Toby
Member
Registered: Jul 2000
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Posts: 3034 |
quote: Originally posted by dietrichbohn
Case In Point. *Sigh* Ok, look at the context: Allow that I "fully understand the argument." More metaphorically, it is not the case that your pearls of wisdom are being cast before swine, it's that I don't particularly like those pearls. It makes perfect sense if you just give me a little credit.
No, it has nothing to do with pearls of wisdom. It's more along the lines of C. Thomas Howell never really knowing what it was like to be black in Soul Man. Or thinking that you fully understand what some other person's perception of God is.  quote: I think I'm tired of being told I'm confused when I'm not. Then maybe you should stop referring to 'we' when you mean 'me'.quote: I was referring to the fact that the founding fathers were not of one unified mind, and therefore you're not going to agree with all of them. Pretty much irrelevant. The ideals which founded the government were not of a particular person. They were the distillation of the individuals' ideas.quote: Further, even if they were of one mind, I'm willing to bet that if you got into a debate with one of them, you'd find some little detail that bugged you and you'd rip into them. Actually, I disagree with Hamilton on quite a lot of things. Ultimately, though, 'his' 'side' 'won'. The framework and foundations were decided upon. Hell, unlike most USians, my ancestors didn't choose to become U.S. citizens as much as their territory was bought from under them, and even I accept that.quote: the real point, of course, is that the constitution is a document of compromise, not--as we've discussed--the holy writ of god. Hence, all or nothing statements to the tune of "When you remove the foundation, the building doesn't have much to stand upon" simply confuse the issue. Horse puckey. If anything, they make the issue crystal clear. This has nothing to do with being holy writ. It's more like a rule book. There's even a process for changing the rules. Hell, even I admit that your position is more possible to have the majority behind it (since it relies on a more base emotion). I still think it flies in the face of the original concepts which created those rules because it subverts the concept that we're supposed to be judged on things we've _done_ and not things we _might_do_ if 'given a chance'.
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