BURNINGBIRD
a node at the edge  


June 27, 2002
PoliticsMore on the Pledge

Dan Lyke pointed out that Illiad of User Friendly fame has weighed in on the Pledge of Allegiance ruling. I laughed until I shuddered and cried.

The Pledge legal decision and the User Friendly cartoon touched on two critical issues facing the US - our hypocrisy in regards to religion (mixing of religion and state in Saudi Arabia is evil, but it's okay in the US), and our increasing willingness to sell our freedom for spurious safety.

On the issue of separation of church and state - if we demand that others drop their unique religious practices and conform to the greater good of all humanity, then we must ask the same of ourselves. As for the issue of trading security for safety - we're willing to die for our country, but not for the freedoms on which the country is based. If this is true, then what good is the country?

I may seem as if I'm mixing the message - separation of church and state and giving up freedoms for security - but as Illiad has noted so well using his own style, it's all about freedom. It's all about freedom.

I was also caught by one of the discussion threads associated with the cartoon. In it, Geek Princess stated:

    And as we continue down the slippery slope of moral decay, I'm wondering when the attacks on morality will stop? Will we have to become totally lawless and amoral before they will stop? How much filth and destruction do they need? :( It just figures that such a ruling would come from judges who live in "The Sodom of America". What are they thinking we will gain by further separating ourselves? We will either stand/work together, under one power, or our nation will crumble. I have to wonder whose side those judges are on?

Whoa, boys and girls - last time I looked, freedom of religion meant that all people are equal regardless of their religious beliefs. Assuming that the "godless" are amoral and lawless is, well, childish, simplistic, and scary as hell. And, Babes, I just moved from The Sodom of America. There weren't no orgies in the street. If there was, no one told me where to go and when.

On a related note: once I finish with ThreadNeedle, I'm going to spend time coding a new application - a web bot that goes out to weblogs looking for two phrases "slippery slope" and "moral equivalency". And every time the bot finds one, a warning email will be sent to the offending weblogger:

    Note: You have used one of the following badly overused cliches:

    Slippery Slope
    Moral Equivalency

    Continued use of cliches such as these has been shown to be detrimental to your mental health and growth. In addition, increased exposure over time leads to frothing at the mouth, a fixed stare, and a tendency to only wear red, white, and blue.

    We suggest, for your own good, that you consider restricting your use of said terms in favor of something new and fresh. A thesaurus will be provided on request.

    Thank you


Posted by Bb at June 27, 2002 12:48 PM




Comments

Beautifully put, Bb.

What Geek Princess and her ilk seem to have missed in their concerns about morals is that the latter are simply the lazy person's ethics: a set of habits or _customs_ (the literal meaning of 'morals') that form socially-agreed ways to avoid dealing with the much messier and more complex realm of ethics. Other societies may choose morals differently - sometimes very differently - _but the ethics-issues remain the same_ in every society.

Dunno whether that could be packaged as easily into a bot as your suggested cliche-hunter, Bb, but perhaps it might be worth a try...!

Posted by: Tom Graves on June 27, 2002 06:14 PM

Please add to more to that email:

"At the end of the day" and "It's been a great ride"

Posted by: Sheila Lennon on June 28, 2002 07:02 AM


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