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Strategies & Market Trends : Galapagos Islands

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To: Jorj X Mckie who wrote (53359)10/29/2004 10:57:57 AM
From: PuddleGlum  Read Replies (2) of 57110
 
My opinion is that the gov't should not be sanctioning a religious tradition.

You are making a couple of faulty assumptions here.

a) Just because there are religious grounds for a position doesn't mean that there aren't well-founded reasons for that position. In fact, most do's and don'ts in the Bible have some good (physical or social) science or psychology behind them, even if the science wasn't understood (by humans) at the time of writing.

b) Are you saying that because my world view is based on God that my world view is less valid or less important than yours? That's an easy way to move your objectives to the top, isn't it?

The libertarian point of view as I understand it is one of "Live and let live, so long as I don't bother anybody else let me do what I want". The question arises as to who determines what bothers/affects somebody else, and how to measure the impact that one person's actions have on others.

The abortion issue is a case in point. We all abhor murder, right? But when it comes to aborting a fetus (killing an unborn human) the line becomes less clear. Is it less clear because we want it so (i.e., it's convenient), or less clear because there are truly confusing issues that have reached the limits of the purpose of a "law"? 200 years from now people might look back at the 20th/21st centuries in horror at the barbaric practice of abortions and soul-less experimentation with embryos. Or they might then have reasons or procedures for eliminating non-productive citizens under 2 years of age, and curse us in our graves for not doing more to prevent world overpopulation. What is "right" or "wrong" with respect to these things? Who decides? If a significant percentage of the population believes this is murder, then at what point do you tell that part of the population to "go %#@$%"?
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