2 pages of false associations
1/25/2010 6:01:22 PM
1/25/2010 6:12:30 PM
^Right. If I wasn't Jewish I wouldn't have been hired as a Jewish youth worker.
1/25/2010 6:36:12 PM
^^ Why shouldn't employers be able to hire based on favorite food or anything else? In a private business, the owners should be able to employ whoever they want based on whatever criteria they choose. I don't see how that's unfair to anyone. Of course, they should also be allowed to decide who to serve (or not to serve), whether or not to allow people to smoke, etc. Just as I can decide who can drive my car, ride in my car, smoke in my car, etc. I own it, I should be able to make the decisions. At what point do we stop running other peoples' lives?
1/25/2010 6:56:06 PM
Well, ghotiblue, we tried doing things your way, and it turned out that in large parts of the country the only people who could get decent jobs or service were white. So basically racist assholes ruined it for all of us.
1/25/2010 7:18:07 PM
1/25/2010 8:18:11 PM
1/25/2010 8:20:29 PM
1/25/2010 10:12:05 PM
1/25/2010 10:14:00 PM
1/25/2010 10:27:23 PM
because this is america and everyone has a chance to make it. you don't have to be born into a certain family or creed. without these laws all that goes down the drain.gohitblue is like an alien or something.
1/25/2010 10:32:54 PM
Yeah, I'm confused.I thought it was understood that we don't discriminate based on these things because bad shit inevitably happens when we do. Somebody gets a little uppity, and next thing you know there's millions of innocent people dead and millions more traumatized forever. Sure, once the initial horror subsides, we all have sex and there's a baby boom, and those baby boomers can go on to do some pretty cool shit like get high on LSD and have sex at virtuoso rock concerts. But we all got together and agreed that even the LSD sex isn't worth it.
1/25/2010 10:45:57 PM
1/25/2010 10:48:02 PM
1/25/2010 11:00:30 PM
1/25/2010 11:43:43 PM
So, to hold a religious belief is to demontrate at least some tendency toward irrationality (per your own definition of religious belief), but if an employer were to consider this fact, he or she would be acting "just as irrationally as the religious person." This is wonderful reasoning.Also, I've been taking a very narrow approach to this thread. I haven't argued that I would personally screen for religious belief. I haven't even argued that all religious belief is irrational. I only question whether it's right to say that an employer must ignore an applicant's demonstrated tendency to think irrationally, just because that tendency happened to reveal itself in the form of religion.[Edited on January 26, 2010 at 12:14 AM. Reason : ]
1/26/2010 12:06:53 AM
Rejecting a candidate because of something that has nothing to do with their qualifications is pretty irrational, if you ask me.I doubt that the man has ever lived who did not make a couple of major irrational decisions in their life. These could have far more profound impacts on job performance than religion. It'd probably be wiser to ask, "Did you marry a horrible shrew/deadbeat bastard?" Because an irrational decision resulting in a bad spouse could lead to fatigue, anxiety, and credit issues, all of which are legitimate job issues.You're singling out religion here as a chief indicator of irrationality, which in itself doesn't make much sense. But what makes even less sense is that you seem to suggest that employers would be better off looking at possible signs of poor critical thinking skills than they would be testing actual critical thinking skills.Why open a pandora's box of belief-based discrimination when there are logic and personality tests designed by learned men of science and evaluated over years of implementation?
1/26/2010 12:17:34 AM
1/26/2010 12:39:51 AM
If you don't think like me then you aren't qualified./thread
1/26/2010 12:48:03 AM
I disagree with #2. What people believe may reflect whether or not they thought critically on one issue, not whether or not they are good at critical thinking. A person who gets good grades at a good university has a demonstrated capacity for critical thinking. A person who has performed well at other jobs requiring critical thinking has a demonstrated capacity for critical thinking. A person who performs well on a critical thinking test has a demonstrated capacity for critical thinking. All of these things are pretty good examples of proof that a person has a grasp on reason; you can't fake your way through critical thinking for too long in any of those situations.Religion is proof of nothing except that, in his/her personal life, the applicant does not always exercise the same critical judgment skills that they have clearly demonstrated to you that they possess. So what?
1/26/2010 12:53:08 AM
You keep assuming that belief in a higher power is an irrational thought. There are things on this earth that are not explainable by the science we have, so what's wrong with having a theory or a pretty good feeling that there are other forces at work?Your arguments are based on the belief of the Christian version of G-d. So why don't you stop grouping all religions in with just one?[Edited on January 26, 2010 at 9:04 AM. Reason : -]
1/26/2010 9:04:31 AM
He's grouping all Abrahamic religions into one, which I don't see a problem with.There's not really a "problem" with it, but those of us who adhere to the theory that "that which has the most likelihood of occurring is probably true" tend to look towards the idea of a divine being with a sense of skepticism.
1/26/2010 9:08:01 AM
^^ no one’s talking about a belief in a “higher power” people are talking about the belief that magical sky fairy created the earth 8000 years ago, or that Christians are the only people that go to heaven, or that God wanted George Bush to be elected because it was “god’s will”, or any other clearly irrational belief that people hold in the name of a higher power.[Edited on January 26, 2010 at 9:09 AM. Reason : ]
1/26/2010 9:08:53 AM
For the record, I agree with ghotiblue, not on his religious views, but on the view that you should be able to hire (or not hire) anyone for any reason you want. It's called a private business for a reason. mambagrl suggested that if there weren't anti-discrimination laws, businesses would start discriminating again. Personally, I would refuse to go to a business that specifically didn't hire minorities or Christians or whatever. That's unacceptable, and you have the ability to "vote with your money." I think there are enough people that feel the same to where a business would never be able to get away with that kind of behavior, except maybe in the south.
1/26/2010 9:12:20 AM
1/26/2010 9:12:57 AM
1/26/2010 9:28:42 AM
1/26/2010 9:46:57 AM
So despite me pointing out that sound logical reasoning can be used to achieve a belief in God, you still hold to your stubborn view that all faith is irrational? Seems like you're the one being illogical here to me.
1/26/2010 9:55:56 AM
1/26/2010 10:01:22 AM
1/26/2010 10:09:20 AM
1/26/2010 10:38:43 AM
Way to ruin the thread, jackass.
1/26/2010 10:42:59 AM
I'm not attempting to derail the thread.
1/26/2010 10:51:00 AM
Number 1 is not true a priori. Thanks for playing.
1/26/2010 10:59:50 AM
1/26/2010 11:05:06 AM
I never claimed that the argument cannot be refuted, and don't think it is necessary to debate it here. Of course God cannot be proven, but a logical theory does not need to be proven to be true to remain logically consistent. My objection is solely to the claim that religion is illogical. There are many logical arguments that can be made in defense of religion, I only provided one which I feel to be particularly strong. So to claim that belief in God is illogical is categorically false.
1/26/2010 12:25:29 PM
There's nothing illogical about saying "there may be a god or gods." It's technically a possibility. A belief is something that you know to be true. If you believe in a god, it's not just that you think there may possibly be a god. You believe there is a god. So, I would say it is illogical to believe in something that cannot possibly be verified, but not illogical to say that something may exist outside of our realm of understanding. All Christians I've ever known aren't just saying that God might exist, they're saying that he does exist and he does interact with our world. That's a very different claim that has no supporting evidence, and could cause people to behave in ways they would not if they didn't hold that belief.Also, to separate theism from religion, religion (or at least Christianity) is definitely illogical. It contains contradictions, such as "God changes" and "God is unchanging." Both cannot be true, so the religion as outlined by the bible is not a logical belief system.[Edited on January 26, 2010 at 12:34 PM. Reason : ]
1/26/2010 12:33:03 PM
^you are seriously misinformed.
1/26/2010 12:40:39 PM
I believe this thread is stupid.
1/26/2010 12:46:00 PM
^^Let me guess. Your version of religion is completely logical and supported by the evidence. I just haven't cherry picked the correct verses to support my own indoctrination.
1/26/2010 12:52:07 PM
1/26/2010 1:37:06 PM
1/26/2010 2:02:01 PM
1/26/2010 2:31:52 PM
Just go ahead and demonstrate how I'm misinformed about, then. If this is so cut and dry, it shouldn't be too hard to do.
1/26/2010 2:44:27 PM
I'm not here to force you to believe in my beliefs or convert you. We are all given the free will and the ability to make our own choices. Just as I have chosen for myself, you are free to do the same. I just ask that you don't try and force your misinformation down mine and everyone else's throats and try and pass it off as fact.
1/26/2010 3:11:10 PM
"Consequences of False Beliefs"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rs-KZqTTyGs
1/26/2010 11:45:18 PM
i thought this was just another OMG Religion Is Supid thread ... but this, right here:
1/26/2010 11:57:09 PM
1/27/2010 1:14:09 AM
Joe, can you tell me then, if not by logic, how you came to your view on religion? And if it is not via rational thought, tell my why I shouldn't doubt your capacity to think critically?
1/27/2010 3:06:54 AM
If irrational beliefs and critical thinking were mutually exclusive, then no one would posess critical thinking.
1/27/2010 9:50:02 AM