Are Christians A Protected Group Under The Bill Of Rights?
The word "Christian" is not mentioned in the Bill of Rights or the Constitution.
The phrase "protected group" came about after the passage of the Civil Rights Act, which is a socialist concept, and
U.S. federal law protects employees from discrimination or harassment based on sex, race, age, disability, color, creed, national origin or religion. It specifically relates to employment law issues.
Although it is NOT required by federal law, employer policies may also protect employees from harassment or discrimination based on marital status or sexual orientation. However, please note the Civil Rights Act of 64 is inconsistent with the Constitution. I am not going to say there was not discrimination, rather, discrimination persists(ed) due to state and local government participation which was(is) unconstitutional. I challenge anyone here to show me in the Bill of Rights where a group is a "protected class."
On this site there will be a natural dissonance when discussing "protected classes." Group think is dangerous. Any concept that pushes ideas that some group has separate rights from the individual members is pushing Force and slavery. But if one has to think that way (illogically) the only group which is acknowledged here is the smallest group: the individual.
So, if one pushes concepts that are part of a group-think, one will be likely challenged. It will be uncomfortable and there will be push back or ignoring if posts focusing on those issues begin to dominate. That goes for issues Christians are concerned with as well as those concerned with LGBT issues. But just as well for the O who is frustrated the site is not more committed to the study of Objectivism. Focusing on our similarities reduces dissonance. Those similarities should be reason and logic foremost. But all of us have to check our premises at times. Discuss
The phrase "protected group" came about after the passage of the Civil Rights Act, which is a socialist concept, and
U.S. federal law protects employees from discrimination or harassment based on sex, race, age, disability, color, creed, national origin or religion. It specifically relates to employment law issues.
Although it is NOT required by federal law, employer policies may also protect employees from harassment or discrimination based on marital status or sexual orientation. However, please note the Civil Rights Act of 64 is inconsistent with the Constitution. I am not going to say there was not discrimination, rather, discrimination persists(ed) due to state and local government participation which was(is) unconstitutional. I challenge anyone here to show me in the Bill of Rights where a group is a "protected class."
On this site there will be a natural dissonance when discussing "protected classes." Group think is dangerous. Any concept that pushes ideas that some group has separate rights from the individual members is pushing Force and slavery. But if one has to think that way (illogically) the only group which is acknowledged here is the smallest group: the individual.
So, if one pushes concepts that are part of a group-think, one will be likely challenged. It will be uncomfortable and there will be push back or ignoring if posts focusing on those issues begin to dominate. That goes for issues Christians are concerned with as well as those concerned with LGBT issues. But just as well for the O who is frustrated the site is not more committed to the study of Objectivism. Focusing on our similarities reduces dissonance. Those similarities should be reason and logic foremost. But all of us have to check our premises at times. Discuss
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The equality make justice blind. We treat all religions the same. That means we treat crimes the same way. Being in a violent religion is not an excuse for criminal behavior. Someone's criminal behavior is not an excuse for persecuting a religion. The religions are protected in that members won't loose any rights for joining a religion. They don't gain any right to commit crimes either.
As for the "public forum" thing, my reference was to the public expression of religion that are common in America.
From the crèche in a public square to the crosses or other religious symbols in war memorials religious people are feeling our right to publicly express our faith are under assault. To the extent that all citizens have a right to express how they feel on any subject, we shall continue to express our religious stance.
No one here can say that I take every opportunity to make a religious statement of some kind. In fact, I often avoid conversations heading that way. But I do not believe there is any limitation placed on the expression of such, just as any other discussion can be followed here. And as you might note, I am a paying member, a "Producer" which also has certain other benefits - not as far as subjects go - that's not what I mean at all. Each member here agrees to abide by the "User Agreement" which makes clear what discussions are inappropriate and how such are ordered.
It has been a while since I read it but I'm pretty sure religion is not one of the targeted items how do I know that? Because I'm here - I would have never joined if speech on any subject was banned.
Perhaps you have read the FAQ for the forum, but if not, allow me to copy the description of the Gulch for you;
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What is "Galt's Gulch?"
Galt's Gulch is the Official Atlas Shrugged Movie "Collective." Galt's Gulch is a community of like-minded individuals who come together regularly to share interesting content and ideas with each other and debate about politics, economics, philosophy and more. If you've read and have been influenced by Atlas Shrugged, this is the site you've been waiting for. This, is Galt's Gulch Online.
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You might see that there is no such reference to the "ideas of Ayn Rand", although they certainly are encompassed by the FAQ, the gulch is NOT limited to them. We are allowed, even encouraged to "come together regularly to share interesting content and ideas with each other and debate about politics, economics, philosophy and more." Certainly religion can find a place among the worlds philosophies, even with those who see no value in it. Perhaps you might be challenged to study a bit about it and KNOW why you reject it.
Only if you use "religion" in the most convoluted of definitions. We are constantly bombarded with a cacaphony of ideals, principles, and conclusions of varying merit and substance in a bewildering assortment of areas of life. ALL tell us to believe this, choose that, pick something based on some set of values or moral code. That moral code is religion. You can choose to align yourself with a formal moral code or religion if you choose and associate with those like-minded people. That is ensconced in the First Amendment as your right. But to pretend that you are not being propositioned by conflicting value proposals all the day long is more than a bit disingenuous to yourself.
Is there a God or isn't there? Two conflicting moral propositions. Individualism vs collectivism. Altruism vs Objectivism. Even SIMILAR moral codes differ, just ask the Protestants and Catholics!
There is no such thing as freedom from others' ideas except by virtue of your own choice whether or not to accept or reject such. But the only freedom from "religion" is total freedom from thought.
Religion is not a class that is being protected per se, but the freedom of choice itself. Compare the United States to China, where there is no Constitutional right to freedom of speech, assembly, religion, or of the press. The only acceptable religion is socialism and the only acceptable God is the Communist Party. The only acceptable information comes from the government-controlled media, and violators are punished with swift imprisonment, torture, and sometimes death.
You can not protect freedom of thought without being willing to protect thought that may disagree with yours - religious, areligious or otherwise. You either protect it as a whole and tolerate the stuff you don't like or you go down the slippery slope.
There is plenty of common ground for everyone here within Objectivism.
Unfortunately SOMEONE from one side of the Religous / Atheist divide or the other always starts beating the exclusion drum.
If the whole issue was ignored by both sides here, we could have much better discussions.
It is an issue that humanity has been unable to resolve throughout recorded history....we won't do any better at it.
You are given a choice: you must choose to support Christianity, or you must choose to be a Moslem. Your only third alternative is a horrible death I won't describe because I know you can't handle it when I get... descriptive :) Just take my word that it would be long, painful and humiliating.
Which do you choose? To support Christianity, or to become Moslem? Or death?
Anything to hasten the destruction of the republic...
/sarc
Take a look at the signatories on the Bill of Rights or the Constitution. Weren’t they men sort of made up of one group? I think in some respects they considered their one group completely covered and protected without having to state it should be so.
If I open my front door, I can point to a neighbor’s home where someone lives who is originally from Peru. The neighbor across from his house is gay. The family to the right of him is african-american. The African-American family has a black family living next door to them, but they are from Ethiopia. I can find people who work or live in my community who can’t speak a lick of English.
It’s normal to seek out those who are similar to you. It’s a biological norm. It is in our DNA: groups stand a better change at surviving. In some ways in a country as diverse as ours we almost have to create laws to protect certain groups in order to better serve the individuals within those groups.
This site was create for Objectivists, fans of Ayn Rand and her writings, and the movie franchise.
I’ve watched interviews of Ayn Rand, interesting enough she never brought up religion,(not that I have ever seen), she just answer the questions that were ask of her concerning faith. In her day and age, saying you didn’t believe in God was considered career-killing. It was very brave of her. I didn’t tell people that I didn’t believe in God when I was a kid, or as a teenager, or in some situations--as a young adult for fear of rejection. People looked at you like there was something wrong with you. For too many decades, atheists and agnostics kept quiet because they feared they would be socially ostracized. I can understand where a christian today feels persecuted because there has been some ‘blow-back’ as individuals throw off the mantel of fear. Christians no longer can control the dialogue and are often shut-down or shut-out now. Individuals now feel free to express their doubts about an existence of a God. I don’t want to ever be preached to again.
HOWEVER-- I have never started a thread here discussing my lack of faith. I never started a thread in here discussing how my gay niece was born that way and I’m so happy she has the right to marry in her state now.
This website is really not the place.
Also, keep in mind that this is Not a "public forum"; it is a privately owned website about the ideas of Ayn Rand. If someone challenges the rationality of my thoughts on this site, it is not pulling the 'discrimination' card.
"I can assure you that it's very important and it involves a algebra you won't understand."
I understand, I disagree. Algebra is logical and based on reason. In no way am I making fun. You may continue to attack me as if I am, however it would not be the case
As I said before, I don't care what you believe, but using a person's faith to belittle them is not using 'reason', it's being a bully and it is the reason that there are protected classes. Because some confuse a feeling of superiority for 'reason'.
I'm out. A long day coming in my real life.
I spent a day at Jekyll Island learning about how the Federal Reserve was hatched. I knew that JP Morgan, John Rockefeller, and Andrew Carnegie were great heroes of banking and industry in the 1800's, but then formed a cartel to get President McKinley elected, before that backfired with McKinley's assassination and the presidency of Teddy Roosevelt. What I didn't know was the tangled web between them, their relatives, and proteges to perpetually put the US and the rest of the world into permanent debt, and how much they used political cronyism to accomplish it. The Creature from Jekyll Island is a worthwhile read.
In Charleston, SC, we visited Fort Sumter. I knew that the South contended that Lincoln started the War Between the States, but I didn't know as many details as I do now. After South Carolina had seceded, most people know that the Union blockaded Charleston. What most people don't know was that the primary reason for this blockade was the collection of taxes, particularly on cotton. Lincoln refused to acknowledge SC's secession and still expected taxes to be collected. This is a lesson any of us wanting to go Gulch need to remember.
The next day we visited the Yorktown that replaced the Yorktown at The Battle of Midway. The second Yorktown was also important in the victory over Japan, but the Battle of Midway is my favorite battle. By breaking the Japanese code (use of intelligence) and calculated risk, we won the battle that turned the battle in the Pacific. Later in Charleston, we went to the Confederate Museum. I knew that I had a lower view of Lincoln than many Americans, but several historians at that museum taught me several things that made my opinion of Lincoln considerably lower.
Then we spent a couple of days in Yorktown, Jamestown, and Williamsburg, Virginia. The pinning of General Cornwallis in Yorktown on a natural peninsula, combined with the French navy's repulsion of the attempted English naval support into Chesapeake Bay was tactically brilliant. In one day, Williamsburg's actors portray events from 1775-1777. Williamsburg is well worth the trip, even if you don't go to Busch Gardens (which I did as a kid), and is remarkably inexpensive compared to most possible vacations. I especially liked the actor portraying Patrick Henry. Perhaps I was born in the wrong era.
Yes there are people who would not hire a worker who was a Christian, but these same people would also deny us access to many other things. Like free speech.
How am I depriving you of your thoughts? Don't all individuals have the individual right to think and believe what they want?
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