Quetzal
New member
Nah, he was on the payroll. He has to play by their rules.The only rights being violated are the coach's. This will be overturned.
Nah, he was on the payroll. He has to play by their rules.The only rights being violated are the coach's. This will be overturned.
Pay attention. I did justify it.
i saw your attempt
The great part about ok loser is that so many people are beginning to put him on ignore, he is basically talking to himself. :chuckle:So just as I suspected, you're trolling again. Thanks for your time.
The great part about ok loser is that so many people are beginning to put him on ignore, he is basically talking to himself. :chuckle:
So just as I suspected, you're trolling again. Thanks for your time.
Doser is making a fair point.The great part about ok loser is that so many people are beginning to put him on ignore, he is basically talking to himself. :chuckle:
i saw your attempt
it fails unless you can show where people were forced to participate
Doser is making a fair point.
Why not respond to it?
So just as I suspected, you're trolling again. Thanks for your time.
Precisely. But even so much as whistling in his general direction tilts Knight to the point that he believes action is necessary. That's too bad.Why should anyone give him the time of day? He's a protected troll who damages the forum no matter what username he posts under. He degrades conversation, derails discussion, stalks posters, calls murdered students cowards - and yet you keep letting him come back.
Nah, he was on the payroll. He has to play by their rules.
Precisely. But even so much as whistling in his general direction tilts Knight to the point that he believes action is necessary. That's too bad.
You made the point that the coach was on paid time, that he constituted an authority figure and a representative of the government (I find the latter sentiment dubious)
I think that this answer holds a certain degree of weight.
To what extent was he acting as a government representative, as an authority figure and so forth and so on if everyone was perfectly within their rights simply to leave? If the students voluntarily remained present for the prayer(s) when they simply could have left, then can we really say that he was acting as an authority figure? If there was no compulsion to participate, it's more difficult to see a problem.
It's not even analogous to a teacher leading a classroom in prayer, since such a student is not free to leave the classroom. The teacher has a captive audience. Did the coach?
And frankly, from a teacher's point of view, I think it's wholly unreasonable to wish to divorce a teacher's religious faith from his teaching activities. I bring in religion into my philosophical teaching all the time.
"Clearly, since all of the sense powers require a bodily organ, a dead Socrates, or even the soul of dead Socrates, can't touch, see, hear, etc. Thus, may we note, that there will be no 72 virgins in the next life...just saying. Nonetheless, the soul of Socrates remains the principle of these sensuous operations. If, by a miracle of grace (e.g., on the last day, at the last judgment, at the resurrection), Socrates should get his body back again, then he would be able to see, touch, etc. once again."
"Thus we have shown a God [in metaphysics] whose very nature is subsistent being. Might this not be the very God of whom we read, in Exodus, that He says of Himself: 'I am who am'?"
Even if I taught at a State funded school, I see nothing wrong with this.
Clearly, not a direct analogy between my actions and the coach's actions...nonetheless, I don't like the trend. There's a definite slippery slope which prejudices against religious expression in general, even where it might be fitting to express it.
Look, I know you fundamentalists think things like this should be allowed (as long as it's Christianity the government is promoting), but that just isn't reality. It's illegal, has been for some time, and isn't likely to change.
Would you agree that He should fight to defend what he feels is right and legal?
Yep.
and coaches from both teams?
The coaches are government employees and need to stay out of it. It's not that hard to do.
Seriously? A person being paid by government funds, acting in his capacity as a government employee, and on work time isn't a representative of the government? How does that work? :idunno:
I'm sure you think it does, but as I explained the Supreme Court has ruled otherwise.
Already answered and explained.
Because it's not a criterion for the act to be illegal. In Engel v Vitale, the Supreme Court held that when a school official promotes a religion while on duty, that gives students the impression that the religion is the "officially approved religion" of the school, which puts "indirect coercive pressure" on the students to conform."
The courts have ruled that even when the teacher provides an opt-out option, there is still pressure to conform to what the students perceive as the official religion.
And I'd bet the school would see a problem, as well as some of the students and their parents.
Great comments!Without a doubt these lost souls from Seattle's Satanist Temple will be included in Coach Kennedy's prayers.
When haters are confronted with love, that puts them in a real quandary Mr. Fly.
How do you think that these lost souls who undoubtedly come from broken homes will feel when they see love for the first time in their lives?
A janitor working at a State hospital is paid by government funds, is acting in his capacity as a government employee and is on work time...to what extent is he a representative of the government?
I'm not entirely sure how I want to phrase the difference, but do you really not see the difference between a hospital janitor, on the one hand, and an IRS auditor, on the other hand?
Be that as it may, it's just, on its face, flatly absurd.
Suppose you have a school in which most of the teachers are Christians (and are quite outspoken about the fact that they are Christians), and a single teacher is Muslim. This teacher promotes Islam. In what sense can we say that any student is left with the impression that Islam is the officially approved religion of the school? In what sense are the students subjected to an "indirect coercive pressure" (whatever in the bloody blazes that even means) to conform?
Why?
I currently teach at a religious school. So meh.
What is it about my actions which you would consider offensive from a secular point of view? What's so offensive about offering my religious views as a reasonable possibility, as a mere hypothesis, in answer to purely rational speculation? Or, for that matter, what's so offensive about indicating how a purely rational speculation excludes certain "religious" hypotheses?
If the senses require bodily organs, and "martyr" Achmed doesn't have a body, he won't be enjoying 72 virgins. That's evident to philosophical reason. Why shouldn't I say that?
As the school has made clear, the coach is being paid for that time, thus he is on duty. And while on duty at a school event, he is going out to the middle of the field and praying. The coach of a team is also an authority figure. So you have the government, through an authority figure over students, publicly promoting Christianity.
1 Thessalonians 5:17 17 Pray without ceasing. |
Clearly, I think that Ok Dozer would be singing a different tune if the coach were a Muslim or a Satanist, but even then, his questions are perfectly reasonable.