To those wondering about the cost of these posters, "Under the law, state funds will not be used to implement the mandate. The posters would be paid for through donations."
New law requires all Louisiana public school classrooms to display the Ten Commandments
I think you understand that this stunt has nothing to do with teaching moral values. It's strictly there to indoctrinate children, which is why they chose the Ten Commandments instead and all of its mentions of the god of Abraham.
But as I said, it's not a big deal in Christianity. Look at what this thread is about if you want to know how much respect Christianity actually pays to that precept and how much is just lip service. This thread is about Christians doing to others what they don't like and what those Christians wouldn't like done to them.
Recriminalizing abortion violates the Golden Rule as the American right is learning as even a large swathe of Christian women want that right restored. The backlash at the polls has been significant.
And how much to you think the LGBTQ+ community like the treatment they receive at the hands of Christians? Do you think they like being marginalized and demonized, or called abominations. We've seen that on this thread already, when one poster used the words "disordered lifestyle" in reference to a transgendered poster.
And how about the way the church and its Bible describe atheists? You've seen the damage that has done to atheists in this thread as well with an article about atheists being the most despised minority in America.
So you can see why this atheistic humanist is unimpressed with the Christian rendering of the Golden Rule, which as I've previously mentioned, actually is a humanist principle. Humanists actually love all of those people that Christians demonize, and by love I don't mean a feeling, but action that protects and enables the object of one's love.
You say that you have enough religious freedom, but you also say that you want more. You want the children of Louisiana to be indoctrinated with the words in YOUR holy book against the wishes of many of their parent. This is why I called this attitude selfish. The Christian church would spread through the government like kudzu if permitted to do so and capture America for itself and its own selfish purposes.
There is no reason to believe that sous, gods, or an afterlife are real things, but if they are - if there an afterlife with a god or race of gods that punish souls for their earthly performance, I'd say that the Christian is in greater peril than the humanist. Why? We know that the god of Abraham doesn't exist because we know that the universe wasn't created in six days and that there were no first two human beings.
So, if the afterlife and judgment scenario pans out, we have no idea who we will be judged by and by what standards, and if there's a cutoff, I want to be judged for embracing reason and empathy. The Christian will need to explain why disregarded these things and chose blind faith and bigotry over what the twin gifts of reasoning and conscience "command" us to do.
But don't worry any. There's probably no afterlife, and if there is, there's no reason to think we'll be judged or punished. Those are just threats some religions use to coerce compliance with their religious leaders' instructions.
That's directed at parents (fathers, specifically). The Commandment is directed at their children.
What parent thinks they overcorrect their children? And the children are commanded to obey the Commandment regardless of how harsh or abusive their parents are.
The Ten Commandments is not a legal document, and yes (not no), it IS religious dogma: "Dogma, in its broadest sense, is any belief held unquestioningly and with undefended certainty. It may be in the form of an official system of
principles or
doctrines of a
religion, such as
Judaism,
Roman Catholicism,
Protestantism,
[1] or
Islam, as well as the
positions of a philosopher or of a
philosophical school, such as
Stoicism." (Also, there are dogmatic political ideologies.)
And its purpose in the classrooms is to indoctrinate children into Abrahamic religion. It's about getting those first four Commandments on the wall. The kids from irreligious homes will hear about stealing, lying, murdering, etc. from their parents and teachers, but they won't hear about the god of Abraham there. They'll read about it on the wall every school day in Louisiana until the Court overturns that law or indefinitely if they uphold it, which is what Christians who don't respect the Constitution or the rights of their neighbors want.
Neither can I, but hopefully, somebody can. Look at what they're doing in the States.
Incidentally, I have never had to write an analogous statement about humanists including Christian humanists.