reply to post by re22666
I'm really having some serious trouble understanding why you get so defensive and see anger where none is intended. So I'm going to try something
different here and intentionally dismiss everything not relevant to the facts at hand. That is not to dismiss your feelings out of hand, but rather
because I simply do not understand them. I am hoping as we go on I will get a better understanding of the problem so I can somehow 'fix' it...
anyway. the point was, yes traffic infractions are minor, pot smoking does go on plenty, but go see how many people are in prison for posession
of it compared to preachers who said the wrong thing. be serious now. go to any prision, what is it full of? people that spoke of religion? kids that
wrote essays on jesus? or people that had drugs on them?
OK, I have to accept that point. The prison population does contain pot smokers rather than religious folk. Where I have a hard time arguing this
point with you is that I actually agree! marijuana was rampant when I was younger (70s

) and I freely admit I smoked my share of pot during that
time. This is not something I am unfamiliar with. In my opinion, after experimenting with both pot and alcohol, I see no difference in intensity
between the two. ergo, if one is legal (alcohol), both should be equally legal.
so your point there i do not get. running a red light is minor. but people get ticketed. people also die because of it all the time and that
seems pretty major to anyone that may have say, cared about the dead guy. these laws get enforced WAY more than your anti-religion laws. and yet, we
still live with them all the time. we still see it happen all the time.
Again, I concede that argument. I see accidents all the time in my job (truck driver) where a minor infraction has caused the death or injury to the
law-breaker or to others.
my point was, 'legally' doesnt really mean a damn thng. for every preacher you say was arrested for what he said at his pulpit, there are way
more getting their words and their thoughts out there.
Here I have some trouble following your logic.
Legal does indeed mean something, even if not regularly enforced. If a law is unenforced, you would be correct. But if a law is loosely enforced, it
is still the law, and one runs a risk of 'punishment' whenever one breaks it. try telling the judge, after receiving a traffic ticket, that you were
speeding because everyone else was speeding. I promise you it will do absolutely no good.
As for the preachers, they do not get arrested for their activities in the first place. this law uses financial punishment rather than incarceration.
yet it is still punishment, because a church exists through charitable giving. They do not make or sell anything. So to take away their status as a
charitable organization and place a heavy tax burden on a non-profit charity effectively nullifies it financially from even existing.
You also seem to have this conception that all preachers and churches are acting in collusion. I assure you this is not the case. Each church exists
as its members wish it to exist, with minimal or no input from any other churches. As a metaphor, I am assuming you smoke pot (from your attitude
towards it) or at least once did. If someone else gets arrested for smoking pot, does that have the same effect on you that being arrested yourself
would have? Obviously not, because you do not even know the other dude, in all probability. It does affect you since it heightens the concern that you
may be arrested (and alerts you to unjust laws), but it will not prevent you from smoking pot.
This is similar to what happens when a preacher is financially punished by the IRS for speaking his mind. Other preachers will no doubt still say what
they want, but they will be much more cautious about it. That will censor free speech and violate the right all of us have to speak freely without
governmental consequence.
we just watched two presidential candidates have to answer to evangelical questions as if that were normal. when do satanists get to quiz the
candidates like that? when is it the jews turn, muslims, etc. so you say preachers are forced to watch what they say. i say i dont believe that is
really happening all that much but ok. i say then we have the entire presidential election being taken over by jesus.
I am still trying to understand why all of this religious pandering is being allowed. Myself, while I would prefer a President who believes as I do
(as I think everyone else would; that is human nature), that is far from my largest concern. I want to know where they stand on illegal immigration,
the terrorism threat, energy policy, involvement in other countries, and spending policies here at home. Not religious dogma.
So here again, I have to agree with you.
see my point, 'legally' shmegally. jesus is shoved down people's throats just as i have said. and if one kid gets a 0 for writing about a
fictional character when specifically told not to, well i cannot feel real bad about that.
Even though I agree with you on the above points, and even though I understand it is irritating to have your day interrupted by someone with a
religious message (as I have stated many times before), I do not understand where the concept of everyone having freedom of speech compares with
governmental and institutional discrimination.
I cannot fathom any 'free' society where any one group (Christians or non-Christians included) is denied freedoms. If you and I are to have the
freedom to post on this site our true feelings about different subjects, then it is an absolute requirement that others are also free to do so. That
means that our own personal freedoms come at the cost of allowing others to have that freedom. That includes the Christian zealot on the street
corner, the preacher in his pulpit, the atheist, the satanist, the Jew, the Muslim, the Wiccan, the Buddhist... everyone. If one voice is silenced,
then all are at risk of being silenced.
Also, do not think for one moment that only 'non-Christians' are being targeted. There are many churches who believe their beliefs are somehow the
only ones which work, and they will get up in my face just as fast as they will yours. Also, if someone is searching for the 'lost', they have no
idea whether or not the next guy in line is religious or not. It's not like there is a secret handshake or something. The difference, as I see it,
without trying to be offensive, is that when confronted, I tell them to back off. If they continue, I try to convert
them. You can do the same,
because a conversion is simply a matter of convincing someone you are right in your beliefs, and everyone, even atheists, have some form of belief.
TheRedneck