Cybrweez wrote:Zarathustra wrote:Thinking that your view is correct is one thing ... arguing for putting people in jail who don't hold your worldview is another thing entirely.
By all means, bold your thoughts and feel like you're different. I get your righteous indignation.
I frequently use bold font to emphasize my main point and to grab the attention those who might be skimming, not necessarily to indicate an emotion like indignation. But yes, in this case, there is a bit of indignation in there.
Cybrweez wrote:But I'm sure you certainly would argue that one who doesn't hold your worldview (for instance, those who don't mind violating others' rights), should go to prison.
Don't be so sure. (See post above.) My opinion that pedophiles should go to jail has absolutely nothing to do with my position on the nature of reality, the question of god's existence, the afterlife, or anything else that fits into the term, "world view." My opinion is part of a "
rights view," but not a world view. I would hold the same position even if I was a Christian.
Cybrweez wrote:I'll call it a legal identity - if you make a law, you are legislating one thing is right, and another wrong. Period. Its really that simple.
No, it's not that simple. Many laws have absolutely nothing to do with right/wrong. For instance, laws that determine how our President is selected, laws that declare federal holidays, etc., etc. How we choose to organize our society does not necessarily include our views on right/wrong. Much of it is pure bureaucracy.
If you really believe this--that laws are nothing more than an enforcement of right and wrong--then do you think it's okay to legislate a belief in God? Why or why not? This should be interesting ....
If you can't force people to believe in religious worldviews, then you can't force people to abide by religious world views. Pretending to not see the difference is pretending that the 1st amendment doesn't exist. Therefore, since there is a huge difference between making murder illegal and making Christianity compulsory, there has to be a difference between enforcing religious views and protecting people's rights.
Surely we can all (well, maybe all except one) understand there is a fundamental, categorical difference between
dictating how people should act (anti-freedom) and
dictating that people can't violate another person's freedom (pro-freedom). This religious ploy of pretending that there is no distinction between these two is disingenuous, anti-american, and frankly just plain ignorant.
Cybrweez wrote:But, aren't you saying rus is wrong? Or are you saying you hope he's right? Now I'm thoroughly confused.
I wish Rus was right. I wish an all-powerful being would make me immortal and let me live in Paradise. Who wouldn't want that? However, I've not seen any evidence to convince me of it.