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RAF man in hospital - might upset other patients?

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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 30 Sep 15 3.39pm

Quote Sg Bilko at 30 Sep 2015 2.51pm

Quote jamiemartin721 at 30 Sep 2015 12.57pm

Quote Sg Bilko at 30 Sep 2015 11.05am

The way I see it is, Europe as a whole is a predominantly Christian society and has been for many hundreds of years, and if other ethnic religions want to come and live amongst us they are welcome but they have to learn tolerance towards the Christian ways and adjust to our ways, just like we have to when we go to their Counties.

I'm a frequent visitor to Egypt, and no way would I even try to force my Christian beliefs on them, if I did I would very quickly find myself in chains and thrown into their hellhole of a prison, and I've seen that done in Sharm-el-Sheikh to three Russians, and Egyptians don't invite you politely, your aggressively manhandled, and they are a very tolerant society compared to most others.

Thing is, I've never actually experienced any attempt by Muslims to convert me or otherwise force their views on me, despite living in an area that has a sizable Muslim population.

But there have been three visits in five years from the two 'evangelical' church asking if 'I'd be interested in hearing the good word' and a visit from the 'holy high pants of nonsense' brigade (Mormans).

Our 'Christian Traditions' are essentially the product of a King having 'had enough of religious interference' in the domination of state, and deciding to resolve a four hundred year old problem.

And yet, still that elimination of the power of religion, resulted in the Church of England and ultimately Anglican faiths coming about, and still ending up trying to decide for everyone how they should live and behave.

Of course the irony of people defending a migrant belief system, that has its basis in militancy, and the middle east, as being rightfully the 'dominant faith' of the country and thus dismissing an older, and related faith, with the same god, as having any validity is amusing.

The simple fact is that Abrahamic faiths are seeped in the idea of telling people what is right and demanding that they abide by their right to do so, even when it would be no problem to actually allow people to decide for themselves.

They might have different views but they still have Christian values.

Not really the point, the point was I don't get Muslims banging on my door at 10am on a Saturday or Sunday trying to get me to join their church. Who the f**k thinks that turning up to strangers houses to talk about god, uninvited, is in anyway acceptable?

There are no Christian values, because there is no Christian god to underpin them. They're ideas for the most part, that people like.

The difference between me, and them, maybe is that I would vote to support their right to be Christians and practice their faith even though its a nonsense to me, where as they would likely as not vote against allowing others to do things their faith considers wrong (abortion, gay marriage, drug legalization, euthanasia and so on).

Its not just a religious thing. The principle of 'right to exert moral power over others' forms a strong current in our nation, probably from its Christian heritage.


 


"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug"
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Dweeb Flag East London 30 Sep 15 3.42pm Send a Private Message to Dweeb Add Dweeb as a friend

Quote sydtheeagle at 30 Sep 2015 3.29pm

Quote Dweeb at 30 Sep 2015 3.20pm

Surely every one has values, they do not need to be attrributed to "faith". It's just being a decent human being. Whilst I wouldn't usually give a scum fan the time of day that doesn't mean I am being Christian if I did just because it measures up to someone else's idea of something.

Also, not that I am anything but anti-religous, but hold on, half of the so called Christian religous "festivals" were in fact someone else's to start with. Christmas isn't anything but Saturnalia (a Roman God) in a different guise, and wasn't celebrated until some Pope decided it would be hundreds of yeasr later. Who knows when some poor bloke called Jesus was actually nailed to a wooden cross - well no one in Eurpose as the date changes every year.

Protestants argue with Catholics, Greek Orthodox argue with others. Actually any "orthodox" argues with everyone one. Islam is divided into at least two camps without even mentioning the sub-groupings.

If you took religion out of more than half of the world's conflicts in the 20th Century and beyond then the so called reason for the trouble in the first place would simply disappear.

I think there are probably two answers to that. First, even though I agree with your latter point, the reality is that religion is here to stay so even if things might be better if it disappeared, it's not going to. Therefore, we have to find (in part through debate) a way to accommodate it peacefully.

Second, and I am not religious myself, for all the harm you point out, I don't think we can deny that Christian (and other religious) values have also been a force for good. The shared values of religious communities that are vested in schools, hospitals, etc. (often free) have generally played an enormously beneficial role in society. The church has also played a critical counter-role in many countries that have been politically subjugated; it's not without reason that Stalin obsessed over destroying the Catholic Church in much of Eastern Europe.

Just saying it's not all black and white.


I accept your points but Henry VIII did his best to destroy the Catholic faith and his daughter wasn't xactly millions of miles behind him. So it wasn't only the likes of Stalin, but what they both were, of course, are dictators.

Actually most religous schools and establishments in the UK are paid for from general taxes. I am not allowed to opt out of that so I have to reluctantly accept it is done. Few are actually paid for by the relevant communities themselves. Luckily we haven't gone as far as our American cousins where religious dogma extends to dictate what schools are allowed to teach or "services" they offer/charge for in their hospitals, and so long as we can actually keep the NHS it will never be that way here.

 


Taking the bungy jump since 1964. Never to see John Jackson in a shirt again

Sorry to see Lee Hills go, did we ever see Alex Marrow? We did January 2013

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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 30 Sep 15 3.47pm

Quote sydtheeagle at 30 Sep 2015 3.29pm

Second, and I am not religious myself, for all the harm you point out, I don't think we can deny that Christian (and other religious) values have also been a force for good. The shared values of religious communities that are vested in schools, hospitals, etc. (often free) have generally played an enormously beneficial role in society. The church has also played a critical counter-role in many countries that have been politically subjugated; it's not without reason that Stalin obsessed over destroying the Catholic Church in much of Eastern Europe.

Just saying it's not all black and white.

I generally agree, that religion has been probably a force for more good, than evil in the world. But that doesn't justify any kind of system where in a majority group can exert moral choices onto others. No group in society should have that right or capacity to inflict its moral character onto the population except where the population has a clear consensus (such as committing rape or where those choices would inhibit or harm the freedom of others).

Wherever possible, each person should have as much freedom to make their own choices in life and about their lives, and how they wish to live them (that doesn't mean the state should necessarily fund them to do so).


 


"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug"
[Link]

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sydtheeagle Flag England 30 Sep 15 4.07pm Send a Private Message to sydtheeagle Add sydtheeagle as a friend

Quote jamiemartin721 at 30 Sep 2015 3.47pm

Wherever possible, each person should have as much freedom to make their own choices in life and about their lives, and how they wish to live them (that doesn't mean the state should necessarily fund them to do so).

Agreed in principle but individuals, by nature, organise themselves into groups (basic Durkheim, if I remember right) and it's within those groups that values coalesce. You only have to go to Selhurst to see individuals willingly cede their identity and act in a collective rather than personal way. Personally,I think you are absolutely right.But objectively I just don't think things work along "each man for himself" lines not least because all too many individuals want air cover; they lack the courage to grasp the nettle.

Edited by sydtheeagle (30 Sep 2015 4.09pm)

 


Sydenham by birth. Selhurst by the Grace of God.

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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 30 Sep 15 4.31pm

Quote sydtheeagle at 30 Sep 2015 4.07pm

Quote jamiemartin721 at 30 Sep 2015 3.47pm

Wherever possible, each person should have as much freedom to make their own choices in life and about their lives, and how they wish to live them (that doesn't mean the state should necessarily fund them to do so).

Agreed in principle but individuals, by nature, organise themselves into groups (basic Durkheim, if I remember right) and it's within those groups that values coalesce. You only have to go to Selhurst to see individuals willingly cede their identity and act in a collective rather than personal way. Personally,I think you are absolutely right.But objectively I just don't think things work along "each man for himself" lines not least because all too many individuals want air cover; they lack the courage to grasp the nettle.

Edited by sydtheeagle (30 Sep 2015 4.09pm)

I think we're conditioned into the idea of promoting shared values, beyond their required need, and that this does stem from Christian influence. The need to 'save souls' and to effectively push Christian values has a central place in Christianity. The concept of the missionary and the conversion of heathens and pagans runs throughout history, and that we as a society have essentially adopted this notion of organizational power to enforce its values onto others, irrespective of whether than want or need them.

Central to Christianity is the idea that Christian Values are truth (its true of all Abrahamic faiths) and that these values apply to everyone, everywhere.

However you don't really see this in say Buddhism, or Shinto or even most forms of Hinduism (arguably the first two aren't really religions in any sense we understand the term). It stems, arguably, from the foundation of Catholicism, which was a militant Christian faith.

I think that we essentially have spent two thousand years or so, conditioning ourselves in the idea that its right to promote values as universally applicable to everyone, rather than being personal or community shared values. When you look at community shared values, they tend to be relevant to specific incidents and needs that occur in a group, and evolve from social participation of a group, rather than being dictated from authority figures.


 


"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug"
[Link]

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sydtheeagle Flag England 30 Sep 15 4.47pm Send a Private Message to sydtheeagle Add sydtheeagle as a friend

Quote jamiemartin721 at 30 Sep 2015 4.31pm

I think we're conditioned into the idea of promoting shared values, beyond their required need, and that this does stem from Christian influence. The need to 'save souls' and to effectively push Christian values has a central place in Christianity. The concept of the missionary and the conversion of heathens and pagans runs throughout history, and that we as a society have essentially adopted this notion of organizational power to enforce its values onto others, irrespective of whether than want or need them.

Central to Christianity is the idea that Christian Values are truth (its true of all Abrahamic faiths) and that these values apply to everyone, everywhere.

However you don't really see this in say Buddhism, or Shinto or even most forms of Hinduism (arguably the first two aren't really religions in any sense we understand the term). It stems, arguably, from the foundation of Catholicism, which was a militant Christian faith.

I think that we essentially have spent two thousand years or so, conditioning ourselves in the idea that its right to promote values as universally applicable to everyone, rather than being personal or community shared values. When you look at community shared values, they tend to be relevant to specific incidents and needs that occur in a group, and evolve from social participation of a group, rather than being dictated from authority figures.

Interesting post and agree with a lot of it. BTW I know it's semantics but Buddhism isn't a religion which, perhaps, accounts for the difference.

 


Sydenham by birth. Selhurst by the Grace of God.

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Yellow Card - User has been warned of conduct on the messageboards Hrolf The Ganger Flag 30 Sep 15 5.31pm Send a Private Message to Hrolf The Ganger Add Hrolf The Ganger as a friend

Christianity has been a vehicle for morality but we associate it with the morals that fit the current fashion.
There is in fact no need for religion at all. Morality is separate. Is it really likely that religion came before morality or is it more likely that morality was born out of human nature and common sense ?

 

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sydtheeagle Flag England 30 Sep 15 5.44pm Send a Private Message to sydtheeagle Add sydtheeagle as a friend

Quote Hrolf The Ganger at 30 Sep 2015 5.31pm

Christianity has been a vehicle for morality but we associate it with the morals that fit the current fashion.
There is in fact no need for religion at all. Morality is separate. Is it really likely that religion came before morality or is it more likely that morality was born out of human nature and common sense ?

True that. It really came from nature, and a taxonomy was first attempted by the Greek philosophers (answering the question what constitutes a "good life".)

 


Sydenham by birth. Selhurst by the Grace of God.

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leggedstruggle Flag Croydon 30 Sep 15 5.49pm

Quote Dweeb at 30 Sep 2015 3.25pm

Quote Cucking Funt at 29 Sep 2015 9.58am

Quote moaner at 29 Sep 2015 9.49am

Quote sydtheeagle at 28 Sep 2015 9.59pm

Quote moaner at 28 Sep 2015 9.48pm

You are talking a load of rubbish, what right or left wingers have got to do with it I don't know.

Nor do I. And I agree with your point. Nonetheless, if you bother to read the many pages in this thread (hard going, I admit) you'll note that those who think Muslims, racists, people from Peckham and other minorities have something "to do with it" all happen to be right wingers.


How do you know who and what is right or left wing?



Perhaps there should be a thread whereby people could identify which particular 'wing' they happen to be. It'd make life an awful lot easier.


How about having our names in colours? Scum, I mean Tory in Blue proper leftie in red , green , New Labour etc . Then we can all know where we stand.

PS I am not responsible for the last bit being in a colour, the syntax says it should be off.

Edited by Dweeb (30 Sep 2015 3.29pm)

What colour should I use. I'm left wing on some things, right wing on some others, centerist on some and couldn't give a ... on some. Should we change colour depending on the subject? Also, how do we accommodate colour blind readers?

 


mother-in-law is an anagram of woman hitler

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leggedstruggle Flag Croydon 30 Sep 15 5.52pm

Quote sydtheeagle at 30 Sep 2015 2.04pm

Quote jamiemartin721 at 30 Sep 2015 1.04pm

I'm an atheist, I reject the notion that Christian beliefs have any more validity than Muslim ones in determining how people's right to choose and live.

It's worth remembering that the C of E is presently mid-schism and doesn't even agree within itself how people should live.

It is clear that currently, Islam is far, far more controlling and intolerant than Christianity

Edited by leggedstruggle (30 Sep 2015 5.53pm)

 


mother-in-law is an anagram of woman hitler

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sydtheeagle Flag England 30 Sep 15 6.23pm Send a Private Message to sydtheeagle Add sydtheeagle as a friend

Quote leggedstruggle at 30 Sep 2015 5.49pm

Quote Dweeb at 30 Sep 2015 3.25pm

Quote Cucking Funt at 29 Sep 2015 9.58am

Quote moaner at 29 Sep 2015 9.49am

Quote sydtheeagle at 28 Sep 2015 9.59pm

Quote moaner at 28 Sep 2015 9.48pm

You are talking a load of rubbish, what right or left wingers have got to do with it I don't know.

Nor do I. And I agree with your point. Nonetheless, if you bother to read the many pages in this thread (hard going, I admit) you'll note that those who think Muslims, racists, people from Peckham and other minorities have something "to do with it" all happen to be right wingers.


How do you know who and what is right or left wing?



Perhaps there should be a thread whereby people could identify which particular 'wing' they happen to be. It'd make life an awful lot easier.


How about having our names in colours? Scum, I mean Tory in Blue proper leftie in red , green , New Labour etc . Then we can all know where we stand.

PS I am not responsible for the last bit being in a colour, the syntax says it should be off.

Edited by Dweeb (30 Sep 2015 3.29pm)

What colour should I use. I'm left wing on some things, right wing on some others, centerist on some and couldn't give a ... on some. Should we change colour depending on the subject? Also, how do we accommodate colour blind readers?

Supporting Palace is belonging to a catholic church (small "c" ). That's why we're red and blue.


Edited by sydtheeagle (30 Sep 2015 6.24pm)

 


Sydenham by birth. Selhurst by the Grace of God.

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nickgusset Flag Shizzlehurst 30 Sep 15 6.32pm

Some on here are so blind (to what's going on) that they need braille.

 

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