Author Topic: The Church of Englad.Time for a moderator?  (Read 171 times)

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: The Church of Englad.Time for a moderator?
« Reply #25 on: Today at 10:40:11 AM »
Seems fair enough, we want policy based upon demonstrable facts, not supernatural suspicions.
What policies are based on supernatural suspicions?
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Not the root of all evil, but demonstrably a net negative in the world.
You might not think it but sufficient numbers thought it for Dawkins to answer it in his documentary “Religion, root of all evil?”
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They don't pose a direct danger, but they validate the nonsense that's used by religious fanatics to justify their atrocities.
You will have to justify if, where and how they validate it. How for instance does the religion that gets people to wear masks so as to not hurt flies, validate atrocities?
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I object - it's up there with having a hereditary head of state as something with a lack of an moral justification, but it's lower on the list of priorities than, say, sorting out education or the health and care services.
That presupposes that without religion health and care would be a priority, ignoring religions historic role in health and care and indeed education. None of which are guaranteed in a religionless society.


Outrider

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Re: The Church of Englad.Time for a moderator?
« Reply #26 on: Today at 10:58:53 AM »
What policies are based on supernatural suspicions?

In part, all of them, given the input of The Church of the England in the drafting and the Head of the Church in the ratification of all legislation. In the specific it's been instrumental in the past in laws on slavery, denying women suffrage, denying women rights, denying gay people rights, and currently it's active in opposition to things like the assisted dying bill.

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You might not think it but sufficient numbers thought it for Dawkins to answer it in his documentary “Religion, root of all evil?”

Channel 4's documentary - Professor Dawkins explicitly did not want that title, as he's said at the time and since. And maybe some do, but I was answering for me.

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You will have to justify if, where and how they validate it. How for instance does the religion that gets people to wear masks so as to not hurt flies, validate atrocities?

When they say that a world-view based upon fairy stories is valid. When 'I believe' becomes sufficient to deny reality, the exact same argument can be utilised whether the tenet you want to cleave to is 'all good dogs go to heaven' or 'all the infidels should be bombed to a paste'. 'God wants it' isn't open to rational debate, regardless of what 'it' is.

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That presupposes that without religion health and care would be a priority, ignoring religions historic role in health and care and indeed education.

Money's role in health and care is important. Societal structures role in health and care is important. Religion's role in trying to dominate those fields implicates in health and care, but health and care are available in other places. Sure, religion sometimes offers - for religious reasons - health and care, but sometimes it uses health and care to syphon up money and prestige for the Vatican while lauding suffering for poor people in India. And whichever of those it does, it's doing it for poor reasons.

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None of which are guaranteed in a religionless society.

But it is guaranteed that suicide bombings will go down, that sectarian violence will go down, that one more pillar of institutional and cultural homophobia and misogyny will go away, that fewer children will be signed up by their parents for harmful conversion therapy.

O.
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Maeght

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Re: The Church of Englad.Time for a moderator?
« Reply #27 on: Today at 11:20:52 AM »
Ideally and if intentions were pure.

No, by definition.

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: The Church of Englad.Time for a moderator?
« Reply #28 on: Today at 11:49:10 AM »
In part, all of them, given the input of The Church of the England in the drafting and the Head of the Church in the ratification of all legislation. In the specific it's been instrumental in the past in laws on slavery, denying women suffrage, denying women rights, denying gay people rights, and currently it's active in opposition to things like the assisted dying bill.
Since there are about 1432 secular MP’s and Lords in the HoP and 26 Lords spiritual I make that each policy has a maximum of just under 2% of religious input.

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When they say that a world-view based upon fairy stories is valid. When 'I believe' becomes sufficient to deny reality, the exact same argument can be utilised whether the tenet you want to cleave to is 'all good dogs go to heaven' or 'all the infidels should be bombed to a paste'. 'God wants it' isn't open to rational debate, regardless of what 'it' is.
Again in terms policy only 2% maximum of any policy can be attributed to the Lords spiritual. For the second time of asking can you give a policy founded on a fairy story?”

« Last Edit: Today at 11:58:44 AM by Nearly Sane »

Outrider

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Re: The Church of Englad.Time for a moderator?
« Reply #29 on: Today at 12:04:39 PM »
Since there are about 1432 secular MP’s and Lords in the HoP and 26 Lords spiritual I make that each policy has a maximum of just under 2% of religious input.

If you're talking about input that is intended to be specifically reliigious, why does it have any? If you're looking at people participating who have a religious affiliation there's significantly more than that 2%. The problem is that there is 2% that is reserved specifically for religious input, and specifically for religious input from one particular sect of one particular branch of one particular domain of one religion.

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Again in terms policy only 2% maximum of any policy can be attributed to the Lords spiritual. For the second time of asking can you give a policy founded on a fairy story?”

Did you miss this bit: "In the specific it's been instrumental in the past in laws on slavery, denying women suffrage, denying women rights, denying gay people rights, and currently it's active in opposition to things like the assisted dying bill."?

You could add their blanket support for the 'Listed Places of Worship' scheme which saw them add their voice to a £150 million+ pot of money to subsidise their building maintenance costs, their near blanket opposition to the Civil Partnership Act, their 90% opposition voting record to the Gordon Brown labour government (in contrast to their greater than 60% support of Cameron's government, and less than 30% support of the Coalition), blanket opposition to the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act, their support of the £20 million extension of the First World War Centenary Cathedral Repair bill, the Place of Worship Security funding (twice) and the extension of the Gift Aid eligibility criteria.

And a curious tidbit that popped up while I was looking that lot up that I hadn't realised before: the Lords Temporal aren't permitted to vote in a General Election... but the Lords Spiritual are.

O.
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: The Church of Englad.Time for a moderator?
« Reply #30 on: Today at 12:20:44 PM »
If you're talking about input that is intended to be specifically reliigious, why does it have any? If you're looking at people participating who have a religious affiliation there's significantly more than that 2%. The problem is that there is 2% that is reserved specifically for religious input, and specifically for religious input from one particular sect of one particular branch of one particular domain of one religion.

Did you miss this bit: "In the specific it's been instrumental in the past in laws on slavery, denying women suffrage, denying women rights, denying gay people rights, and currently it's active in opposition to things like the assisted dying bill."?

You could add their blanket support for the 'Listed Places of Worship' scheme which saw them add their voice to a £150 million+ pot of money to subsidise their building maintenance costs, their near blanket opposition to the Civil Partnership Act, their 90% opposition voting record to the Gordon Brown labour government (in contrast to their greater than 60% support of Cameron's government, and less than 30% support of the Coalition), blanket opposition to the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act, their support of the £20 million extension of the First World War Centenary Cathedral Repair bill, the Place of Worship Security funding (twice) and the extension of the Gift Aid eligibility criteria.

And a curious tidbit that popped up while I was looking that lot up that I hadn't realised before: the Lords Temporal aren't permitted to vote in a General Election... but the Lords Spiritual are.

O.
And Again there are 1432 secular lords and MPs. Including782 secular Lords against 26 Spiritual Lords.

Your fears seem to be based on secular superstition rather than data.

Then there is the question of whether a notional minuscule input is invariably bad or good.

Outrider

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Re: The Church of Englad.Time for a moderator?
« Reply #31 on: Today at 12:47:03 PM »
And Again there are 1432 secular lords and MPs. Including782 secular Lords against 26 Spiritual Lords.

The 'it's only a little bit biased' argument. I said it wasn't a high priority of mine, in the grand scheme of things, but it's still a situation that appears to be a blatant sop to a particular religious viewpoint at the expense of everyone else, and so is not justifiable. Your 'it's not much' is effectively a tacit admission of that.

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Your fears seem to be based on secular superstition rather than data.

Which is why you asked for data? Or is it because now that you've been given the data it serves you to ignore it?

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Then there is the question of whether a notional minuscule input is invariably bad or good.

No, there really isn't. Whether you agree or disagree with their voting record is irrelevant, the problem is that they have a reserved place for one particular sect of spellcasters, when no-one else does. It's special treatment, it's a double-helping that hasn't been justified.

I'm particularly exercised because they so regularly vote against the principles I'd espouse, but my argument against their inclusion isn't that I disagree with their stance, it's that I disagree with the notion that they should get to have a stance when everyone else instead gets to have the opportunity to write to a Lord of their choice.

O.
Universes are forever, not just for creation...

New Atheism - because, apparently, there's a use-by date on unanswered questions.

Eminent Pedant, Interpreter of Heretical Writings, Unwarranted Harvester of Trite Nomenclature, Church of Debatable Saints