- #106
russ_watters
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Also, guys, you may not believe it but I'm actually trying to help here and my politics on the issues (abortion, homosexuality, etc.) are pretty close to yours. You shouldn't be running from the issue of morality, you should be embracing it as a means to forward your own. Framing the question wrong and running from it leaves a vacuum for others to fill-in their own morality in the absence of yours. This is, in part, what enables the Religious Right to be able to forward its ideology despite its positions being in the minority.
Here's a legal scholar discussing the issue:
...that is assuming I believe these arguments are even serious. I have a tough time accepting an argument that looking back at historical context would imply issues like slavery had no moral component.
Here's a legal scholar discussing the issue:
https://www2.gwu.edu/~ccps/rcq/legislating_morality.html...I want to dispute the more basic and, I believe, misguided notion that government should not try to legislate morality. In fact, I want to argue something almost exactly the opposite: that it is extremely difficult and rare for government not to legislate morality. Therefore, the connection between legislation and morality ought not to be affirmed by conservative Christians alone. Any American who worries about the moral condition of their society cannot responsibly ignore this question. And that means they cannot responsibly ignore politics, nor can they deny the moral duty of the state.
To make this case, I want to focus first on another Christian American, Martin Luther King, Jr...
...that is assuming I believe these arguments are even serious. I have a tough time accepting an argument that looking back at historical context would imply issues like slavery had no moral component.