McCain Unable To Understand U.S. Declaration Of Independence

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Rick, quit being such an r-tard.

Why the hell do you care whether anybody on this forum (or anywhere else for that matter) believes in God? It's a personal thing and none of your business, frankly. Besides, even if somebody doesn't believe in God, that doesn't mean they don't believe in basic human dignity and the rights that civilized people ought to extend to one another in respect of said human dignity.

Let's face it: The enigmatic author known only as Ragnar Redbeard was 100% correct in the basic premise of his infamous pamphlet,"Might Makes Right." If I were to hold a gun to your head and tell you to lick a pile of dog shit off the floor or else I'm gonna put a bullet in your head, where are your God-given rights to life and liberty then? Where is your God now, Rick?

You above all people should know that political treatises, constitutions and "guaranteed" rights aren't worth the dead trees they're written on unless the human beings with the lawyers, the guns and the money decide to abide by them.
Last edited by Colonel Panic_Archive on Sun Jun 15, 2008 10:51 pm, edited 2 times in total.

McCain Unable To Understand U.S. Declaration Of Independence

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Rick, just because someone is an atheist doesn't mean that they don't believe in inalienable rights for all mankind. And anyway, I don't see any definition of what they meant by god in the constitution. The way I interpret it, it is more of an idea than an entity. Of course, I am speaking for myself, not the founding fathers. I can't, and won't, make assumptions about what they meant by god, and I suspect it differed depending on which one you spoke to, if you were able to speak to them.

There are plenty of theists who have sought to limit human rights all throughout history, under the assumption that this is what their god meant to be. Just as there are theists who seek to extend human rights to all.
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McCain Unable To Understand U.S. Declaration Of Independence

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Mark Hansen wrote:
Dr. Geek wrote:We should strip atheists of all their rights!

As George Bush said, " . . . I don't know that atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots. This is one nation under God."


Bush didn't really say that, did he?


Senior, yes.
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McCain Unable To Understand U.S. Declaration Of Independence

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Rick Reuben wrote:
scott ritsema wrote:By now, it is widely known that the Supreme Court has weighed in on the debate over the rights of the prisoners at Gitmo. The court has stated that the detainees’ habeas corpus rights (the protection against an indefinite detention without charges and a trial) ought to be respected.

Referring to the human beings who are still being detained at Guantanamo Bay, John McCain stated, “These are people who are not citizens. They do not and never have been given the rights that citizens in this country have” .

So our rights are given to us? Interesting.

Where exactly in the text of the Constitution does the Constitution give this right of habeas corpus?

You won’t find it. The Constitution only puts limits on the removal of habeas corpus, which implies that human beings possess this right naturally, and that habeas corpus is not some peculiar civil privilege, such as welfare, or some right that only citizens have, such as voting in our elections.

A reminder to the atheists on this forum: If you completely reject God as a possibility, then you completely reject the possibility that a God gave you rights that your government cannot take away from you. Remember that the founders of your country used God to define the rights that you were born with- not as an American, but as a human being.

Makes you wonder what the real motives are for eliminating a citizen's claim to hold 'God-given rights', doesn't it?
The Declaration of Independence declares the self-evident truth that God gave us our rights and that we are “endowed by our creator” with “unalienable rights,” such as, “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

Unalienable. Can’t be taken away. God-given natural rights.

Might be sound policy for the atheists to accept God as a possibility, because if you throw away God, then there's nothing at all standing between you and your government- especially if you throw away your right to bear arms and your right to free assembly and your right to privacy at the same time that you throw away your 'God-given' rights.


What the hell are you talking about? This doesn't make any sense.
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McCain Unable To Understand U.S. Declaration Of Independence

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Mark Hansen wrote:Rick, just because someone is an atheist doesn't mean that they don't believe in inalienable rights for all mankind. And anyway, I don't see any definition of what they meant by god in the constitution. The way I interpret it, it is more of an idea than an entity. Of course, I am speaking for myself, not the founding fathers. I can't, and won't, make assumptions about what they meant by god, and I suspect it differed depending on which one you spoke to, if you were able to speak to them.


I think you're right about this. I do think that the framers were referring to the Judeo-Christian idea of God, but by not establishing a state religion they understood that could change.

Forcibly removing God out of or putting God into the state apparatus is at the crux of a lot of mainstream political debates today. I think Rick is correct is saying that it serves as a distraction, and as people who believe in inalienable rights we should not target those who choose to believe in God (or whatever) or those who choose not to believe in God. He makes the distinction that those who choose not to believe in God are still making a choice - and are therefore acting upon some degree of a faith or belief system.

I think he also focuses on those who choose not to believe in God because those who do believe in God - like myself - are in the vast minority here.

Of course I don't speak for him, so he may clarify/correct me on any/all of this!
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McCain Unable To Understand U.S. Declaration Of Independence

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http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/features/2000/buckner1.html

Michael E. Buckner wrote:The United States Constitution is, of course, literally a "godless" document: the word "God" (like the words "Jesus," "Christ," "Christianity," or "Bible") simply doesn't appear anywhere in our country's fundamental legal document. If the Founders of the United States meant to establish this as a "Christian Nation" in any constitutional, legal, or political sense, they neglected to mention it in the document from which our federal government derives its authority.

Often, though, supporters of the "Christian Nation" ideology claim that the Declaration of Independence is the document that establishes this country as distinctively Christian. Leaving aside the fact that the Declaration, however important it may be in our history, technically has no legal standing in our government, this is at least superficially a more convincing claim. After all, the Declaration does at least use the word "God," and uses synonyms thereof three more times later in the Declaration. To be sure, none of these words or phrases ("Nature's God," "Creator," "Supreme Judge of the World," "Divine Providence") is specifically Christian -- there are no references to Jesus Christ or the Holy Trinity -- but none of them is necessarily incompatible with Christianity either.

It should be pointed out that Thomas Jefferson, the principal drafter of the Declaration, although he often referred to himself as a "true Christian," did not accept the doctrines of the virgin birth, the resurrection of Jesus, the divinity of Jesus, or any miraculous powers ascribed to Jesus, nor did he believe in original sin or justification by faith. Given Jefferson's religious beliefs and the lack of any distinctively Christian language in the Declaration, many have argued that the theism of the Declaration is the religion of Deism and not the religion of Christianity. (Deism was a rationalist, monotheistic faith associated with the 18th Century Enlightenment in Europe; Deism had no creeds or dogmas, but in general Deists, while believing in God as Creator of the Universe and even as author of moral laws, rejected belief in miracles and considered reason and experience rather than revelation and faith to be the proper sources of religious truth. The modern Unitarians are probably the closest heirs to the Deists of Jefferson's day.) It's also true that the Declaration contains no scriptural citations or even any obvious allusions to the Christian Bible, which is certainly peculiar for an ostensibly Christian document.


The founders were denounced as atheists and infidels by the Religious Right of their day for purposely omitting any reference to a god in the Constitution, the document that matters. This is all spelled out clearly here:

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and here:

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Rick Reuben wrote:Edit those words out or I'm contacting a moderator.

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