Rick Reuben wrote:warmowski wrote: ambiguous words are wide open to interperetation
The word Creator is not ambiguous or metaphorical.
Who cares if the Declaration is deist or theist? Either way, the authors state that a Creator ( of the physical universe ) endowed men with unalienable rights.
The document may be theist or deist, but the last thing it is is atheist.
Who cares? Smart people who can tell the difference between different things.
Here it is, worded so that even abusive retards can grasp it:
Using reason, the founders invented an important philosophy of original rights.
Their invention's document contains a tiny shred of language that cursory, shallow thinkers and theists always presume is proof the founders had faith in a creator.
In fact, the founders' own actions prove the
direct opposite.
The founders' on-paper faith in a divine creator as invoked in the Declaration - as slight and ambiguous as the evidence is - is totally invalidated by the unarguable fact that the founders
withheld those allegedly divinely-endowed rights from nonwhites and women.
If the founders really believed that the source of the rights was divine and they had faith in that divinity, wouldn't they act accordingly and carry out god's endowment? Stay out of his way?
Of course, they most certainly did not. They kept down the nonwhites and women, gave faith faint emphasis in their invention and went about their decidedly contratheistic business, developing a secular social construct and put all the strong places in their philosophy exclusively under the secular rubric.
It then follows that in their work, the founders valued reason more than faith.
As such, the founders are a pretty crappy group to hold up when trying to slap around uppity "bigoted" atheists. A crappy group for a crappy, stupid cause.
The founders just weren't particularly impressed by a rights-endowing "creator". They gave a tiny shout-out at best in the Declaration - and even then their enlightenment, deistic legacies kept them from taking on any specific theistic baggage. And then they treated the "Creator" just like a rhetorical / metaphorical construct as they went about their white male business.
You're done.
-r