[quote=“Granny_Rainbow, post:100, topic:611736”]
[quote=“Granny_Rainbow, post:101, topic:611736”]
There is not ever, and no ever, and not any excuse excuse ever for…my my turtntthelp…omg someonecan glep to help to give them a elap esatrreacteed an help omg
Pentecostal?
[quote=“Granny_Rainbow, post:102, topic:611736”]
speaking in tongues, or hopefully not a health concern?
[quote=“Granny_Rainbow, post:101, topic:611736”]
There is not ever, and no ever, and not any excuse excuse ever for…my my turtntthelp…omg someonecan glep to help to give them a elap esatrreacteed an OMG than yr yougyHe sig as londid as loingedas he longas hedemosedamnnell\
[quote=“florez, post:104, topic:611736”]
It looks like either self-medication or kitty on the keyboard to me. I’m tempted to suspend her for 24 hours, but on the other hand, I need to get to bed, and I think it will be a learning experience for us all if she continues trying to justify her notions.
Demonic possession.
Well, assuming that God doesn’t actually exist (Granny, feel free to prove me wrong) and thus ignoring the commandments that directly relate to him, I’d guess not stealing, killing, and perjuring is a good idea. I’d like a definition for “adultery” before weighing in on that (i.e. is it still “adultery” after you’ve gotten a divorce), and I don’t see a reasonable expectation for a human being not to “covet” (in fact, without coveting, there’d be no progress), and “honor thy father and mother” is somewhat vague…
So… no, I don’t see the Ten Commandments being that useful. The Golden Rule is simpler and more comprehensive and, I figure, more useful.
It would be a disaster. Just consider the Sabbath. There are conservative Jewish communities that strictly observe the Sabbath, and they face all sorts of moronic challenges 1/7th of their lives. There are exceptions for life-threatening emergencies in Rabbinical tradition, but those exceptions are not contained in the Bible itself. That means a Biblically correct society wouldn’t have ambulances or doctors or grocers or electrical power plant workers during the Sabbath. Even if you allow the exception, I suggest you read all the trouble some people (apparently) go through just to keep the precious commandment.
Or the prohibition on graven images. Pretty much any attempt to enforce this commandment would decimate art and free expression (and probably science in general, as I suspect a model of Saturn with its rings would be considered a representation of something “in the heavens”).
While we’re on the subject of free expression and science, the commandment to worship one specific God is fundamentally totalitarian and would have stifled scientific inquiry (as it does throughout the Islamic world today, who can’t get their act together because they’re so worried about the theological implications of their experiments).
But why just keep those ten? Why not the other 603 other commandments? Biblical morality claims its legitimacy through (divine) authority, but once you accept an authority’s dictates as inherently moral, you have to take the whole set. God commanded people never mix their linen and their wool. God commanded animal sacrifice as a method of atonement for scores of sins. God commanded that unruly children be put to death. If God’s commandments are good, why not follow those equally good commandments? On the other hand, if you can pick and choose which of the perfect God’s orders are really good, then your morality can have no authority at all. You didn’t suggest we should only follow these commandments, so maybe we can exercise some human judgment and still ban slavery (even though brutally enslaving non-Jews is totally fine in the Bible) or tweak topics that the God hasn’t made commandments on, but it’s still a horrible, terrible society we’d be creating.
Real, true, effective morality boils down to a recognition of every human being as equally legitimate and worthy as every other. This dovetails with common versions of what is sometimes called the golden rule. Treat others as you want them to treat you, but first and foremost understand the way they want to be treated may be different than how you want to be treated. “Don’t be a douche.”
If we develop our morality through reason, then we don’t have to get bogged down with details of whether picking up the phone to call an ambulance is technically work and violating a sacred edict, or whether it would be a sin to build a planetarium. The strength of rational morality is that if it creates a negative outcome, you can try to reason out a way to fix it. The goal is some version of minimizing suffering and maximizing well-being, as opposed to mindlessly obeying the proclamations written in a stone.
Sorry, I forgot to toss in this link to the rules conservative Jewish communities deal with the Sabbath.
Some examples of prohibitions on the Sabbath:
Also, a bonus link about Sabbath Elevators that work on their own (wasting gobs of electricity, I’m sure) when observant Jews aren’t allowed to push buttons, but can still inexplicably ride elevators.
There are no gods; and even if there were it doesn’t matter what it/they know or don’t know; that doesn’t make it a crime. It’s the laws of the country you are residing in that make something a crime, not the opinion of your god.
And there are plenty of victimless crimes; or for that matter, crimes that are outright admirable. It depends on what the crimes are.
It is YOUR quiestion
[/QUOTE]
No, it’s your OP. You asked about the Ten Commandments; which are religious commandments that demand people worship a particular god.
<checks> It appears the thread started in the Pit and was moved.
Granny Rainbow, I am not sure what your last few posts were all about, but I am going to close this thread to give you a chance to start over.
Please read all the responses to your views, (not just the reflexively hostile ones), and consider those before you re-submit your argument.
Also, refrain from calling other posters names, (such as “sick fucks”), when a thread is not in The BBQ Pit forum.
As to your observations about atheists, this board has a very large number of atheists on it, so appeals to religious beliefs will rarely carry much weight in a discussion and your style of posting will never convert any of them to your beliefs.
[ /Moderating ]