I thought Christmas was a national holiday now and only remotely tied to the religion it came from... I don't know I'm not a big Christmas practitioner, but goddamn it if I don't love the music.
Cristman is Christ's mass. I would think it is a religious holiday. I think a Christman tree should have Christian symbols on it. I don't worship at the Christmas tree. I have one to celebrate Christmas. Nobody is forced to be celebrative just because there's a Christmas tree somewhere. We should have Atheistmas day where you celebrate around a tree hung with turds. Fuck folk who can't handle symbols. They are sticks and stones and you were instructed, countless times in kindergarten to get over yourselves.
We get Christmas once a year and 364 days of fuck you the rest of the year. What's the problem?
I'm one of the "atheist assholes" you speak of, and I happily celebrate christmas - although we call it the equivalent of Yule where I live, as our language is not English. To me, christmas is a nice family holiday where you get to be merry, eat good food, open pressies and enjoy each others' company. It's not religious at all.However, Moonie, I do agree with your sentiment. We have the atheist assholes on one side and the christian churches on the other. In between are the normal folk who just want to celebrate their traditional winter solstice holiday in peace.
I'm one of the "atheist assholes" you speak of, and I happily celebrate christmas - although we call it the equivalent of Yule where I live, as our language is not English. To me, christmas is a nice family holiday where you get to be merry, eat good food, open pressies and enjoy each others' company. It's not religious at all.
I have angels in my christmas tree, they're pretty baubles amongst other pretty baubles. That's what it means to be atheist, not get bogged down in symbolics. Just because I'm an atheist doesn't mean I can't enjoy christian imagery, which really is just creativity spawned by the talented human mind.
However, all this applies to my own personal opinions and beliefs, this guy is concerned with society actually following its own laws. One of those laws says government is not allowed to sponsor any particular religions. That's a very good basic standpoint, as too often have one religion or a particular interpretation thereof been used as a bludgeon to clobber those of different beliefs, and a government should always treat everyone equally, regardless of faith or lack thereof. A government that embraces christianity can by its very definition not treat everyone differently, particulary as christianity is mutually exclusive of all other faiths.
So those who oppose what this guy is doing (and want to sever his limbs, nail him to trees etc, yech) really are saying that society can ignore its own laws, if it suits part of its population. But that's not how things work.
Imagine society wants to ignore the people's right to bear arms and want to take your guns away. You people would go apeshit.
So remove that beam from your own eye first, because double standards are uncool mmkay?
It seems this fellow belongs to the "Church of I'm an Bitter Idiot".
I think it would be fun to forbid using words which have religious connotations. People would have to be careful when swearing etc. Couldn't use the word "conversion" for example because it has religious meaning in the dictionary. I mean someone might not know what it meant and see the religious definition. Damn, get rid of the dictionary right away, and get those internet filters up, and don't say "Damn"
I'd find it amusing![]()
I'm one of the "atheist assholes" you speak of, and I happily celebrate christmas - although we call it the equivalent of Yule where I live, as our language is not English. To me, christmas is a nice family holiday where you get to be merry, eat good food, open pressies and enjoy each others' company. It's not religious at all.
I have angels in my christmas tree, they're pretty baubles amongst other pretty baubles. That's what it means to be atheist, not get bogged down in symbolics. Just because I'm an atheist doesn't mean I can't enjoy christian imagery, which really is just creativity spawned by the talented human mind.
However, all this applies to my own personal opinions and beliefs, this guy is concerned with society actually following its own laws. One of those laws says government is not allowed to sponsor any particular religions. That's a very good basic standpoint, as too often have one religion or a particular interpretation thereof been used as a bludgeon to clobber those of different beliefs, and a government should always treat everyone equally, regardless of faith or lack thereof. A government that embraces christianity can by its very definition not treat everyone differently, particulary as christianity is mutually exclusive of all other faiths.
So those who oppose what this guy is doing (and want to sever his limbs, nail him to trees etc, yech) really are saying that society can ignore its own laws, if it suits part of its population. But that's not how things work.
Imagine society wants to ignore the people's right to bear arms and want to take your guns away. You people would go apeshit.
So remove that beam from your own eye first, because double standards are uncool mmkay?
This is a governmental restriction, not an individual one.
This comes down in the category of 'this guy is right, but he's still an asshole'. While the church/state separation doctrine has some unfortunate and silly side effects like this one, it's an American principle to keep religion out of government business and it should stay that way. Religion has a pretty unfortunate history throughout the ages as to what it does when given the coercive power of the state and I have no desire to give it even a foot in the door.
Err, we're talking a couple angels, which I'd bet the Founding Fathers wouldn't have had a cow about. The intent was the prevention of a state religion, AKA an Anglican Church sort of thing. It's only been recently that it's been expanded to include almost everything because one's testicles got knotted. There is the freedom of religion, which includes YOUR choice to not follow one, and the prohibition of the ESTABLISHMENT of a state run one, but while Jefferson was a Deist, he wasn't a bitter old bastard trying to be Scrooge.
Awesome post... :thumbsup:
You said exactly what I was thinking and how I feel about religious holidays in general. My wife (a christian) and I (an agnostic) are headed over to my bro, sis-in-law, and nieces place this afternoon. My dad will join us there and we'll hang for a bit then head over to my sis-in-law's parents place where we'll join much more family. Some will attend church, some will not, all will have a great time either way.![]()
This is a governmental restriction, not an individual one.
This comes down in the category of 'this guy is right, but he's still an asshole'. While the church/state separation doctrine has some unfortunate and silly side effects like this one, it's an American principle to keep religion out of government business and it should stay that way. Religion has a pretty unfortunate history throughout the ages as to what it does when given the coercive power of the state and I have no desire to give it even a foot in the door.
I agree with the OP's sentiment, but get confused about some aspects of this argument. For one thing, despite the name, a Christmas tree is NOT a Christian symbol, it's a pagan symbol (arguably, Christmas is not Christian holiday either, but that's for another thread). For another, the word holiday is the contraction of holy day, so the use of the word holiday still has religious implications.
So in short, I guess what confuses me are the idiot atheists protesting Christmas trees as religious symbols and the idiot religious protesting the use of word holiday as being anti-religious. Are there any non-idiots left in any debate in this country?
I know you are pretty dumb... but really?
It is on Gov property. If this was on a persons house then no problem.
And they, the city, did have a option. Allow other items to be put up. That includes islam, pagans, satanist, etc... Many cities have done this and is was ok/
I'm one of the "atheist assholes" you speak of, and I happily celebrate christmas - although we call it the equivalent of Yule where I live, as our language is not English. To me, christmas is a nice family holiday where you get to be merry, eat good food, open pressies and enjoy each others' company. It's not religious at all.
I have angels in my christmas tree, they're pretty baubles amongst other pretty baubles. That's what it means to be atheist, not get bogged down in symbolics. Just because I'm an atheist doesn't mean I can't enjoy christian imagery, which really is just creativity spawned by the talented human mind.
However, all this applies to my own personal opinions and beliefs, this guy is concerned with society actually following its own laws. One of those laws says government is not allowed to sponsor any particular religions. That's a very good basic standpoint, as too often have one religion or a particular interpretation thereof been used as a bludgeon to clobber those of different beliefs, and a government should always treat everyone equally, regardless of faith or lack thereof. A government that embraces christianity can by its very definition not treat everyone differently, particulary as christianity is mutually exclusive of all other faiths.
So those who oppose what this guy is doing (and want to sever his limbs, nail him to trees etc, yech) really are saying that society can ignore its own laws, if it suits part of its population. But that's not how things work.
Imagine society wants to ignore the people's right to bear arms and want to take your guns away. You people would go apeshit.
So remove that beam from your own eye first, because double standards are uncool mmkay?
People get too worked up about shit. Why doesn't he just go and set up a tree with non-angel decorations at the top?
I'm an agnostic and I think he needs to relax.
The idea of a 'wall of separation of church and state' came from Jefferson, and most historians do not believe he intended it to mean only that the state could not establish a church. The bredth of his quotations on the subject clearly show that he did not want the state to show a preference to any religion over any other, and obviously the state erecting Christian imagery does that.
While I'm not trying to play 'quote the founders', as there are surely several of them who completely disagreed with Jefferson, I do think that while we're talking about the separation of church and state that we keep in mind what its main proponent thought.