Obama's Religious Background, Does It Matter? |
Here are the general forum rules that you must follow before you start any debate topics. Please make sure you've read and followed all directions.
Obama's Religious Background, Does It Matter? |
![]()
Post
#1
|
|
![]() ^_^ ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Staff Alumni Posts: 8,141 Joined: Jan 2005 Member No: 91,466 ![]() |
For those of you that have been following, yet another, God-awful US election, you're well aware of the recent specualtions about Barack Obama being a Muslim. Does it really matter? What difference would it make if the man was a Scientologist?
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/ Discuss. EDIT: Can someone please correct the spelling in the title? |
|
|
![]() |
![]()
Post
#2
|
|
GD. <3 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Staff Alumni Posts: 1,222 Joined: Aug 2005 Member No: 198,566 ![]() |
Hitherto religious affiliation has been an utterly inappropriate means towards character evaluation. It just doesn't work. What a religion preaches is seldom what its followers practice. Just as you identify that politicians create elaborate campaign images, as do all people create even more complex and interweaving images - the personalities we suggest in small doses. Christians can be pretty huge shit heads, as can Buddhists, atheists, and Hindus. Further, the best of your knowledge sucks if you think religion promotes wholly positive teachings and practices; anything that dampens scientific research and dismembers equal rights can suck my ass. I never stated that their religion was the sole basis for character evaluation. When I chose to practice a certain religion, and identify myself with their teachings, that means I as a person agree with said concepts. That gives insight to what a person believes, which in turn gives insight to a person's thought process. And you missed the point completely. In concept, most religions DO preach positive concepts. Hence, a candidates religious affiliation shouldn't ideally hurt them. But courtesy extremism and the mixture of personal beliefs, a number of religions aren't exactly practiced the intended way. Hence, a lot of them are shed in a negative light. I never said practicing a religion MAKES a person good. I said practicing any certain religion shouldn't hurt their evaluation as a person, so why would it matter? Because people lack the ability to understand other religions objectively because of improper practice, prejudice, racism, etc. But that's a problem with the people, not the concept. QUOTE Well, if our analyzers are the American voting population - f**k all! Agreed. I never said the American population HAD the capacity to analyze intelligently. We've had Bush for two f**king terms! QUOTE 1. The facilitators of our state do not have to be completely removed from the church (or spirituality) to conduct government business in a secular manner. What you're arguing is a far too broad definition of separation. 2. Secondly, the hell do you mean "no religious affiliation" is a form of "religious affiliation?" Have you never heard of the law of non-contradiction? 1. I never said they couldn't. What I'm saying, is that if we're able to evaluate a candidate based on past actions and beliefs, moral and otherwise, why shouldn't religious standing be fair game? We voting for the person to fill the job -- not the job itself. 2. Why not? Atheism can be defined as a religious affiliation. |
|
|
![]() ![]() |