The Ten Commandments Required
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 00:17 last edited by
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 01:40 last edited by
9-0 SCOTUS even thomas and alito.
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 02:06 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in The Ten Commandments Required:
9-0 SCOTUS even thomas and alito.
Yup.
"Thou shalt have no other gods..."
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 02:10 last edited by
Wow. And they are using the precedent of the coach having a prayer? That is exactly the opposite precedent.
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 02:12 last edited by
We do have fun down here.
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 03:11 last edited by
@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
We do have fun down here.
The unConstitutional sort, no less.
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 03:12 last edited by
The Ten Commandments are pretty uncontroversial, if you take them as they are.
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 03:41 last edited by
The no god before Me is kinda controversial…
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 03:48 last edited by
Pretty uncontroversial, you say ...
Thou shalt not make to thyself any graven images.
That goes against the First Amendment (freedom of expression).
Thou shalt not take the Name of the Lord thy God in vain.
That also goes against the First Amendment (freedom of expression).
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 05:08 last edited by
That triggers you so badly it incapacitates you and keeps you from learning? A wall poster?
Ya got any bigger fish to fry?
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The no god before Me is kinda controversial…
wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 05:09 last edited by@LuFins-Dad said in The Ten Commandments Required:
The no god before Me is kinda controversial…
Whose God? Look at it in a broader context...
Allah? Buddah? Yahweh?
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 10:10 last edited by
I would hope the 5th circuit strikes it and Louisiana would know better than to appeal, and if they do cert won’t be granted
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 11:42 last edited by
Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain
Jesus
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 12:06 last edited by
I've had a bit of fun with this one, as I agree it will not stand.
But did anybody catch Shapiro's podcast on guilty vs. shame societies? In short, his argument was that societal behavior was heavily influenced by one or the other. Japan would be an example of a shame society, where the individual confirms to desired behavior out of concern that his neighbors and associates would shame him for bad behavior.
More religious countries, such as the U.S. used to be, use religious teachings as a way to generate guilt over actions that the individual knows to be wrong. Those teachings also give an individual positive feelings when he believes he is doing the right thing.
Shapiro contended we are now morphing into a post-shame society, where guilt plays little part in individual lives and shame is rapidly losing any effectiveness. The inevitable result is a non-functioning society.
Therefore, while I agree the Ten Commandments posters will come down, I'm not sure exposure to a few basic rules for society is entirely bad for young minds of mush.
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 20:44 last edited by
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 21:14 last edited by
Regarding western societies he's not wrong.
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wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 21:29 last edited by Mik
Nah. Just spitballing.
"The top of the stele features an image in relief of Hammurabi with Shamash, the Babylonian sun god and god of justice. Below the relief are about 4,130 lines of cuneiform text: one fifth contains a prologue and epilogue in poetic style, while the remaining four fifths contain what are generally called the laws."
Kind of long for a classroom poster.
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@Mik did you watch the whole thing? Look behind Landry.
Also, I think Hammurabi predates Moses.
wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 21:30 last edited by@George-K said in The Ten Commandments Required:
Look behind Landry.
Gasp! It’s a sign!
Why must the children pay for … well … whatever they’re doing? -
I've had a bit of fun with this one, as I agree it will not stand.
But did anybody catch Shapiro's podcast on guilty vs. shame societies? In short, his argument was that societal behavior was heavily influenced by one or the other. Japan would be an example of a shame society, where the individual confirms to desired behavior out of concern that his neighbors and associates would shame him for bad behavior.
More religious countries, such as the U.S. used to be, use religious teachings as a way to generate guilt over actions that the individual knows to be wrong. Those teachings also give an individual positive feelings when he believes he is doing the right thing.
Shapiro contended we are now morphing into a post-shame society, where guilt plays little part in individual lives and shame is rapidly losing any effectiveness. The inevitable result is a non-functioning society.
Therefore, while I agree the Ten Commandments posters will come down, I'm not sure exposure to a few basic rules for society is entirely bad for young minds of mush.
wrote on 20 Jun 2024, 21:57 last edited by@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
I've had a bit of fun with this one, as I agree it will not stand.
But did anybody catch Shapiro's podcast on guilty vs. shame societies? In short, his argument was that societal behavior was heavily influenced by one or the other. Japan would be an example of a shame society, where the individual confirms to desired behavior out of concern that his neighbors and associates would shame him for bad behavior.
More religious countries, such as the U.S. used to be, use religious teachings as a way to generate guilt over actions that the individual knows to be wrong. Those teachings also give an individual positive feelings when he believes he is doing the right thing.
Shapiro contended we are now morphing into a post-shame society, where guilt plays little part in individual lives and shame is rapidly losing any effectiveness. The inevitable result is a non-functioning society.
Therefore, while I agree the Ten Commandments posters will come down, I'm not sure exposure to a few basic rules for society is entirely bad for young minds of mush.
I can't be bothered to be that outraged over Louisiana's shenanigans in part because of what Shapiro outlined.
Like, okay, they'll take it down, but I'm not too outraged over their putting them up.