being addressed. And all my complaints have gotten previously is ignored/disregarded. So I figured it was an acceptable practice, and decided to try it out myself. You could say it's a typical liberal tactic. And as I said above, I won't be bothered debating with someone about their bigotry, it won'd do any good.

Quote:
Try coming up with examples of how the religious right encourages people to think for themselves. Try coming up with examples of how the religious right doesn't completely misrepresent the facts. You could explain, for instance, why the democratic refusal to approve a handful of judges amounts to anything remotely resembling an attack on christianity.
I never said that the religious right encourages people to think for themselves. And as for "completely misrepresent"ing facts, that is always debatable. I might show you some things that you see in a different light. And it would be hard to say which perspective is truly "right". And as for the Dem filibustering, that IMO isn't an attack on Christianity. I don't agree with what the Dems are doing, but I don't see that as an attack on Christianity.
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Old 04-30-2005, 03:46 PM   #51 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
You're right, I've complained about people being labelled bigots without their points being addressed. And all my complaints have gotten previously is ignored/disregarded. So I figured it was an acceptable practice, and decided to try it out myself. You could say it's a typical liberal tactic. And as I said above, I won't be bothered debating with someone about their bigotry, it won'd do any good.
You could say its a typlical liberal tactic, except for the fact that you'd have to be ignoring the christian right's use of it when attempting to get ultra conservative judges approved by congress. Is it normal to call out someone on their questionable debate tactics and then employ them one's self? Sounds like you have more in common with pat robertson that you might suspect in terms of ideological consistency.

So tell me again how roachboy was making a statement about all of christianity.
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Old 04-30-2005, 04:54 PM   #52 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by filtherton
You could say its a typlical liberal tactic, except for the fact that you'd have to be ignoring the christian right's use of it when attempting to get ultra conservative judges approved by congress. Is it normal to call out someone on their questionable debate tactics and then employ them one's self? Sounds like you have more in common with pat robertson that you might suspect in terms of ideological consistency.
What ultra conservative judges are being put up for votes? I think that's a bit of a stretch, but that's not relevant.

And i've found often the best way to make a point is to show by example. When I would say it's unfair to throw around the term bigot without trying to understand the other side first, it was ignored. I figured that's just how debating went on around here, so I was trying to fit in.

And that little dig at the end was quite cute. But if you're gonna try to call me a hypocrite, at least be brave enough to just come out and say it instead of dancing around.

Quote:
So tell me again how roachboy was making a statement about all of christianity.
He made a statement saying that Christians have a collective intellectual handicap. Doesn't get much plainer than that.

But i'm not gonna bother to reply in this thread again. You can now go back to your regularly scheduled Christian bashing without outside interference.
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Old 04-30-2005, 08:11 PM   #53 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
And i've found often the best way to make a point is to show by example. When I would say it's unfair to throw around the term bigot without trying to understand the other side first, it was ignored. I figured that's just how debating went on around here, so I was trying to fit in.

And that little dig at the end was quite cute. But if you're gonna try to call me a hypocrite, at least be brave enough to just come out and say it instead of dancing around.
Okay, you're a hypocrite. You're a hypocrite because you complain about "liberals" and their "liberal tactics" while employing and supporting those who employ those same tactics. If you didn't think it was a worthwhile tactic when it was employed against you, why do you think it is a worthwhile attack to employ?

Quote:
He made a statement saying that Christians have a collective intellectual handicap. Doesn't get much plainer than that.
He was referring to the evangelical christian right, not christianity as a whole. How is that not clear in his post when he specifically mentions the evangelical christian right? I don't mean to be a prick, but when you point at the sky and say it's red when obviously it is not, don't be surprised when you are called on it.

Quote:
But i'm not gonna bother to reply in this thread again. You can now go back to your regularly scheduled Christian bashing without outside interference.
Christian bashing? Get over yourself. Some of the most important people in my life are seemingly more in tune with the teachings of christ than you could probably ever hope to be. I completely respect their faith and their abilities to think independently. The fact that you all you see in this thread is "christian bashing" reflects more on you than it does on this thread or any of its other participants. All you're doing is proving roachboy's point.

Last edited by filtherton; 04-30-2005 at 08:15 PM..
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Old 04-30-2005, 11:53 PM   #54 (permalink)
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There has been a long-going culture war in the US. The lunatic fringe far-left has attacked again and again and again and again. Now the lunatic fringe far right is waking up and fighting back, and the far left doesn't like it. They started the fight. They have to live with the consequences. And the lunatic fringe far right FAR outnumbers the lunatic fringe far left. They should have thought about that before they started the culture war in the first place.

/sitting back and enjoying the fray
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Old 05-01-2005, 12:00 AM   #55 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Manx

Apparently, the gay community is required to be more accepting of the intolerance they are shown by the straight community.
Tolerance is a two-way street. The gay community demands tolerance of their viewpoint, but excoriates people who hold diametrically opposed viewpoints to them. That's not very tolerant, is it?
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Old 05-01-2005, 08:00 AM   #56 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by moosenose
Tolerance is a two-way street. The gay community demands tolerance of their viewpoint, but excoriates people who hold diametrically opposed viewpoints to them. That's not very tolerant, is it?
That's not even close to what happens in reality. If it were, sure, you'd have a point. But it's not, so you don't have a point.

The gay community demands tolerance of their viewpoint, and excoriates people who do not provide that tolerance. The gay community does not excoriate the straight community (the diametrically opposed viewpoint), only the portion of the straight community that does not tolerate the gay community.

Maybe you expect the people you are intolerant of to be tolerant of your intolerance (as did the author of the quote I posted) - but that is an absurd viewpoint.
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Old 05-01-2005, 11:57 AM   #57 (permalink)
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When you've been around the block a few more times you will begin to see and realize that bigotry holds not allegiance to any race, creed or color.

There are indeed some gays who are just as bigoted as some straights. Denying it only perpetuates bigotry IMO.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Manx
That's not even close to what happens in reality. If it were, sure, you'd have a point. But it's not, so you don't have a point.

The gay community demands tolerance of their viewpoint, and excoriates people who do not provide that tolerance. The gay community does not excoriate the straight community (the diametrically opposed viewpoint), only the portion of the straight community that does not tolerate the gay community.

Maybe you expect the people you are intolerant of to be tolerant of your intolerance (as did the author of the quote I posted) - but that is an absurd viewpoint.
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Old 05-01-2005, 01:17 PM   #58 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lebell
When you've been around the block a few more times you will begin to see and realize that bigotry holds not allegiance to any race, creed or color.

There are indeed some gays who are just as bigoted as some straights. Denying it only perpetuates bigotry IMO.
When I've been around the block a few more times?

How many times have I been around the block, Lebell? Your patronizing is uninteresting, though not unexpected. Almost certainly inapplicable, however.

I haven't denied that some random individual gay person, or black person cannot be a bigot - it should be clear that both myself and moosenose were speaking of the communities - not any specific individuals. As evidenced by the use of the word "community" in both of our posts.
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Old 05-01-2005, 01:46 PM   #59 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Manx
The gay community does not excoriate the straight community (the diametrically opposed viewpoint), only the portion of the straight community that does not tolerate the gay community.
If you preach tolerance, you need to practice it, too. I don't know many people in the gay community that "tolerate" people who think homosexual sex is a sin. If your position is Homosexual sex is "normal", the gay community generally will tolerate you, even if you're straight. If you think homosexual sex is a sin, or not something to be proud of, the gay community is a lot less tolerant, EVEN IF YOU ARE GAY. For example: the entire "Outing" movement.

Tolerance does NOT equal acceptance as normal. Tolerance means you tolerate something you feel is wrong. And the far left has a LOT to learn about tolerance.
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Old 05-01-2005, 01:52 PM   #60 (permalink)
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moosenose -

As soon as the gay community starts demanding that a constitutional amendment be created that illegalizes the marriage of heterosexual couples and as soon as such an amendment has the support of the President of the U.S. and as soon as the gay community has ballot measures placed in a dozen states to eliminate the right for heterosexuals to get married - then I will start to take your statemeent that the gay community is intolerant of the heterosexual community with the seriousness you believe it deserves.

Until that time, the simple fact is that your claim is simply false that intolerance of intolerance is the same thing as plain intolerance.
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Old 05-01-2005, 03:58 PM   #61 (permalink)
 
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so moose:
let me get this straight--what you are in effect saying is that critiques of racism, for example, should not be advanced because the effect of doing so would be to "discriminate against" the racists? as if there is an equivalence between a history of brutal racism in the united states from it outset thorugh the present and the twinge of embarrassment that racists might experience when they are called on their racism?

or: gay folk should shut up about the persistent type of discrimination they encounter because of who they choose to love (nothing else, friend) because to complain or mobilize or to act politically to eradicate this discrimination would in turn discriminate against homophobes?

or is all this really about loss of position--if you benefit from a racist order and the order comes under attack, then you stand to loose, right? so you now imagine that the effects of the critique constitute a second type of dscrimination?

i find it hard to believe that the sophomoric logic of your post is something that you take seriously--in the backwater of right media, i hear this kind of pseudo-argument advanced quite alot--i dont think limbaugh et al believe it either (though they seem to derive some erotic pleasure from repeating it)--rather this type of argument seems to be more about dissolving the whole idea of arguments against discrimination by a strategy of repeated reduction to absurdity.

so i assume is the case here: the problem is the type of argument against discrimination. all of them. presumably what is being defended behind this is the autonomy of individuals to be a racist, as bigoted, as uninformed as they wish without being bothered by being told that they are racist, bigoted, or uninformed. i cant see another function to the type of argument you advance.

but maybe i only see part of this, so
what do you think you are doing by advancing such arguments?
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Old 05-01-2005, 09:02 PM   #62 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Manx
When I've been around the block a few more times?

How many times have I been around the block, Lebell? Your patronizing is uninteresting, though not unexpected. Almost certainly inapplicable, however.

I haven't denied that some random individual gay person, or black person cannot be a bigot - it should be clear that both myself and moosenose were speaking of the communities - not any specific individuals. As evidenced by the use of the word "community" in both of our posts.

My appologies.
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Old 05-03-2005, 06:00 PM   #63 (permalink)
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I would like to say that a disservice is done to all the arguments posed here by the "backwater" media of all political stripes. Sure, people are allowed to exercise their Constitutional rights, but the idiocy of political talk shows on the radio and tv has got to stop. I think that this forum has disintegrated into the same two name-calling camps as we see in the media, and it gets us nowhere.

As John Stewart so brilliantly put it when he guested on Crossfire, 'why? stop hurting america!'

We're all on the same team here, guys. I think that is something that the Right-Wing conspiracy and the Liberal Left need to accept.

I know this is slightly irrelevant...but I just can't see the value in empty philosophical exchange for its own sake.

Back to my paper on fascism...
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