Eh, nothing against you in particular, but you know how threads that touch on religion get.
4/23/2010 11:30:03 PM
4/24/2010 12:51:43 AM
1)As stated previously, meditation does not equal prayer. It is disingenuous to associate the two.2)I'm enjoying you retorting to a Harvard medical study with the largest sample size ever from 2006 with bullshit from 1994 and 1999. It really bolsters the argument. Apparently if there ever was a study on a something, even if more recent, larger studies disprove it, it must be true.Did you know that they did studies on ESP? Surely it must exist.[Edited on April 24, 2010 at 7:40 AM. Reason : .]
4/24/2010 7:19:37 AM
^ your study was about something i am not talking aboutsee:
4/24/2010 8:08:28 AM
4/24/2010 10:35:57 AM
just popped in to see what was going on in this thread. slowly backing out now...
4/24/2010 11:05:19 AM
4/24/2010 11:34:36 AM
None of my criticisms of prayer can be said to only be true about the "outliers".And it's pretty clear that you don't understand what the Harvard study was about, don't understand what a double-blind study is, or both.[Edited on April 24, 2010 at 12:21 PM. Reason : ]
4/24/2010 12:19:02 PM
no, the problem is that you can't see that you are talking about something different than me and can't tell the difference between your opinion and the experience of others
4/24/2010 12:33:55 PM
So enlighten us. Tell us about the form of prayer that doesn't lend itself to the criticism I've offered.[Edited on April 24, 2010 at 12:57 PM. Reason : ]
4/24/2010 12:47:04 PM
Your "criticisms" are merely your personal opinions.And disco_stu, there's nothing disingenuous about associating prayer with meditation. Most of the time, they are one in the same.
4/24/2010 2:26:25 PM
I don't think so. I don't know the thoughts and prayers of everyone on earth, but I suspect that a majority of prayers, at least in the Christian religion, are not "meditation," they're requests, i.e. "dear god, if you just let me pass this test, I'll never come to another test unprepared again." A pastor would probably say that's not how you're supposed to pray. You're supposed to be praising God and shit, but I can't think of anything more useless than praising a sadistic God that probably doesn't exist anyway. Plus, it'd just be a huge waste of time if you're not benefiting from it in some way. God shouldn't need your praise.I've heard countless stories in church, or from Christians, and they're all about the same. "Bobby had cancer. It was a massive malignant tumor in his brain. The doctor said he had around a week to live. Everyone prayed really hard and trusted in God, and then when we went back for a second round of scans, the cancer was completely gone! The doctors didn't have an explanation, but we know it was the Lord!" I mean, what a load of bullshit. You know you're missing the real story, if not being straight up lied to, and it's very insulting.What it comes down to is that humans are often unable to deal with the harsh circumstances they find themselves in. No one likes the idea of a universe that doesn't have them alive and conscious in it. No one likes the idea that you will just die, or get some terrible illness that will cause you to die. If someone tells you, "I know the magic words to say, and it'll fix your problems," it's very tempting. That's why religion, for the most part, is one big con. It plays on people's fears and emotions, but on a massive scale.
4/24/2010 3:59:38 PM
i like how you firstly throw out about 66% of religious people with your "only christianity" then make your conclusions on what you "suspect"nice
4/24/2010 4:07:38 PM
I like how you read about one line of my post. I know it probably makes you cringe to see your belief system challenged in writing, but maybe you should read the whole thing 3 or 4 times and let it sink in.I don't know enough about other religions to know what those religions say is possible through prayer, so I'm not going to guess. I know what many versions of Christianity say, and I know from my experiences when people pray, how they pray, and what they pray for. There's no way to know what actually goes on inside of every person's head, but a lot of people pray in times of desperation. I don't make any conclusions based on that suspicion, it's just an observation.
4/24/2010 4:33:44 PM
my belief system? well now you are just being a little too presumptuous. if someone does something that gives them comfort and doesn't hurt anything whats the problem with that? who cares if they are praying to a magical character that doesn't exist, what does it matter? it gives them comfort and doesnt hurt anyone.
4/24/2010 4:55:07 PM
^^You sound like an atheist whose experience with Christianity is limited to the evangelism channel and movies.
4/24/2010 6:17:32 PM
4/24/2010 6:43:48 PM
4/24/2010 7:29:26 PM
4/24/2010 11:33:35 PM
Well, they aren't! ITT, Evangelism is "fringe Christianity". I know you're all modern hip Christians that have personal relationships with God. I was wrong, you're all cool and when you pray you enter deep meditative states. You're not asking for him to protect you, or bless your food, or to heal someone who is sick, or thanking him for the blessings he gives you. Real Christians never do that.
4/25/2010 8:35:29 AM
But let's get back on topic shall we?Is a National Day of Prayer constitutional?
4/25/2010 10:14:09 AM
I'm not a christian - don't lump me in with those crazies!
4/25/2010 10:54:22 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lemon_v._Kurtzman#Lemon_test
4/25/2010 12:33:10 PM
That's also why this case is important. In order for the Court to find NDP to be constitutional, they'll have to determine that it doesn't violate the Lemon and endorsement tests, that the Lemon and endorsement tests aren't applicable to this case, or that the Lemon and endorsement tests are no longer legitimate Supreme Court precedent. I think the Court is unlikely to make the first two determinations. What scares is that they might decide to do away with the Lemon and endorsement tests altogether, which would have all sorts of ramifications. Public funding for religious schools, intelligent design in the classroom - all of these would have to be reconsidered if those tests were abolished.[Edited on April 25, 2010 at 1:52 PM. Reason : rarefactions?]
4/25/2010 1:51:13 PM
Is disco_stu still trolling ITT and doing a poor job of it?
4/25/2010 3:31:58 PM
disco_stu references studies that disprove older flawed studies. He must be trolling.disco_stu demands evidence for made up shit that can't be observed. He must be trolling.disco_stu respects the establishment clause. He must be trolling.
4/25/2010 6:39:31 PM
Yup, he is. That answered my question, thanks.
4/25/2010 8:18:16 PM
ITT Golovko being as much of an idiot as he is in Tech Talk.
4/25/2010 10:32:53 PM
U MAD?
4/25/2010 11:38:16 PM
how does a "national prayer day" endorse a particular religion?just askin'
4/26/2010 2:02:33 AM
It endorses religion over non-religion. It endorses religions that pray over religions that do not believe in prayer...
4/26/2010 3:00:36 AM
not having it endorses atheists and agnostics which are the ones bitching up a storm. Can't please everyone all the time and since Atheists/Agnostics are not the majority they can deal with it since 1 Prayer Day does not affect them in any way, shape, or form.
4/26/2010 3:13:03 AM
4/26/2010 3:20:14 AM
4/26/2010 9:16:24 AM
it doesn't endorse a religion, its unconstitutional because there is no secular purpose for it
4/26/2010 9:22:00 AM
Christmas is a federal holiday.The phrase "an establishment of religion" implies a distinct religion or institution, and the clause itself was a response to England's establishment of a state church. However, it's still vague enough to be open to interpretation, and times have changed such that religion plays a lesser role in society. There are two common (in law) interpretations: "Total separation" vs "Non-preferential". Both are reasonable and justified, and both are in use today. It just depends on the judge.
4/26/2010 9:49:21 AM
Hey, just because Christmas is a federal holiday doesn't mean I think it should be. It's as silly as National Prayer Day.When I was working for the state, I made the suggestion that they simply pool all Holidays as floating holidays so people of other faiths could take their week off when they felt like it. Of course, this is impractical since the entire fucking country shuts down on Christmas week anyway.Thanks Ulysses S. Grant!
4/26/2010 10:04:09 AM
4/26/2010 12:04:13 PM
Well shit, my use of an article has totally undermined my argument. You're right. National Prayer day is totally constitutional, non-discriminatory, and should be sanctioned and paid for with my tax money.It's still an establishment of religions that pray over religions that do not.[Edited on April 26, 2010 at 12:39 PM. Reason : .]
4/26/2010 12:24:01 PM
I've kind of been wanting to point out the fact that "prayer" is not necessarily exclusive to religion, but thats a whole can of worms I don't want to get into here.I'll grant the day is unconstitutional because it doesn't pass the "excessive entanglement" test put forth 40 years ago and ignored countless times in other, less known situations.
4/26/2010 1:41:08 PM
4/26/2010 1:51:53 PM
Read the fucking law:
4/26/2010 2:00:50 PM
^^see my earlier post.
4/26/2010 2:00:58 PM
eat a bowl of dicks. there, that's trolling.[Edited on April 26, 2010 at 2:02 PM. Reason : and it felt good too]VNaw, just annoyed that you buried my response to Norrin Radd.[Edited on April 26, 2010 at 2:04 PM. Reason : V]
4/26/2010 2:01:43 PM
4/26/2010 2:02:04 PM
disco_stu FTW in this thread
4/26/2010 2:07:53 PM
disco_stu brings nothing new to this thread nor anything worth reading. #trollfail
4/26/2010 2:12:07 PM
Quit talking about me like I'm not here! I thought my posting of the actual unconstitutional law was something new: to illustrate that it's not ambiguous about what type of "prayer" the National Day of Prayer is referring to.[Edited on April 26, 2010 at 2:19 PM. Reason : holy run on sentence batman]
4/26/2010 2:19:13 PM
4/26/2010 3:16:39 PM
The law unambiguously is referring to religious prayer. There, you can let go of your prayer semantics. In fact, it is unambiguously referring to an Abrahamic religious prayer (God).The law doesn't grant anyone permission to do anything. It is overtly designating a specific day of religious prayer to an Abrahamic God. It is a recognition that prayer to God as a something Americans do on this day, every year. It's disgusting.
4/26/2010 3:32:41 PM