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Why America is the greatest country ever. . .
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R. S. Refugee



Joined: 29 Sep 2004
Location: Shangra La, ROK

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 4:45 am    Post subject: Why America is the greatest country ever. . . Reply with quote

Why I�m Patriotic
by Matthew Rothschild
(In memory of George Carlin.)

It�s July 4th again, a day of near-compulsory flag-waving and nation-worshipping. Count me out.

Spare me the puerile parades.

Don�t play that martial music, white boy.

And don�t befoul nature�s sky with your F-16s.

You see, I don�t believe in patriotism.

It�s not that I�m anti-American, but I am anti-patriotic.

Love of country isn�t natural. It�s not something you�re born with. It�s an inculcated kind of love, something that is foisted upon you in the home, in the school, on TV, at church, during the football game.

Yet most people accept it without inspection.

Why?

For when you stop to think about it, patriotism (especially in its malignant morph, nationalism) has done more to stack the corpses millions high in the last 300 years than any other factor, including the prodigious slayer, religion.

The victims of colonialism, from the Congo to the Philippines, fell at nationalism�s bayonet point.

World War I filled the graves with the most foolish nationalism. And Hitler and Mussolini and Imperial Japan brought nationalism to new nadirs. The flags next to the tombstones are but signed confessions-notes left by the killer after the fact.

The millions of victims of Stalin and Mao and Pol Pot have on their death certificates a dual diagnosis: yes communism, but also that other ism, nationalism.

The whole world almost got destroyed because of nationalism during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

The bloody battles in Serbia and Bosnia and Croatia in the 1990s fed off the injured pride of competing patriotisms and all their nourished grievances.

In the last five years in Iraq, tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians have died because the United States, the patriarch of patriotism, saw fit to impose itself, without just cause, on another country. But the excuse was patriotism, wrapped in Bush�s brand of messianic militarism: that we, the great Americans, have a duty to deliver �God�s gift of freedom� to every corner of the world.

And the Congress swallowed it, and much of the American public swallowed it, because they�ve been fed a steady diet of this swill.

What is patriotism but �the narcissism of petty differences�? That�s Freud�s term, describing the disorder that compels one group to feel superior to another.

Then there�s a little multiplication problem: Can every country be the greatest country in the world?

This belief system magically transforms an accident of birth into some kind of blue ribbon.

�It�s a great country,� said the old Quaker essayist Milton Mayer. �They�re all great countries.�

At times, the appeal to patriotism may be necessary, as when harnessing the group to protect against a larger threat (Hitler) or to overthrow an oppressor (as in the anti-colonial struggles in the Third World).

But it is always a dangerous toxin to play with, and it ought to be shelved with cross and bones on the label except in these most extreme circumstances.

In an article called �Patriot Games� in the current issue of Time magazine (July 7), Peter Beinart, late of The New Republic, inspects his navel for seven pages and then throws the lint all around.

�Conservatives are right,� he says. �To some degree, patriotism must mean loving your country for the same reason you love your family: simply because it is yours.�

And then he criticizes, incoherently, the conservative love-it-or-leave-it types.

The moral folly of his argument he himself exposes: �If liberals love America purely because it embodies ideals like liberty, justice, and equality, why shouldn�t they love Canada-which from a liberal perspective often goes further toward realizing those principles-even more? And what do liberals do,� he asks, �when those universal ideals collide with America�s self-interest? Giving away the federal budget to Africa would probably increase the net sum of justice and equality on the planet, after all. But it would harm Americans and thus be unpatriotic.�

This is a straw man if I ever I saw one, but if the United States gave a lot more of its budget to eradicating poverty and disease in Africa and other parts of the developing world, it might actually make us all safer.

At bottom, note how readily Beinart disposes of �liberty, justice, and equality.�

He has stripped patriotism to its vacuous essence: Love your country because it�s yours.

If we stopped that arm from reflexively saluting and concerned ourselves more with �universal ideals� than with parochial ones, we�d be a lot better off.

We wouldn�t be in Iraq, we wouldn�t have besmirched ourselves at Guantanamo, we wouldn�t be acting like some Argentinean junta that wages illegal wars and tortures people and disappears them into secret dungeons.

Love of country is a form of idolatry.

Listen, if you would, to the wisdom of Milton Mayer, writing back in 1962 a rebuke to JFK for his much-celebrated line: �Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.�

Mayer would have none of it. �When Mr. Kennedy spoke those words at his inaugural, I knew that I was at odds with a society which did not immediately rebel against them,� he wrote. �They are the words of totalitarianism pure; no Jefferson could have spoken them, and no Khrushchev could have spoken them better. Could a man say what Mr. Kennedy said and also say that the difference between us and them is that they believe that man exists for the State and we believe that the State exists for man? He couldn�t, but he did. And in doing so, he read me out of society.�

When Americans retort that this is still the greatest country in the world, I have to ask why.

Are we the greatest country because we have 10,000 nuclear weapons?

No, that just makes us enormously powerful, with the capacity to destroy the Earth itself.

Are we the greatest country because we have soldiers stationed in more than 120 countries?

No, that just makes us an empire, like the empires of old, only more so.

Are we the greatest country because we are one-twentieth of the world�s population but we consume one-quarter of its resources?

No, that just must makes us a greedy and wasteful nation.

Are we the greatest country because the top 1 percent of Americans hoards 34 percent of the nation�s wealth, more than everyone in the bottom 90 percent combined?

No, that just makes us a vastly unequal nation.

Are we the greatest country because corporations are treated as real, live human beings with rights?

No, that just enshrines a plutocracy in this country.

Are we the greatest country because we take the best care of our people�s basic needs?

No, actually we don�t. We�re far down the list on health care and infant mortality and parental leave and sick leave and quality of life.

So what exactly are we talking about here?

To the extent that we�re a great (not the greatest, mind you: that�s a fool�s game) country, we�re less of a great country today.

Because those things that truly made us great-the system of checks and balances, the enshrinement of our individual rights and liberties-have all been systematically assaulted by Bush and Cheney.

From the Patriot Act to the Military Commissions Act to the new FISA Act, and all the signing statements in between, we are less great today.

From Abu Ghraib and Bagram Air Force Base and Guantanamo, we are less great today.

From National Security Presidential Directive 51 (giving the Executive responsibility for ensuring constitutional government in an emergency) to National Security Presidential Directive 59 (expanding the collection of our biometric data), we are less great today.

From the Joint Terrorism Task Forces to InfraGard and the Terrorist Liaison Officers, we are less great today.

Admit it. We don�t have a lot to brag about today.

It is time, it is long past time, to get over the American superiority complex.

It is time, it is long past time, to put patriotism back on the shelf-out of the reach of children and madmen.

Matthew Rothschild is the editor of The Progressive magazine.

� 2008 The Progressive

No, wait. I made a cut and paste error. The title was actually:

Why I�m NOT Patriotic

Enjoy your hot dogs and Blue Angels shows. Very Happy Laughing Very Happy
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Kuros



Joined: 27 Apr 2004

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 8:28 am    Post subject: Re: Why America is the greatest country ever. . . Reply with quote

Rothschild wrote:


Love of country isn�t natural. It�s not something you�re born with. It�s an inculcated kind of love, something that is foisted upon you in the home, in the school, on TV, at church, during the football game.

Yet most people accept it without inspection.


What about those of us who have accepted patriotism with inspection? I suppose I am not incredibly patriotic, or else I would be serving.

The author confuses nationalism with patriotism when he condemns the latter for so many deaths.

What makes this country great is its Constitution and the fact that the people respect it so. That is why I would be proud to be called patriotic, anyhow. There are other reasons, but that is the most important and enduring reason.
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ReeseDog



Joined: 05 Apr 2008
Location: Classified

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 2:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Indeed, Kuros. Well said.
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Zenas



Joined: 17 May 2008

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 2:29 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
What makes this country great is its Constitution and the fact that the people respect it so.


What made the US great was it's dependence upon God and His principles. Not 100% mind you, never going to get that, but at least there was some humility before God or Providence or the Almighty or what ever name you give him, even Creator.

"the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them...."

"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."

"And for the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor."


Now, most people don't even know what the Constitution means, much less respect it. Ron Paul was the single candidate running on anything close to a Constitutional platform and he's not even in the race.

The only two left - the Red Death Pill and the Blue Death Pill - don't even mention the Constitution and are advocating policies that are contrary to the principles of the supreme law of the land.

The Federal Reserve, the war in Iraq, fiat currency to name a few.

The current president referred to the Constitution as a "god damned piece of paper."

American was a great nation. No more.
_____________________________________________
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ReeseDog



Joined: 05 Apr 2008
Location: Classified

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 2:36 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Zenas wrote:
Quote:
What makes this country great is its Constitution and the fact that the people respect it so.


What made the US great was it's dependence upon God and His principles. Not 100% mind you, never going to get that, but at least there was some humility before God or Providence or the Almighty or what ever name you give him, even Creator.

"the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them...."

"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."

"And for the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor."


Now, most people don't even know what the Constitution means, much less respect it. Ron Paul was the single candidate running on anything close to a Constitutional platform and he's not even in the race.

The only two left - the Red Death Pill and the Blue Death Pill - don't even mention the Constitution and are advocating policies that are contrary to the principles of the supreme law of the land.

The Federal Reserve, the war in Iraq, fiat currency to name a few.

The current president referred to the Constitution as a "god damned piece of paper."

American was a great nation. No more.
_____________________________________________


Then renounce it officially, Zenas.
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Ya-ta Boy



Joined: 16 Jan 2003
Location: Established in 1994

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 2:36 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I also agree with Kuros.

I would disagree with the writer that some form of patriotism is not natural. People seem to divide things into 'us vs them' at pretty much every level and have always done so as far as can be known. The only difference is who 'us' is defined as and I think that is what is taught in the schools, etc.
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Zenas



Joined: 17 May 2008

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 2:45 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Then renounce it officially, Zenas.


Isn't what I said true? America is a dying nation. All Empires die and we are watching the American Empire die right before our eyes.

Why should I renounce America when it's our corrupt government that is the problem? We the People have allowed our government to take the rest of us [at least some of us] in directions we don't want to go, and if we had the backbone our Founding Fathers had, we could take it back.

We don't and therefore we won't.
_____________________________________________

I failed to mention immigration as an issue that the Two Pills hold unconstitutional positions on. McCain has promised amnesty to the illegals. It's ok for these invaders to break the law and then they get rewarded with full citizenship.
_______________________________________
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Gopher



Joined: 04 Jun 2005

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 2:58 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

More stupid and transparently antiAmerican propaganda. This is simply dumb.

By the way, I think America is a great nation, and a great place to live and indeed prosper -- indeed a positive force in world history. But "the greatest country ever?" Who talks like that? Perhaps some in the ultra-nationalist camp. The rest of it remains the far left's false attributions to their boogeyman: that entity they have created in their imaginations who seems to contain everyone who does not share their virulently hateful antiAmerican politics.

Some of us love our country and support our govt, RS Refugee. We are aware of its many faults and shortcomings, and we even will criticize individual leaders and their policies as well. But we see no reason to sneer at the entire thing as you do.

Happy Fourth of July, RS Refugee.
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Ya-ta Boy



Joined: 16 Jan 2003
Location: Established in 1994

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 3:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Now, most people don't even know what the Constitution means, much less respect it. Ron Paul was the single candidate running on anything close to a Constitutional platform and he's not even in the race.


Quote:
What makes this country great is its Constitution and the fact that the people respect it so.


Zenas' quote indicates a contempt for people in general because they don't agree with his narrow (strict) interpretation of the Constitution. He's a fundamentalist in that sense.

I think he's completely wrong. I know for a fact that even high school sophomores know something about the Constitution and some of its basic principles. I think a high school kid howling about his Constitutional right to a trial by jury because he's been assigned a 30 minute detention after school is sufficient to demonstrate my point. (Fortunately for human civilization, kids gain a more sophisticated understanding as they grow older.)

To insist there is one and only one possible interpretation of the Constitution demonstrates a profound misunderstanding of the role of the Judicial Branch and a contempt for the Constitution itself.
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Zenas



Joined: 17 May 2008

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 3:13 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

�Our beloved Republic is in grave danger and every sovereign citizen in this country has the obligation and the duty to safeguard our freedoms paid for with the precious blood of Americans before us. We must not shame their memory because the television set, going to the mall or a round of golf has become more important than freedom.

We must dedicate ourselves to this fight for freedom, for all America has stood for in the past and for all we will stand for in the future. We the People must be the army of America, the leadership for America as William Wallace was for the people of Scotland. We can turn things around by learning to fight smart using the system our forefathers gave us that has held us for so long.�

http://www.devvy.com/devvyindex.html

_________________________________________

Bush heckled at a July 4 speech as a fascist war criminal.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7491278.stm

Bush is right on one thing, we still have free speech in American and my guess is he wishes we didn't.
__________________________________________

Quote:
To insist there is one and only one possible interpretation of the Constitution demonstrates a profound misunderstanding of the role of the Judicial Branch and a contempt for the Constitution itself.


Show us one quote of mine as evidence that I believe there is "only one possible interpretation of the Constitution." You're building a strawman.

______________________________________________________

In support of my point regarding Obama I submit these two quotes of his, his own words:

�During a speech given in 2007, Obama stated that

�Whatever we once were, we�re no longer a Christian nation.�

If it was the fact that we were once a "Christian nation" and we are no more, as Obama believes, then we have lost our greatness, because it was the fact that we were a "Christian nation" that made us great.
_____________________________

What�s more, consider the following quote from Obama�s first little book, Dreams of My Father:

�I will stand with the Muslims should the political winds shift in an ugly direction.�

America has two choices, the "Hundred Years War" for Israel McCain, who the Vietcong nicknamed "Songbird" because he gave away vital military info to the Vietnamese Viet Cong in exchange for special treatment, ie. McCain is a lying traitor. Not only that, McCain made 35 videos to be used by the Communists against the US war effort. McCain was never tortured. McCain is a traitor to his nation. The Vietnam vets familiar with the facts refer to McCain as a "lying traitorous scumbag."

Obama who will stand by - not Christians - but Muslims - when the going gets rough.

I rest my case.
________________________________________

btw: it was McCain's father who helped cover up the Israeli attack on the USS Liberty, which killed 34 and injured another 173.
________________________________________
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R. S. Refugee



Joined: 29 Sep 2004
Location: Shangra La, ROK

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 8:18 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Gopher wrote:
More stupid and transparently antiAmerican propaganda. This is simply dumb.

By the way, I think America is a great nation, and a great place to live and indeed prosper -- indeed a positive force in world history. But "the greatest country ever?" Who talks like that? Perhaps some in the ultra-nationalist camp. The rest of it remains the far left's false attributions to their boogeyman: that entity they have created in their imaginations who seems to contain everyone who does not share their virulently hateful antiAmerican politics.

Some of us love our country and support our govt, RS Refugee. We are aware of its many faults and shortcomings, and we even will criticize individual leaders and their policies as well. But we see no reason to sneer at the entire thing as you do.

Happy Fourth of July, RS Refugee.


Happy Fourth to you, Gopher.

Written on July 4, 2008

Some Thoughts on Patriotism
By WILLIAM BLUM

Most important thought: I'm sick and tired of this thing called "patriotism".

The Japanese pilots who bombed Pearl Harbor were being patriotic. The German people who supported Hitler and his conquests were being patriotic, fighting for the Fatherland. All the Latin American military dictators who overthrew democratically-elected governments and routinely tortured people were being patriotic -- saving their beloved country from "communism".

General Augusto Pinochet of Chile: "I would like to be remembered as a man who served his country."[1]

P.W. Botha, former president of apartheid South Africa: "I am not going to repent. I am not going to ask for favours. What I did, I did for my country."[2]

Pol Pot, mass murderer of Cambodia: "I want you to know that everything I did, I did for my country."[3]

Tony Blair, former British prime minister, defending his role in the murder of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis: "I did what I thought was right for our country."[4]

I won't bore you with what George W. has said.

At the end of World War II, the United States gave moral lectures to their German prisoners and to the German people on the inadmissibility of pleading that their participation in the holocaust was in obedience to their legitimate government. To prove to them how legally inadmissable this defense was, the World War II allies hanged the leading examples of such patriotic loyalty.

I was once asked after a talk: "Do you love America?" I answered: "No". After pausing for a few seconds to let that sink in amidst several nervous giggles in the audience, I continued with: "I don't love any country. I'm a citizen of the world. I love certain principles, like human rights, civil liberties, democracy, an economy which puts people before profits."

I don't make much of a distinction between patriotism and nationalism. Some writers equate patriotism with allegiance to one's country and government, while defining nationalism as sentiments of ethno-national superiority. However defined, in practice the psychological and behavioral manifestations of nationalism and patriotism -- and the impact of such sentiments on actual policies -- are not easily distinguishable.

Howard Zinn has called nationalism "a set of beliefs taught to each generation in which the Motherland or the Fatherland is an object of veneration and becomes a burning cause for which one becomes willing to kill the children of other Motherlands or Fatherlands."[5] ... "Patriotism is used to create the illusion of a common interest that everybody in the country has."[6]

Strong feelings of patriotism lie near the surface in the great majority of Americans. They're buried deeper in the more "liberal" and "sophisticated", but are almost always reachable, and ignitable.

Alexis de Tocqueville, the mid-19th century French historian, commented about his long stay in the United States: "It is impossible to conceive a more troublesome or more garrulous patriotism; it wearies even those who are disposed to respect it."[7]

George Bush Sr., pardoning former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and five others in connection with the Iran-Contra arms-for-hostages scandal: "First, the common denominator of their motivation -- whether their actions were right or wrong -- was patriotism."[8]

What a primitive underbelly there is to this rational society. The US is the most patriotic, as well as the most religious, country of the so-called developed world. The entire American patriotism thing may be best understood as the biggest case of mass hysteria in history, whereby the crowd adores its own power as troopers of the world's only superpower, a substitute for the lack of power in the rest of their lives. Patriotism, like religion, meets people's need for something greater to which their individual lives can be anchored.

So this July 4, my dear fellow Americans, some of you will raise your fists and yell: "U! S! A! U! S! A!". And you'll parade with your flags and your images of the Statue of Liberty. But do you know that the sculptor copied his mother's face for the statue, a domineering and intolerant woman who had forbidden another child to marry a Jew?

"Patriotism," Dr. Samuel Johnson famously said, "is the last refuge of a scoundrel." Ambrose Bierce begged to differ -- It is, he said, the first.

"Patriotism is the conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." George Bernard Shaw

"Actions are held to be good or bad, not on their own merits but according to who does them, and there is almost no kind of outrage -- torture, the use of hostages, forced labour, mass deportations, imprisonment without trial, forgery, assassination, the bombing of civilians -- which does not change its moral colour when it is committed by 'our' side. ... The nationalist not only does not disapprove of atrocities committed by his own side, but he has a remarkable capacity for not even hearing about them." George Orwell[9]

"Pledges of allegiance are marks of totalitarian states, not democracies," says David Kertzer, a Brown University anthropologist who specializes in political rituals. "I can't think of a single democracy except the United States that has a pledge of allegiance."[10] Or, he might have added, that insists that its politicians display their patriotism by wearing a flag pin. Hitler criticized German Jews and Communists for their internationalism and lack of national patriotism. Along with Mussolini in Italy, the F�hrer demanded that "true patriots" publicly vow and display their allegiance to their respective fatherlands. Postwar democratic governments of the two countries made a conscious effort to minimize such shows of national pride.

(Oddly enough, the American Pledge of Allegiance was written by Francis Bellamy, a founding member, in 1889, of the Society of Christian Socialists, a group of Protestant ministers who asserted that "the teachings of Jesus Christ lead directly to some form or forms of socialism.")

Following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, we could read that there's "now a high degree of patriotism in the Soviet Union because Moscow acted with impunity in Afghanistan and thus underscored who the real power in that part of the world is."[11]

"Throughout the nineteenth century, and particularly throughout its latter half, there had been a great working up of this nationalism in the world. ... Nationalism was taught in schools, emphasized by newspapers, preached and mocked and sung into men. It became a monstrous cant which darkened all human affairs. Men were brought to feel that they were as improper without a nationality as without their clothes in a crowded assembly. Oriental peoples, who had never heard of nationality before, took to it as they took to the cigarettes and bowler hats of the West." H.G. Wells, English writer[12]

"The very existence of the state demands that there be some privileged class vitally interested in maintaining that existence. And it is precisely the group interests of that class that are called patriotism." Mikhail Bakunin, Russian anarchist[13]

"To me, it seems a dreadful indignity to have a soul controlled by geography." George Santayana, American educator and philosopher.

William Blum is the author of Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II, Rogue State: a guide to the World's Only Super Power. and West-Bloc Dissident: a Cold War Political Memoir.

He can be reached at: [email protected]
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Gopher



Joined: 04 Jun 2005

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 9:15 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I believe I have already heard enough from William Blum, RS Refugee. I know who he is, I know about the movement he belongs to, I understand its position, its objectives, and its methods. I get it. And I could not disagree more.
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Zenas



Joined: 17 May 2008

PostPosted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 11:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

And I like to see you try to justify three US foreign policy interventions in the last 50 years.
_____________________________________

Quote:
And you'll parade with your flags and your images of the Statue of Liberty. But do you know that the sculptor copied his mother's face for the statue, a domineering and intolerant woman who had forbidden another child to marry a Jew?


So what? Most Jewish mothers forbid their children to marry non-Jews.
______________________________
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Ya-ta Boy



Joined: 16 Jan 2003
Location: Established in 1994

PostPosted: Sun Jul 06, 2008 12:57 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Show us one quote of mine as evidence that I believe there is "only one possible interpretation of the Constitution


How about this one?
Quote:
Ron Paul was the single candidate running on anything close to a Constitutional platform....


I believe this is what is known as being hoisted on your own petard.
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greedy_bones



Joined: 01 Jul 2007
Location: not quite sure anymore

PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 5:53 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
What makes this country great is its Constitution and the fact that the people respect it so.


Zenas wrote:

What made the US great was it's dependence upon God and His principles. Not 100% mind you, never going to get that, but at least there was some humility before God or Providence or the Almighty or what ever name you give him, even Creator.
"the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them...."

"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."

"And for the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor."


Now, most people don't even know what the Constitution means, much less respect it.


You realize that none of those quotes are from the constitution, don't you? Those are all from the declaration of independence which was written prior to the constitution. The constitution is pretty secular. "We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America." The one word with any theistic sentiment in there is blessings. I'd like to know how that or any other specific part of the constitution endorses a theocracy.
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