Originally Posted by Quaoarsking
Ok, I'll bite.
I'm not previously familiar with any of these cases, but just from looking at the article you linked:
1. The school's policy was that no religious books were allowed to be read during "free reading time," not just the Bible. Your article specifically says that, so it's not discrimination against Christians. It sounds like a pretty dumb policy, but I don't know what incidents occurred at the school to make them enact the policy. I doubt they just made it up out of the blue one day.
The only thing prohibited was the Bible and the Broward County Superintendent of Schools has now come out and stated the teacher was in error. ... The article explicitly states the teacher said, "I noticed that he had a book, a religious book, in the classroom. He?s not permitted to read those books in my classroom." That means Bible, Qu'ran, Torah, Vedas, whatever. And I never said the teacher was in the right -- in fact I speculated that he was not, but I'd need to know the backstory before judging for sure.
2. If that story is accurate and is telling the whole story (considering the source, I'm skeptical),
Ah yes, the old ?Fox News published it, so I should be skeptical.?It's not like they haven't earned that skepticism... I would say that's probably overreach. However, there's no evidence that it's specifically targeted at Christians. I would assume a verse from the Qu'ran would be similarly disallowed, probably with the support of the people who are mad over this.
Freedom From Religion started this, please cite the cases where FFR has attacked the Qu?ran. I'm not sure if this is a serious question. Google "Freedom From Religion" Islam and you'll see anti-Islam articles on their site. Did you seriously think an anti-religion group wouldn't be anti-Islam too? How would that even make sense in your mind? Like #1, there may very well be a good reason that justifies this policy, but even if there's not, it's not like Christianity is being singled out...
Parents paid for the t-shirts, they aren?t part of the uniform. There is no indication of a school uniform required by all students which the T-shirts would violate, just what is the problem?I don't have a problem with the shirts. I bet there's something more to the story. But if there's not, then I think the school is in the wrong. I'd also think they were in the wrong if they disallowed Qu'ran shirts, even though most Christians wouldn't.
3. An opinion piece from Chuck Norris? Not exactly a very good source on this type of thing.
And why is Chuck Norris? opinion less to be respected than yours? Why don't you rebut the assertions and facts he states in the opinion piece? Are you saying the opinion piece is invalid simply because it was written by Chuck Norris? Chuck Norris can think whatever he wants. But I usually go for journalists to get factual information, not crazy celebrities like Chuck Norris, Paris Hilton, Charlie Sheen, etc. I find it very telling that the article doesn't mention what the disallowed Biblical reference was. I'm assuming this means it was a very controversial verse, such as an anti-gay one.
The verse was Galatians 2:20, ?For I have been crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ lives in me, and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself for me.?Assuming that's correct, that seems like an innocuous verse, but I feel confident that the entire story isn't being told. The Air Force of all places isn't in the business of stomping out the Bible -- it employs explicitly Christian chaplains. Remember, the Air Force Academy is generally considered to be one of the 2 or 3 most conservative major colleges in the whole country, so if it's something that was too right wing there, it's not going to fly anywhere.
Please cite your source for this statement. You seriously doubt this? http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/1...n_1973710.html Also, I see no evidence that this policy, if it is indeed real, was for Christians/the Bible only.
The Bible verse was the only thing prohibited by this "crackdown" on white boards.Proof? Were there Qu'ranic verses that were allowed? Were all Bible verses disallowed? There's always more to stories like this, whatever flavor of the month story that fires up people on the Internet, and I'm sure there is on this one too.
4. Well no shit. If I went and publicly made comments like this I'd get fired from my job. So would you. So would almost everyone, including Muslims, Jews, etc.
So dissent is dead? Just what does this have to do with his job? Much as Scientific American fired an engineering writer because they learned he believed in Intelligent Design. SA admitted no problems with the writing but they didn?t like what he said outside the scope of his job. Group think lives.If you publicly embarrass your employer, you're going to get fired. It's one thing to say "I don't believe in gay marriage." It's another to go off on a rant about how evil gay people are. A lot of people on this thread probably don't see the difference...
So to summarize, you have a couple examples that might be government overreach if your stories are completely accurate and unbiased, and there aren't unreported justifications behind them, but even then they aren't specifically targeted at Christians, but at religion as a whole. And you certainly haven't demonstrated how a couple of isolated incidents from all over the country somehow are a grand overarching national trend ?
Just how many incidents will satisfy you? I was asked to cite incidents, I did. These are all very recent. I never said it was a ?grand overarching national trend". However, in time it could certainly get worse. I asked Beardo to cite incidents of discrimination against Buddhist, etc. which he claimed. At least I responded with citations, that is more than he has done.
I could like stories about anti-black discrimation picked out from around the country, but that doesn't mean America = 1980s South Africa.
I never said ?America = 1980s South Africa?, you did. South Africa?s issues did not develop overnight, they developed over time, just as this problem is developing. The point I was trying to make that is that blacks in South Africa had real problems. Christians in America don't as a whole. Sure there's an isolated incident here and there, but they are in no way indicative of any kind of trend. They make up 75% of the population and well over 90% of government. I don't really know how to react to the guy who said Christians are the most discriminated against group in America other than just to laugh.