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07-18-2003, 04:23 PM | #41 | |
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07-18-2003, 06:57 PM | #42 | |||
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Lev - it would help structure the dialogue if your only responded to one person per message. Thanks.
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You continue to avoid the issues by interpreting every challenge as too personal to respond to. You are the one who has asserted that David Barton (BA, Oral Roberts University) is an authority. You have not given us his evidence - you have presented him and his authoritative law review article as the evidence. I have already given you one link that details Barton's methods: he had admitted that he made up quotes from the founding fathers. David Barton Rewrites American History Quote:
You gave us one quote allegedly from Jefferson, and I showed that it looked unreliable, compared to words that Jefferson actually wrote. Are you going to respond to any of this, other than to wave your hands at the stack of law review articles by your computer? For more on Barton, there is an old link, David Barton Automatons Quote:
Your last sentence there does not make any sense to me. What erroneous assumptions? Who is more credible? Whispers in the wind?? |
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07-18-2003, 07:25 PM | #43 | |||
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We're talking about an officially sanctioned pledge of allegience to God, not a historical document. Quote:
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07-18-2003, 07:52 PM | #44 |
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(I read your first statement below and read no further. It cries out for an immediate response unfrettered with my additional frustrations that seem to be proliferating as you attempt to support conditioned fictions rather than verified facts.) Barton cites too many authorities for the quotations in question, for me to just roll over and say, "ok, your bias against his bias is valid." Please appreciate how difficult it is to tell a true believer that there is no Santa Claus. It may be even more difficult for the messenger to tell it than the recipient to hear it. David Barton has been exposed as a liar and an uncredentialed (by anyone other than the radical religious right and their supporters) historical revisionist. As a potential seeker of legal fact, you should be concerned with the veracity of the evidence I use to make that statement without concern for charges of defamation of character or suit for slander/libel. I can safely make my charge because Mr. Barton has admitted many of his errors of fact after being challenged to support his claims. Do I have biases? Of course I do! Do I have opinions? Of course I do! That is why I do my best to apply scientific methodology when searching for the facts in order to minimize or eliminate my biases/opinions from the final conclusions. Accurate "Facts" stand all by themselves without any assistance from me. People like Barton are not concerned with verifiable evidence that contradicts their pre-conditioned faith beliefs. They cite enormous numbers of authorities in order to lend an aura of professional respectability to their statements and conclusions...and to intentionally make it difficult to arrive at the verifiable facts concerning an issue. Citing many respected and qualified authorities would be a welcome technique if the authorities he quotes were qualified to address the issues, or were quoted accurately. Unfortunately, far too many are neither qualified to comment or quoted accurately. One of the major differences between you and me is that I do not readily accept ("roll over") things on blind faith simply because someone cites many authorities. I check each of them for applicability and accuracy. YES!. It takes lots of very valuable time away for other endeavors. However, the search for the verifiable facts is seldom as quick and easy as the fairytale endings have led many folks to believe. Now I will read the rest of your post and determine whether to invest any more valuable time in this discussion. |
07-18-2003, 08:24 PM | #45 |
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A serious historical scholar would not make such a spelling error. A serious historical lay scholar didn't. Try reading the information I have thoughtfully provided for you to read. Look at how the name was originally spelled. http://members.aol.com/calebj/bradford_journal.html You are correct. You are all-knowing. Good luck with your studies. If you can't be bothered getting the facts, I can't be bothered trying to provide some for you. I avoid folks who pretend that they have all the answers. |
07-18-2003, 08:56 PM | #46 | |||||||||
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1. It seems that source does say Barton admits there was error, but I fail to see how it was malicious (as in his admission states this). What I do see is a politically motivated article (your source), wishing to bash him in the ground. 2. To weigh against this, we have a man with a little more than a B.A., but evidently you just ignored the paragraph of qualifications I presented to you. Evidently he is credible enough that, after such a "horrendous, despicable" act as "reinventing history," a credible law review such as the Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics, and Public Policy, finds his work respectable enough to post. In addition, if you will note ([Level+Case+Citation:]|[Group+citemenu:])/doc/{@1}/hit_headings/words=4/hits_only?]here , Justice Rehnquist's dissent makes similar historical comparisons as Barton's law review, footnoting all of them as S. Ct. decisions typically do. So... what's next: the ND Journal and Chief Justice of the United States of America aren't good enough for you either? Kevbo Quote:
Additionally, for your argument to be more persuasive, you would need to distinguish how Justice Brennan's concurrence is not correct in stating the following, "Brennan noted that the ''referance to divinity in the revised pledge... may merely recognize historical fact that our Nation was believed to have been founded Under God." To me, Brennan's argument makes alot of sense: it is just one of numerous arguments finding that the Pledge, contrary to "establishment" precedent, is *not* an endorsement of religion (your favorite opinion to give), but instead is a political act of historical recognition. I have yet to see a rebuttal to that. Quote:
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Think about it this way: if reality is only as you perceive it, then my reality is your fiction. You telling me I have a "skewed" reality in your opinion amounts about as much to me as you telling me the sky is purple. Give reasons, arguments, *not* conclusions. Quote:
You see, your assumption in the quotation above is that for some reason I "take things on faith." This is ridiculous, and honestly is a stupid, stupid assertion. There's no other word for it. I have cited numerous law reviews to you: *not* because I see the title page and think, "hey that would be good for my argument!", but instead b/c I have read them, thought about them, and then I present them to someone who I know will disagree with me, to get their perspective. I want your perspective, meaning, your argument and reasons for disagreeing with my perspective. What I don't want is your opinions that I'm creating a "fiction" with no credibility. If you are going to do that, you might as well not reply, b/c I see nothing constructive coming out of such a "debate." Quote:
The irony of that statement, given your statements above I qutoed, about knowing sources better than I, is just too much. :banghead: |
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07-18-2003, 09:13 PM | #47 | ||||||||||
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Let's take a hypothetical example. Suppose the Court denies cert in Newdow. (Yeah, it won't happen, but bear with me a moment. ) I wouldn't consider consider that a comment on the merits of Newdow any more than I consider the denial of cert in Sherman a comment on the merits of that case. It may simply mean that the Court wants to let the issue "percolate" among the circuits awhile longer before getting involved. It's not that uncommon for the Court to let conflicting circuit court opinions stand for a long time before taking a case and issuing a definitive pronouncement. Quote:
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A bit later the Court notes: Quote:
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One of the problems with Judge O'Scannlain's position is his unstated assumption that reciting the Pledge is either a patriotic act or a religious act, but can't be both. That's a false dichotomy. As I see it, Pledge recitation not only can be but in fact is both patriotic and religious. I have no quarrel with viewing the version of the Pledge codified in 1942 as exclusively "patriotic." Let's contrast that with something else that gets recited, namely the Apostles' Creed. Certainly most everyone would agree that reciting the Creed is exclusively a "religious" act. There's a lot of territory between those two extremes, and within that territory lies the 1954 version of the Pledge. By reciting the current version, one does considerably more than pledge allegiance to a flag and a country. First, you acknowledge the existence of a deity. Second, as the legislative history of the 1954 Act demonstrates, that deity is the God of the Bible. Third, you acknowledge that the deity in question exercises sovereignty over the nation to which you're pledging allegiance. That sounds mighty "religious" to me. So yes, the Pledge does have both patriotic and religious elements. Under the rule of Lee, the state can't coerce school children to engage in religious exercises. For EC purposes, the solution is to excise the religious element - i.e., "under God" - from the Pledge. The upshot of all this rambling is that I believe Newdow finds sound and substantial support in Lee. In order to reverse, Diana, Mary and Flo will have to modify Lee significantly, ignore it altogether, or conclude (despite all the evidence to the contrary) that Lee is inapposite because reciting the Pledge isn't "religious." It'll be interesting to see which way the Court goes. (Offhand, I can't cite any authority for this frenetic analysis. It's just my take on things.) Quote:
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07-18-2003, 09:26 PM | #48 |
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Is Deism a religious belief? Is David Barton a known prevaricator? Was Plymouth originally spelled Plimoth? A simple yes or no answer would have sufficed. I'm 68 and have learned just how much I don't know. Perhaps your "reality" will teach you that lesson one day. |
07-18-2003, 10:10 PM | #49 |
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I see that this debate is going well. I just posted a new thread specifically about Sherman. Since there is no real substantive attack on Newdow, there is no need to defend that decision, so I might as well counterattack.
I didn't want to crowd this thread, though. My post on Sherman is looooooooong. |
07-18-2003, 10:24 PM | #50 | ||||
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This is not a simple recognition that many past Americans have been Christians. It is an officially sanctioned prescription of religious orthodoxy. It is a law passed by Congress which states that the Judeo-Christian God is the correct god and that public school students may be lead in pledging allegience to this god on a daily basis. That is exactly what I would call the unconstitutional establishment of religion, as well as a restriction of the free exercise of those belief systems which do not recognize the Judeo-Christian deity in expressions of patriotism. Again, the PoA, as of 1954, is pledging allegience to the Judeo-Christian God, not simply stating that many past Americans have believed in such a deity. Quote:
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