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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 870
Default vatican astronomer blasts creationism


"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
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"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
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"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
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"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
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"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
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wrote in message
...
On Thu, 8 Oct 2009 11:07:07 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:

"CalifBill" wrote in message
news:PoqdnbCgSJ_Du1PXnZ2dnUVZ_vydnZ2d @earthlink.com...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"Wayne.B" wrote in
message
...
On Wed, 7 Oct 2009 21:59:42 -0700, "CalifBill"
wrote:

Let religion put up a
cross, menora, etc on public property. The people own the
property.

How would you feel about Muslim or Rastafarian religious
symbols in
your town square?

The problem is that once you start you can't say no to the
next group,
and you can't say no to bigger and better.


Since I am an semi agnostic married to a Catholic, I can
accept all
religions putting up displays in the town square. I was
married by a
Monsignor in a Catholic Church with a JW best man, and a
Jewish usher.
Locally the Jewish community puts up a Menorah during their
holidays,
and Christians put up Christmas Displays during their
holidays, and we
have had different religions also. Seems to work fine. I
believe there
may be a higher power, but not sure what it is. May be the
Flying
Spaghetti Monster.



Who gets to decide what symbol gets put up? You can say...
oh, let the
locals decided, but how do you deal with the various
minority views that
are inevitable? It can't be a simple majority, because it's
the
obligation of the majority to protect the rights of the
minority. If you
put a cross or spire, you're basically promoting a religion,
which
without much of a stretch is prohibiting others from doing
so. You're
taking sides. The simplest thing to do is to prohibit all
symbols.

--
Nom=de=Plume


You have an established religion, put up your symbols for
your holiday.
Simple. Does not matter what religion. As long as it gets a
religious
tax ID, go for it. The people own the public lands, not the
government!
We own the government. Does not seem that way these days,
but maybe if we
get serious and vote out those owned by lobbiests, we will
get OUR
governments back.

An established religion? A tax ID? Sounds like it's government
promoting
religion by giving tax breaks and determining who can and can't
claim to be
part of a religious order.

I'm not in favor of any tax breaks for religions. If they can
stand on their
own, fine. If not, too bad.

Actually, Em, your attitude is not too far removed from the
concerns
that Thomas Jefferson and James Madison had about government
sponsorship of particular Christian denominations in the
granting of
subsidies. This is what lead to the Statute of Virginia for
religious
freedom which was authored by Jefferson and was the precurser
to the
Constitutional Amendment.


Nice crowd to be part of... It just urks me that (for example)
the Catholic Church can own whole swaths of buildings, and they
don't have to pay a dime in tax.

--
Nom=de=Plume


But they do charitable work.

So? Their buildings don't do anything. The mega-churches are the
same... should have tax-exempt status.

--
Nom=de=Plume


If they taxed churches, would be a restriction on religion. Now I
know you would like that. Tax them out of existance.

I just want them to stand on their own, which is what I said. You
don't know me, so you can't know what I would like or not like.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...MN10159JCM.DTL

--
Nom=de=Plume


Knowing San Francisco tax accessor office, I have zero respect for
them. They jsut want the money for an overspending SF politcal
agenda. Took us 5 years to get a generational transfer straightened
out, and still cost us money that it should not. Every time my wife
talked to an actual person, which is really hard to do, normally you
get a full voice mailbox, they said they would take care of it. They
did not.



Which has nothing to do with taxing church property, and nothing to do
with the argument that they should or shouldn't be taxed.

--
Nom=de=Plume


Separate argument. But seems as if SF is trying to change the rules.
They need more money for an overpriced govenment.

I said that I believe churches should stand on their own and be taxed
like the rest of us. SF is apparently trying to hold them to at some
portion of that notion. You said that you don't have any respect for SF.
That's fine, but that has nothing to do with the proposed argument of
taxing churches.

--
Nom=de=Plume


I said I had no respect for the SF Tax Collector. I actually like SF.
Graduated University there for my BSc.



Ok.... so, what about the rest?

--
Nom=de=Plume


You are going to control religion by taxing it. The reason we will not have
a flat tax, is government loves control, and taxation is the ultimate
control. And that is unconstitutional to infringe freedom of religion.
This country does not have a revenue problem, it has a spending problem.


  #272   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Oct 2009
Posts: 30
Default vatican astronomer blasts creationism

Don White wrote:

Is the Freaky Ponytail talking about me?
I wonder if he's spent all his inheritance yet on shiny baubles and used
motobike parts.



WAFA Jr has spoken!
  #273   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Oct 2009
Posts: 30
Default vatican astronomer blasts creationism

Jim wrote:
Don White wrote:
"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...
"Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...
H the K wrote:
On 10/8/09 1:15 PM, nom=de=plume wrote:
wrote in message
...
nom=de=plume wrote:
wrote in message
m...
wrote in message
...
On Wed, 7 Oct 2009 21:59:42 -0700, "CalifBill"
wrote:

Let religion put up a
cross, menora, etc on public property. The people own the
property.
How would you feel about Muslim or Rastafarian religious
symbols
in
your town square?

The problem is that once you start you can't say no to the
next
group,
and you can't say no to bigger and better.

Since I am an semi agnostic married to a Catholic, I can
accept all
religions putting up displays in the town square. I was
married by
a
Monsignor in a Catholic Church with a JW best man, and a Jewish
usher.
Locally the Jewish community puts up a Menorah during their
holidays,
and Christians put up Christmas Displays during their
holidays, and
we
have had different religions also. Seems to work fine. I
believe
there
may be a higher power, but not sure what it is. May be the
Flying
Spaghetti Monster.


Who gets to decide what symbol gets put up? You can say...
oh, let
the
locals decided, but how do you deal with the various minority
views
that
are inevitable? It can't be a simple majority, because it's the
obligation of the majority to protect the rights of the
minority. If
you
put a cross or spire, you're basically promoting a religion,
which
without much of a stretch is prohibiting others from doing so.
You're
taking sides. The simplest thing to do is to prohibit all
symbols.

MINORITY VIEWS DON'T TRANSLATE TO MINORITY RIGHTS. HOW ARE
MINORITY
RIGHTS
ANY DIFFERENT FROM MAJORITY RIGHTS. ANSWER THIS SWEETIE. HOW HAS
AFIRMATIVE ACTION AFFECTED THE WHITE MANS RIGHT TO COMPETE FOR
A JOB.
You are so full of crap. Majority rules in the Supreme Court.
Majority
voted in a president I didn't and don't want. Are there
federal laws
prohibiting religeous symbols on private or public property?
We let
Congress critters decide major issues by writing laws and
voting on
them.
And guess what, majority rules. How well is that going for us? I
suppose
that depends on who you ask.

I really don't like your condescending bs. Get a life. If you
can't
speak
without yelling or trying to put me "in my place," you have no
business in a
rational discussion. It's totally obnoxious.

The majority has the responsibility to protect the rights of the
minority.
If you don't believe that, then you're not much of an American.



Flajim's wife, if he has one, probably beats the crap out of
him...thus,
he lashes out at...you.



**** off, Krause
Here is your answer son...

http://mpgravity.sourceforge.net/

Then, filter, filter, filter...

if you need a free fast news server to go with that try

eternal-september.org

Both easy to set up. And you really won't miss the bozo's anyway.
When
you get fed up with somebodys irrational name calling festivals,
you hit
one button and don't see them anymore, it's easy.

I strongly suggest you plonk me. Please.
Sure Harry, no problem... just do a favor, stop with the sock puppets,
you are not fooling anybody but dumb donnie the rat bitch...

Not Harry, not a sockpuppet, I don't morph. If you can't figure that
out, I'm sorry for you.

--
Nom=de=Plume


Is the Freaky Ponytail talking about me?
I wonder if he's spent all his inheritance yet on shiny baubles and
used motobike parts.

When you and hairball team up, you guys remind me of Abbot and Costello
or Martin and Lewis, or Burns and Allen. Yuk Yuk


Or Beavis and Butthead...
  #274   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2009
Posts: 5,427
Default vatican astronomer blasts creationism

"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
wrote in message
...
On Thu, 8 Oct 2009 11:07:07 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:

"CalifBill" wrote in message
news:PoqdnbCgSJ_Du1PXnZ2dnUVZ_vydnZ2 ...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"Wayne.B" wrote in
message
...
On Wed, 7 Oct 2009 21:59:42 -0700, "CalifBill"
wrote:

Let religion put up a
cross, menora, etc on public property. The people own
the property.

How would you feel about Muslim or Rastafarian religious
symbols in
your town square?

The problem is that once you start you can't say no to
the next group,
and you can't say no to bigger and better.


Since I am an semi agnostic married to a Catholic, I can
accept all
religions putting up displays in the town square. I was
married by a
Monsignor in a Catholic Church with a JW best man, and a
Jewish usher.
Locally the Jewish community puts up a Menorah during
their holidays,
and Christians put up Christmas Displays during their
holidays, and we
have had different religions also. Seems to work fine. I
believe there
may be a higher power, but not sure what it is. May be
the Flying
Spaghetti Monster.



Who gets to decide what symbol gets put up? You can say...
oh, let the
locals decided, but how do you deal with the various
minority views that
are inevitable? It can't be a simple majority, because it's
the
obligation of the majority to protect the rights of the
minority. If you
put a cross or spire, you're basically promoting a
religion, which
without much of a stretch is prohibiting others from doing
so. You're
taking sides. The simplest thing to do is to prohibit all
symbols.

--
Nom=de=Plume


You have an established religion, put up your symbols for
your holiday.
Simple. Does not matter what religion. As long as it gets
a religious
tax ID, go for it. The people own the public lands, not the
government!
We own the government. Does not seem that way these days,
but maybe if we
get serious and vote out those owned by lobbiests, we will
get OUR
governments back.

An established religion? A tax ID? Sounds like it's government
promoting
religion by giving tax breaks and determining who can and
can't claim to be
part of a religious order.

I'm not in favor of any tax breaks for religions. If they can
stand on their
own, fine. If not, too bad.

Actually, Em, your attitude is not too far removed from the
concerns
that Thomas Jefferson and James Madison had about government
sponsorship of particular Christian denominations in the
granting of
subsidies. This is what lead to the Statute of Virginia for
religious
freedom which was authored by Jefferson and was the precurser
to the
Constitutional Amendment.


Nice crowd to be part of... It just urks me that (for example)
the Catholic Church can own whole swaths of buildings, and they
don't have to pay a dime in tax.

--
Nom=de=Plume


But they do charitable work.

So? Their buildings don't do anything. The mega-churches are the
same... should have tax-exempt status.

--
Nom=de=Plume


If they taxed churches, would be a restriction on religion. Now I
know you would like that. Tax them out of existance.

I just want them to stand on their own, which is what I said. You
don't know me, so you can't know what I would like or not like.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...MN10159JCM.DTL

--
Nom=de=Plume


Knowing San Francisco tax accessor office, I have zero respect for
them. They jsut want the money for an overspending SF politcal
agenda. Took us 5 years to get a generational transfer straightened
out, and still cost us money that it should not. Every time my wife
talked to an actual person, which is really hard to do, normally you
get a full voice mailbox, they said they would take care of it.
They did not.



Which has nothing to do with taxing church property, and nothing to
do with the argument that they should or shouldn't be taxed.

--
Nom=de=Plume


Separate argument. But seems as if SF is trying to change the rules.
They need more money for an overpriced govenment.

I said that I believe churches should stand on their own and be taxed
like the rest of us. SF is apparently trying to hold them to at some
portion of that notion. You said that you don't have any respect for
SF. That's fine, but that has nothing to do with the proposed argument
of taxing churches.

--
Nom=de=Plume


I said I had no respect for the SF Tax Collector. I actually like SF.
Graduated University there for my BSc.



Ok.... so, what about the rest?

--
Nom=de=Plume


You are going to control religion by taxing it. The reason we will not
have a flat tax, is government loves control, and taxation is the ultimate
control. And that is unconstitutional to infringe freedom of religion.
This country does not have a revenue problem, it has a spending problem.


My proposal would free religion from having to prove that it's a religion.
Right now, if you're claiming you're a religion, you have to prove it to
avoid taxes.

--
Nom=de=Plume


  #275   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2009
Posts: 1,764
Default vatican astronomer blasts creationism

On 10/12/09 1:25 PM, CalifBill wrote:
wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...

wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...

wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...

wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...

wrote in message
...
wrote in message
...

wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...

wrote in message
...
wrote in message
...
On Thu, 8 Oct 2009 11:07:07 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:

wrote in message
m...

wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...

wrote in
message
...
On Wed, 7 Oct 2009 21:59:42 -0700, "CalifBill"
wrote:

Let religion put up a
cross, menora, etc on public property. The people own
the property.

How would you feel about Muslim or Rastafarian religious
symbols in
your town square?

The problem is that once you start you can't say no to
the next group,
and you can't say no to bigger and better.


Since I am an semi agnostic married to a Catholic, I can
accept all
religions putting up displays in the town square. I was
married by a
Monsignor in a Catholic Church with a JW best man, and a
Jewish usher.
Locally the Jewish community puts up a Menorah during
their holidays,
and Christians put up Christmas Displays during their
holidays, and we
have had different religions also. Seems to work fine.
I believe there
may be a higher power, but not sure what it is. May be
the Flying
Spaghetti Monster.



Who gets to decide what symbol gets put up? You can say...
oh, let the
locals decided, but how do you deal with the various
minority views that
are inevitable? It can't be a simple majority, because
it's the
obligation of the majority to protect the rights of the
minority. If you
put a cross or spire, you're basically promoting a
religion, which
without much of a stretch is prohibiting others from doing
so. You're
taking sides. The simplest thing to do is to prohibit all
symbols.

--
Nom=de=Plume


You have an established religion, put up your symbols for
your holiday.
Simple. Does not matter what religion. As long as it gets
a religious
tax ID, go for it. The people own the public lands, not
the government!
We own the government. Does not seem that way these days,
but maybe if we
get serious and vote out those owned by lobbiests, we will
get OUR
governments back.

An established religion? A tax ID? Sounds like it's
government promoting
religion by giving tax breaks and determining who can and
can't claim to be
part of a religious order.

I'm not in favor of any tax breaks for religions. If they can
stand on their
own, fine. If not, too bad.

Actually, Em, your attitude is not too far removed from the
concerns
that Thomas Jefferson and James Madison had about government
sponsorship of particular Christian denominations in the
granting of
subsidies. This is what lead to the Statute of Virginia for
religious
freedom which was authored by Jefferson and was the precurser
to the
Constitutional Amendment.


Nice crowd to be part of... It just urks me that (for example)
the Catholic Church can own whole swaths of buildings, and
they don't have to pay a dime in tax.

--
Nom=de=Plume


But they do charitable work.

So? Their buildings don't do anything. The mega-churches are the
same... should have tax-exempt status.

--
Nom=de=Plume


If they taxed churches, would be a restriction on religion. Now I
know you would like that. Tax them out of existance.

I just want them to stand on their own, which is what I said. You
don't know me, so you can't know what I would like or not like.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...MN10159JCM.DTL

--
Nom=de=Plume


Knowing San Francisco tax accessor office, I have zero respect for
them. They jsut want the money for an overspending SF politcal
agenda. Took us 5 years to get a generational transfer straightened
out, and still cost us money that it should not. Every time my
wife talked to an actual person, which is really hard to do,
normally you get a full voice mailbox, they said they would take
care of it. They did not.



Which has nothing to do with taxing church property, and nothing to
do with the argument that they should or shouldn't be taxed.

--
Nom=de=Plume


Separate argument. But seems as if SF is trying to change the rules.
They need more money for an overpriced govenment.

I said that I believe churches should stand on their own and be taxed
like the rest of us. SF is apparently trying to hold them to at some
portion of that notion. You said that you don't have any respect for
SF. That's fine, but that has nothing to do with the proposed argument
of taxing churches.

--
Nom=de=Plume


I said I had no respect for the SF Tax Collector. I actually like SF.
Graduated University there for my BSc.



Ok.... so, what about the rest?

--
Nom=de=Plume


You are going to control religion by taxing it. The reason we will not
have a flat tax, is government loves control, and taxation is the
ultimate control. And that is unconstitutional to infringe freedom of
religion. This country does not have a revenue problem, it has a spending
problem.


My proposal would free religion from having to prove that it's a religion.
Right now, if you're claiming you're a religion, you have to prove it to
avoid taxes.

--
Nom=de=Plume


and it is good you have to prove you are a religion. Use to be a guy in
Modesto, Calif (maybe Turlock) that sold reverendships for the price of a
self addressed stamped envelope. So everyone could avoid paying taxes then.




I've got to get me one of those!

--
Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger:
Idiots All


  #276   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 870
Default vatican astronomer blasts creationism


"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
wrote in message
...
On Thu, 8 Oct 2009 11:07:07 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:

"CalifBill" wrote in message
news:PoqdnbCgSJ_Du1PXnZ2dnUVZ_vydnZ ...

"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"CalifBill" wrote in message
m...

"Wayne.B" wrote in
message
...
On Wed, 7 Oct 2009 21:59:42 -0700, "CalifBill"
wrote:

Let religion put up a
cross, menora, etc on public property. The people own
the property.

How would you feel about Muslim or Rastafarian religious
symbols in
your town square?

The problem is that once you start you can't say no to
the next group,
and you can't say no to bigger and better.


Since I am an semi agnostic married to a Catholic, I can
accept all
religions putting up displays in the town square. I was
married by a
Monsignor in a Catholic Church with a JW best man, and a
Jewish usher.
Locally the Jewish community puts up a Menorah during
their holidays,
and Christians put up Christmas Displays during their
holidays, and we
have had different religions also. Seems to work fine.
I believe there
may be a higher power, but not sure what it is. May be
the Flying
Spaghetti Monster.



Who gets to decide what symbol gets put up? You can say...
oh, let the
locals decided, but how do you deal with the various
minority views that
are inevitable? It can't be a simple majority, because
it's the
obligation of the majority to protect the rights of the
minority. If you
put a cross or spire, you're basically promoting a
religion, which
without much of a stretch is prohibiting others from doing
so. You're
taking sides. The simplest thing to do is to prohibit all
symbols.

--
Nom=de=Plume


You have an established religion, put up your symbols for
your holiday.
Simple. Does not matter what religion. As long as it gets
a religious
tax ID, go for it. The people own the public lands, not
the government!
We own the government. Does not seem that way these days,
but maybe if we
get serious and vote out those owned by lobbiests, we will
get OUR
governments back.

An established religion? A tax ID? Sounds like it's
government promoting
religion by giving tax breaks and determining who can and
can't claim to be
part of a religious order.

I'm not in favor of any tax breaks for religions. If they can
stand on their
own, fine. If not, too bad.

Actually, Em, your attitude is not too far removed from the
concerns
that Thomas Jefferson and James Madison had about government
sponsorship of particular Christian denominations in the
granting of
subsidies. This is what lead to the Statute of Virginia for
religious
freedom which was authored by Jefferson and was the precurser
to the
Constitutional Amendment.


Nice crowd to be part of... It just urks me that (for example)
the Catholic Church can own whole swaths of buildings, and
they don't have to pay a dime in tax.

--
Nom=de=Plume


But they do charitable work.

So? Their buildings don't do anything. The mega-churches are the
same... should have tax-exempt status.

--
Nom=de=Plume


If they taxed churches, would be a restriction on religion. Now I
know you would like that. Tax them out of existance.

I just want them to stand on their own, which is what I said. You
don't know me, so you can't know what I would like or not like.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...MN10159JCM.DTL

--
Nom=de=Plume


Knowing San Francisco tax accessor office, I have zero respect for
them. They jsut want the money for an overspending SF politcal
agenda. Took us 5 years to get a generational transfer straightened
out, and still cost us money that it should not. Every time my
wife talked to an actual person, which is really hard to do,
normally you get a full voice mailbox, they said they would take
care of it. They did not.



Which has nothing to do with taxing church property, and nothing to
do with the argument that they should or shouldn't be taxed.

--
Nom=de=Plume


Separate argument. But seems as if SF is trying to change the rules.
They need more money for an overpriced govenment.

I said that I believe churches should stand on their own and be taxed
like the rest of us. SF is apparently trying to hold them to at some
portion of that notion. You said that you don't have any respect for
SF. That's fine, but that has nothing to do with the proposed argument
of taxing churches.

--
Nom=de=Plume


I said I had no respect for the SF Tax Collector. I actually like SF.
Graduated University there for my BSc.



Ok.... so, what about the rest?

--
Nom=de=Plume


You are going to control religion by taxing it. The reason we will not
have a flat tax, is government loves control, and taxation is the
ultimate control. And that is unconstitutional to infringe freedom of
religion. This country does not have a revenue problem, it has a spending
problem.


My proposal would free religion from having to prove that it's a religion.
Right now, if you're claiming you're a religion, you have to prove it to
avoid taxes.

--
Nom=de=Plume


and it is good you have to prove you are a religion. Use to be a guy in
Modesto, Calif (maybe Turlock) that sold reverendships for the price of a
self addressed stamped envelope. So everyone could avoid paying taxes then.


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Default vatican astronomer blasts creationism


"H the K" wrote in message
...
On 10/12/09 1:25 PM, CalifBill wrote:
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On Thu, 8 Oct 2009 11:07:07 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:

wrote in message
m...

wrote in message
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wrote in
message
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On Wed, 7 Oct 2009 21:59:42 -0700, "CalifBill"
wrote:

Let religion put up a
cross, menora, etc on public property. The people
own
the property.

How would you feel about Muslim or Rastafarian
religious
symbols in
your town square?

The problem is that once you start you can't say no to
the next group,
and you can't say no to bigger and better.


Since I am an semi agnostic married to a Catholic, I
can
accept all
religions putting up displays in the town square. I
was
married by a
Monsignor in a Catholic Church with a JW best man, and
a
Jewish usher.
Locally the Jewish community puts up a Menorah during
their holidays,
and Christians put up Christmas Displays during their
holidays, and we
have had different religions also. Seems to work fine.
I believe there
may be a higher power, but not sure what it is. May be
the Flying
Spaghetti Monster.



Who gets to decide what symbol gets put up? You can
say...
oh, let the
locals decided, but how do you deal with the various
minority views that
are inevitable? It can't be a simple majority, because
it's the
obligation of the majority to protect the rights of the
minority. If you
put a cross or spire, you're basically promoting a
religion, which
without much of a stretch is prohibiting others from
doing
so. You're
taking sides. The simplest thing to do is to prohibit
all
symbols.

--
Nom=de=Plume


You have an established religion, put up your symbols for
your holiday.
Simple. Does not matter what religion. As long as it
gets
a religious
tax ID, go for it. The people own the public lands, not
the government!
We own the government. Does not seem that way these
days,
but maybe if we
get serious and vote out those owned by lobbiests, we
will
get OUR
governments back.

An established religion? A tax ID? Sounds like it's
government promoting
religion by giving tax breaks and determining who can and
can't claim to be
part of a religious order.

I'm not in favor of any tax breaks for religions. If they
can
stand on their
own, fine. If not, too bad.

Actually, Em, your attitude is not too far removed from the
concerns
that Thomas Jefferson and James Madison had about
government
sponsorship of particular Christian denominations in the
granting of
subsidies. This is what lead to the Statute of Virginia
for
religious
freedom which was authored by Jefferson and was the
precurser
to the
Constitutional Amendment.


Nice crowd to be part of... It just urks me that (for
example)
the Catholic Church can own whole swaths of buildings, and
they don't have to pay a dime in tax.

--
Nom=de=Plume


But they do charitable work.

So? Their buildings don't do anything. The mega-churches are
the
same... should have tax-exempt status.

--
Nom=de=Plume


If they taxed churches, would be a restriction on religion. Now
I
know you would like that. Tax them out of existance.

I just want them to stand on their own, which is what I said.
You
don't know me, so you can't know what I would like or not like.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...MN10159JCM.DTL

--
Nom=de=Plume


Knowing San Francisco tax accessor office, I have zero respect
for
them. They jsut want the money for an overspending SF politcal
agenda. Took us 5 years to get a generational transfer
straightened
out, and still cost us money that it should not. Every time my
wife talked to an actual person, which is really hard to do,
normally you get a full voice mailbox, they said they would take
care of it. They did not.



Which has nothing to do with taxing church property, and nothing
to
do with the argument that they should or shouldn't be taxed.

--
Nom=de=Plume


Separate argument. But seems as if SF is trying to change the
rules.
They need more money for an overpriced govenment.

I said that I believe churches should stand on their own and be
taxed
like the rest of us. SF is apparently trying to hold them to at some
portion of that notion. You said that you don't have any respect for
SF. That's fine, but that has nothing to do with the proposed
argument
of taxing churches.

--
Nom=de=Plume


I said I had no respect for the SF Tax Collector. I actually like
SF.
Graduated University there for my BSc.



Ok.... so, what about the rest?

--
Nom=de=Plume


You are going to control religion by taxing it. The reason we will not
have a flat tax, is government loves control, and taxation is the
ultimate control. And that is unconstitutional to infringe freedom of
religion. This country does not have a revenue problem, it has a
spending
problem.

My proposal would free religion from having to prove that it's a
religion.
Right now, if you're claiming you're a religion, you have to prove it to
avoid taxes.

--
Nom=de=Plume


and it is good you have to prove you are a religion. Use to be a guy in
Modesto, Calif (maybe Turlock) that sold reverendships for the price of a
self addressed stamped envelope. So everyone could avoid paying taxes
then.




I've got to get me one of those!

--
Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger:
Idiots All


And you probably would try to get a tax exemption if you made real money.


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Jim Jim is offline
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Posts: 483
Default vatican astronomer blasts creationism

CalifBill wrote:
"H the K" wrote in message
...
On 10/12/09 1:25 PM, CalifBill wrote:
wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...
wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...
wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...
wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...
wrote in message
...
wrote in message
...
wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...
wrote in message
...
wrote in message
...
On Thu, 8 Oct 2009 11:07:07 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:

wrote in message
m...
wrote in message
...
wrote in message
m...
wrote in
message
...
On Wed, 7 Oct 2009 21:59:42 -0700, "CalifBill"
wrote:

Let religion put up a
cross, menora, etc on public property. The people
own
the property.
How would you feel about Muslim or Rastafarian
religious
symbols in
your town square?

The problem is that once you start you can't say no to
the next group,
and you can't say no to bigger and better.

Since I am an semi agnostic married to a Catholic, I
can
accept all
religions putting up displays in the town square. I
was
married by a
Monsignor in a Catholic Church with a JW best man, and
a
Jewish usher.
Locally the Jewish community puts up a Menorah during
their holidays,
and Christians put up Christmas Displays during their
holidays, and we
have had different religions also. Seems to work fine.
I believe there
may be a higher power, but not sure what it is. May be
the Flying
Spaghetti Monster.


Who gets to decide what symbol gets put up? You can
say...
oh, let the
locals decided, but how do you deal with the various
minority views that
are inevitable? It can't be a simple majority, because
it's the
obligation of the majority to protect the rights of the
minority. If you
put a cross or spire, you're basically promoting a
religion, which
without much of a stretch is prohibiting others from
doing
so. You're
taking sides. The simplest thing to do is to prohibit
all
symbols.

--
Nom=de=Plume

You have an established religion, put up your symbols for
your holiday.
Simple. Does not matter what religion. As long as it
gets
a religious
tax ID, go for it. The people own the public lands, not
the government!
We own the government. Does not seem that way these
days,
but maybe if we
get serious and vote out those owned by lobbiests, we
will
get OUR
governments back.
An established religion? A tax ID? Sounds like it's
government promoting
religion by giving tax breaks and determining who can and
can't claim to be
part of a religious order.

I'm not in favor of any tax breaks for religions. If they
can
stand on their
own, fine. If not, too bad.
Actually, Em, your attitude is not too far removed from the
concerns
that Thomas Jefferson and James Madison had about
government
sponsorship of particular Christian denominations in the
granting of
subsidies. This is what lead to the Statute of Virginia
for
religious
freedom which was authored by Jefferson and was the
precurser
to the
Constitutional Amendment.

Nice crowd to be part of... It just urks me that (for
example)
the Catholic Church can own whole swaths of buildings, and
they don't have to pay a dime in tax.

--
Nom=de=Plume

But they do charitable work.
So? Their buildings don't do anything. The mega-churches are
the
same... should have tax-exempt status.

--
Nom=de=Plume

If they taxed churches, would be a restriction on religion. Now
I
know you would like that. Tax them out of existance.
I just want them to stand on their own, which is what I said.
You
don't know me, so you can't know what I would like or not like.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...MN10159JCM.DTL

--
Nom=de=Plume

Knowing San Francisco tax accessor office, I have zero respect
for
them. They jsut want the money for an overspending SF politcal
agenda. Took us 5 years to get a generational transfer
straightened
out, and still cost us money that it should not. Every time my
wife talked to an actual person, which is really hard to do,
normally you get a full voice mailbox, they said they would take
care of it. They did not.


Which has nothing to do with taxing church property, and nothing
to
do with the argument that they should or shouldn't be taxed.

--
Nom=de=Plume

Separate argument. But seems as if SF is trying to change the
rules.
They need more money for an overpriced govenment.
I said that I believe churches should stand on their own and be
taxed
like the rest of us. SF is apparently trying to hold them to at some
portion of that notion. You said that you don't have any respect for
SF. That's fine, but that has nothing to do with the proposed
argument
of taxing churches.

--
Nom=de=Plume

I said I had no respect for the SF Tax Collector. I actually like
SF.
Graduated University there for my BSc.


Ok.... so, what about the rest?

--
Nom=de=Plume

You are going to control religion by taxing it. The reason we will not
have a flat tax, is government loves control, and taxation is the
ultimate control. And that is unconstitutional to infringe freedom of
religion. This country does not have a revenue problem, it has a
spending
problem.
My proposal would free religion from having to prove that it's a
religion.
Right now, if you're claiming you're a religion, you have to prove it to
avoid taxes.

--
Nom=de=Plume

and it is good you have to prove you are a religion. Use to be a guy in
Modesto, Calif (maybe Turlock) that sold reverendships for the price of a
self addressed stamped envelope. So everyone could avoid paying taxes
then.



I've got to get me one of those!

--
Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger:
Idiots All


And you probably would try to get a tax exemption if you made real money.


I was just thinking the same thing.
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