Originally posted by: sao123
Originally posted by: RBachman
Originally posted by: sao123
you're all bigoted towards religion, and think you can blame all your problems in life due to the existence of religion. The courts feel that these laws (although religious in origin) are secular enough to be constitutional, and all your whining about the religious over a nonreligious subject is just simply uncalled for, and its really getting on my nerves.
Might want to read the thread before labelling me. Regardless, 95% of people are religious; this includes judges. Just why exactly do you think the SC ruled that way? You've dodged the same question as paulnepants (or whatever his SN is); why should our options be limited?
Lastly - whining about whining is great hypocrisy... not that the religious have a habit of that or anything ...
Why should your options be limited?
Let me explain it this way... You are the one who dodged the question...
what makes you think that your option to buy alcohol on sunday is a right and should not be interfered with?
I dont recall the right to drink alcoholic beverages being added anywhere in the constitution. Any agenda not set forth in the constitution must explicitly be considered a privelage. Any privelage granted, may be governed as the grantor see fits, regardless of the motivation behind the methods or specifics of that governing policy.
But this isnt about your right to drink on sunday now is it...
truthfully you have no case to argue about your options as a conumer being limited, and if you were a store owner who is arguing that you want to sell alcohol on sunday, well that arguement has already been refuted by my last post.
In short, you have no options except that which are explicitly granted to you.
Anything more than that is by definition anarchy. We dont live under anarchy, we live under democratic capitalism. When you have enough money to influence the politicians, then you can have your say. Until then, you will just ebb and flow like the rest of us.
I did read the entire thread, and the mentality of the folloing statement is exactly what I addressed.
That's not what anyone has said; rather, the argument is that if something doesn't hurt others, there's no basis for outlawing it. Perhaps if you learned to read...