A moment for the Constitution

You may have noticed that in my 'External Links' list, one of the only two sites I list is the site US Constitution Online run by a former colleague of mine, the esteemed Steve Mount. This is one of the few sites I frequent on a regular basis - not because the US Constitution changes that often, but because there always seems to be a new issue or idiot which challenges our understanding of that fine document, and that site boasts a great message board to discuss both or either.

With the recent focus on the separation of Church and State, I was moved to post the following. I liked the sounds of my own words so much, I'm moved to repost them here (In fact, this is the second post of mine to make it into that site's 'Message Hall of Fame' - aren't I special?). Comment away, if you're so inclined:

>on Mar 29th, 2005, 2:42am, R._George_Dunn wrote: And also, where should values and morals come from if not from their beliefs, some secularist man god?
We've had this discussion around here before, but for the benefit of newcomers:

There are many ways which values can be derived. Religion is one means of enshrining values, but by no means the only one. For any society to effectively survive and prosper, the members agree on a set of rules. For example: Don't kill your neighbor without sufficient provocation. And its reciprocal: Try not to provoke your neighbor into killing you. As society develops, it 'creates' additional values by identifying behaviors which create an environment in which most members prosper. This general pattern of development can be seen in every society - from the US to China to tribal Africa. Only the details are different (which leads us to moral relativism, but your position seems to indicate you're not ready to hear that argument). This is pretty much Sociology 101.

These rules don't require the force of religion to propagate, but it doesn't hurt. The notion that 'God said it' does lend a bit of weight to a standard, after all. But there are and have been a number of secular societies who have similar standards to those you'd find espoused by religious ones. Consider nearly any of the Eastern countries, for example, where Buddhism is the biggest influencer (Buddhists do not believe in God).

And of course, if one tries to maintain that God is the arbiter of all man's values, and so must be recognized in law, you're left with the question of which god to choose. The Jewish Yahweh? Jesus and pals? Allah? (all from the same family, but each with a different handbook, with different emphasis on certain values). Or should we choose from the Hindu pantheon? Or how about our American Indian co-tenants? Recall that the most revered of ancient civilizations (Greek, Roman, Egyptian) believed in what we commonly call "mythology" today, and yet they had very similar values without the benefit of today's "true" religion(s).

If you pick one (or more) of the above to recognize in law, then you're running smack into the restrictions of the 1st Amendment. By the act of enshrining a religious value in law, you've established a gov't position favoring one religion or another. Even the watered-down interpretation of "In God We Trust" establishes at the least an official endorsement of Theism (excluding those Buddhists we were talking about before) and at worst a specific endorsement of Monotheism (now you're excluding the Hindus as well).

It would be equally bad to say "We the People Officially Deny God's existance," by the way. That's Atheism. Nor is Agnosticism ("We the People Haven't got a Clue") appropriate. Both of these positions would conflict with the 1st amendment by establishing a gov't position on religion.

Secularism, however, is not atheism. The motto of Secularism on God(s) might be "We the People Have No Comment At This Time." Any and all laws (or lawfully sanctioned act) must be able to pass what's called the Lemon test. A law has to have a valid civil, or secular, purpose and effect. Laws which enshrine what we know as 'values,' (e.g. murder, violent crime, theft, etc.), pass this test on the basis of the negative effect of those acts on society. That some of them happen to be echoed by most of the major philosophies or religions is just gravy. It's not relevant to the discussion.

This does not mean that it is not valuable to understand the history of religion and its influence on society. Most historians will tell you that there are few things like religion which drove people to "influence" each other - usually with the pointy end of some kind of metal implement. But the United States has been shaped by our unique approach to creating an environment where individuals are free to practice their faith without any influence - good or bad - from the state.
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It's all fun and games 'til someone loses an eye...

The critter went to a birthday party today for our neighbors' daughter. She turned 5 today, and in addition to the neighborhood kids from the farm, they invited her entire class full of children. Which made our critter about the youngest one of the 25 or so kids there. To pacify this barbaric passel of raccoons soon high on cake, candy and tiny sausages, our neighbors rented one of those inflated bouncy-castle things. This always seems like a good idea, doesn’t it? It's inflatable fun, with walls of bouncy air-filled rubber. Somehow, how well the party is planned, these things always seem to be set up on at least a 20 degree tilt towards one corner, but that just makes the whole thing more fun, right? Ella enjoyed herself thoroughly. Being the smallest of the lot, she was content to belly-crawl through the masses of bent, crying bodies that had been small children in pretty party dresses. She naturally adopted a WWI style elbows & knees crawl to both keep herself stable as the two oldest boys in the lot did belly-shattering drops from the inflated walls onto the floor of the bouncy castle, doing their best to imitate artillery shells falling on Flanders. At least two kids vomited, and more were crying before the day was done. The interesting thing was that the kids didn’t stop bouncing for any of this, they just cleared a space around the vomit and kept right on going. Ella has informed us that she has to have a bouncy castle at her birthday party this summer.
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Tuscan Telephony

This week I'm in Italy for work. When I travel for work, I typically like to find a Marriott or some other faceless, bland hotel to stay in if at all possible. While I may miss out on some charm of a 'unique' bed & breakfast, all I really want in a hotel on a business trip is a decent bed, an iron, and a connection for my laptop. Broadband is preferable, but at the very least an empty phone jack. And these are things I can (usually) count on from one of the cookie-cutter big chains. Our main office in Italy is lovely Siena, in the heart of Tuscany. It's a beautiful medieval town, with, it turns out, matching medieval phones. I sort of laughed when I walked into my room in the Villa Patrizia and saw the phone was a leftover from a 1962 estate sale. I used my internationally enabled cell phone to call my bride and share a chuckle. Rotary! Good thing I don't have to use that!

Not so fast, kemosabe. This rotary phone is hardwired into the wall. No convenient jack to hook my laptop into. Oy. And then I experienced the 5 o' clock Italian Mobile Madness - when the cell networks all jam up and it's impossible to keep a connection on your mobile phone. Murphy dictated that this coincided with a teleconference I was to dial into. After more than a half dozen attempts, the folks in the US asked me to quickly dial in via a land-line.

Quickly. With a rotary phone. Let me remind you what it takes to dial from Italy to the US. 0 (to get an external line). (Wait a minute.) (Ah. Ok, done.) 0 (Wait. Wait. Wait.) (Nope. Wait again.) 0 (Wait. Wait. Wait.) (Nope again. Ok, now.) Now proceed to dial the 10 digit number...

Welcome to the middle ages. By the way, the silver buttons on the bedside table were the remote control for the television. Thank God the food here makes up for any electronic inconvenience.

The other two pictures are pictures I took in the countryside on the way out to one of our sites. I was trying to get one of my Italian colleagues to identify this huge castle like building. And I was risking life and limb to do so, as this guy on a tractor was driving in a straight line at me while I was taking pictures.






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