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Technoviking said:In the end, "our" idiot is off the front page, and hopefully finds himself buried in obscurity as an odd footnote of history.
I sincerely hope that he doesn't even make a footnote.
Technoviking said:In the end, "our" idiot is off the front page, and hopefully finds himself buried in obscurity as an odd footnote of history.
Foxhound said:
readytogo said:IM having a hard time finding the info, did the pin eyed preacher actually light one on fire?
Apollo Diomedes said:Imagine if we burned every holy book?
E.R. Campbell said:Even this? There's a problem with the word 'holy' or 'sacred;' who gets to decide? I do not regard the Tao Te Ching as either holy or sacred because many scholars have decided, and I am satisfied with their decision, that the religious components of Taoism are quite secondary to its philosophical components. In fact, as far as I know, Lao Tsu did not intend that his Tao Te Ching (or Daodejing, if you prefer) should be 'sacred' nor that he should be a god. He was a philosopher, akin to and a near contemporary of Confucius, who focused his thinking on ways to achieve spiritual balance and to comprehend (rather than understand) the universe and our place in it.
Let's not burn any books. The 'freedom of speech' (actually freedom of expression - which includes e.g. burning flags, displaying a crucifix in a jar of urine and so on)wemany of you have pledged to defend as a fundamental right (but not a natural right, I think) only counts when the most reprehensible speech must be defended; neo-Nazis and anti-Semites and racists and xenophobes and religious bigots and fools must be allowed to spew their venom - otherwise the 'freedom' is meaningless andouryour defence of it is worthless.
readytogo said:SPOILER ALERT 2.0
yes but in the movie the holy burning had happened so long ago(along with every other book they could get their hands on) that nobody even knew what a holy book was or why it mattered???
Jim Seggie said:I heartily concur. While I find the burning of flags reprehensible, it's a right that over 100,000 Canadians have died for.
Touche. Can't argue with any of that.E.R. Campbell said:Even this? There's a problem with the word 'holy' or 'sacred;' who gets to decide? I do not regard the Tao Te Ching as either holy or sacred because many scholars have decided, and I am satisfied with their decision, that the religious components of Taoism are quite secondary to its philosophical components. In fact, as far as I know, Lao Tsu did not intend that his Tao Te Ching (or Daodejing, if you prefer) should be 'sacred' nor that he should be a god. He was a philosopher, akin to and a near contemporary of Confucius, who focused his thinking on ways to achieve spiritual balance and to comprehend (rather than understand) the universe and our place in it.
The Bible and others have gone through numerous revisions haven't they? What if we took all the applicable religious texts and edited out all the violent cut your left hand off, stone people, kill whoever parts and had a V.2010 kinder gentler edition. Slowly but surely we start weeding out all the violent parts of the bible, quran etc.. and in a few generations religion won't be a reason to kill each other.Let's not burn any books. The 'freedom of speech' (actually freedom of expression - which includes e.g. burning flags, displaying a crucifix in a jar of urine and so on)wemany of you have pledged to defend as a fundamental right (but not a natural right, I think) only counts when the most reprehensible speech must be defended; neo-Nazis and anti-Semites and racists and xenophobes and religious bigots and fools must be allowed to spew their venom - otherwise the 'freedom' is meaningless andouryour defence of it is worthless.