That's fine, but I'm still curious where you see a theocracy outlined in our founding documents, especially given all the elements I mentioned that seem to clearly indicate a secular government was the intent.
I see the symbols of religion (especially Christianity) suffused throughout the government and public spaces which indicate that the "tone" of the government was to be between a theocracy and a representative republic. When I see presidents and eye witnesses swearing in on bible's, both sides of congress and the military employing chaplains, and direct references to Yahweh in our capitol the idea of a separation or "wall" between church and state becomes absurd.
Again, we're attempting to discuss a legal question that courts have ruled on for decades. If you cannot do even the most cursory of reading on the subject (and you don't have to read the entire ruling to understand the basis for it....much of it is legal fluff), there's really no point in continuing.
That is not how debates work. I can throw books and personal letters at you faster than you can even look them up. Again, the formula for an online debate usually goes like this.
1. You make a truth claim. Some times you can stop at this point, but if the other person disagrees then you must move on to completion of the rest of these steps.
2. You supply either evidence or quote a passage from an article or book that supports your truth claim.
3. Then you give the link to the entire article or book in case the other person wants to read more than what you quoted.
My job used to be installing high tech evidence presentation systems in federal court rooms. I often had down time and would kill time be reading from the hundreds of law books in the judges chambers but I can't expect you to have done the same so I must follow the formula above as well. That formula also applies to science, history, philosophy, etc.........
So you want me to do all the work it would take to educate you on the subject.
That is simply the burden any truth claim comes with in a debate. If you remember, when you said I hadn't given any evidence I went back and copied all the evidence I had given recently in this thread and every bit of it followed the formula I laid out above. In a debate your not presumed to be right until you demonstrate (within the debate its self) that you are right.
So I assume you will not be accepting any public benefits ever in your entire life?
That does not follow from anything I or you have said but I will pretend it does for the heck it.
Public benefits is to broad a word. Lets limit this to welfare, food stamps, and things similar to them.
1. You can assume I do not plan to receive welfare or food stamps in my life.
2. That even if I did accept them I would get off of them as soon as possible.
3. That I would recognize how those give away programs prey upon our desire to take the easy way out and that I would fight that weakness and return to work as soon as possible.
I believe in a hand up not a hand out.
That's exactly the basis for overturning Jim Crow. Those laws violated the rights of blacks, even though they were reflective of the majority view, thereby negating your position.
Are you suggesting that the nationwide majority were for Jim Crow laws?
Nope. The southern states were extremely angry at the court rulings. Does the name George Wallace ring a bell?
Ring a bell, I met the man. Your being intellectually dishonest again. We do not make laws based on only what the south eastern majority think. As I have said a dozen times our government's laws are supposed to reflect those of the national majority, not a regional (even assuming it existed) majority.
First, the Jim Crow laws specifically targeted blacks and relegated them to second-class status (at best). Second,
it was just in 2003 that the Supreme Court ruled that anti-sodomy laws to be unconstitutional. And finally, if you want to cite examples of what you think is "targeting of Christians", then please do so.
You switched contexts again. This particular argument was about homosexuality not race. This is going to get confusing because I am not for Jim Crow laws but I might be for anti-sodomy laws. I have never considered the legality of sodomy but I know for a fact that sodomy results in massive medical problems and costs. Also anti-sodomy laws are not anti-gay laws. They concern an act not an orientation.
So you're actually saying that laws have no bearing on a citizen's rights?
I have no idea how you got that from what you responded to. However I will say that court ruling and our inherent rights are two completely different things in many cases.
Until you stop dodging the question of whether our rights are subjective or objective I do not know in which context to consider points about rights. For the third time which one are they?
Except as we've covered, that's simply wrong. The history of Jim Crow laws and their popularity in the south directly contradicts your position.
You have not demonstrated that.
Because that's irrelevant to the question at hand.
Nope, there is precious little that's more relevant. I will give one last post to answer the question before I start deleting questions or claims about rights that you make.
Deleted based on criteria laid out in earlier posts.
Please show where the founding fathers meant for federal courts to simply go with majority views.
I already showed you that Jefferson feared this exact thing more than anything else. Do you need more than this? Are you not aware that most of our founders, framers, and early presidents stated that they feared internal threats far more than any external threat and courts contradicting the will of the majority being a primary reason for that fear.
So again, the overturning of Jim Crow laws must have really irked you. Just as you lament above, the court's ruling contradicted what the majority wanted.
You again, have not shown this to be true.
Then why don't courts conduct public opinion polls prior to making their decisions?
Because we are a representative republic. There has never been one, but I wish we were a direct democracy. The Achilles heal of a representative republic is that representatives govern to be re-elected, not for the greater good of the people. This tangent "if followed up" would require it's own thread.