See what I mean about that need to trump the pointy headed. If I had said exactly what you followed with I've no doubt your response would have begun with some contrary notion. :chuckle:Your conception of ethnocentricity is not the lowest common denominator. The lowest common denominator is our shared inner lies.
See (and this will get tricky for you) the ethnocentric principle is a demonstrable, factual address of an actual human condition. What you're doing is speculative, assumptive and other. I didn't create it, but it is at the root of unreasoned bias, which is precisely what we're talking about here...only you're still mistaking it for a virtue, or at least the appeasement of it as such.Supporting our inner lies is the fallacy of secular Interfaith.
Hooey. What "inner lie or lies" mandate that men of differing beliefs live in enmity and strife? Self apparently contradicted by example. There have been any number of times in the history of man where people of disparate faiths have done exactly that. It's people like you who inevitably send the business crashing down, not those who desire and attempt to live in respectful disagreement.You do not appreciate that our inner lies deny the possibility of what you describe.
Baloney. Again, what lies about our nature are exchanged and prevent peace between men and women of good conscience and honest difference. No, again, it's the paranoid, the angry, blinkered arbiters of everyone's truth who manage to foul the works.It sounds wonderful but is not practical because it is based on the habitual exchange of lies:
Which is a meaningless statement absent a set out on what you mean, precisely, by lies and how they impact an attempt at coexistence.The "highest common factor" is the objective potential for human "being:" to become ourselves or the reality that is free of inner lies.
:sigh: Principles are always the framework of law. The question then becomes are the principles just and do the laws follow them. And spiritual freedom has nothing to do with government and everything to do with God.America is a country built on ideas that further striving towards the highest common factor and the spiritual goal of freedom. That is why it was founded on principles rather than laws.
I'll agree that respect for one another is vital to the well being of our social compact.One of these principles requires respecting individuality, family, community, and country. Positive patriotism is really just the experience of a vulnerable extended family.
Smaller sentences. You really fall apart when you over reach. After "experience" it spins off the rails. I don't agree we are incapable of living up to our ideas in the limited sense of respecting one another, though it is an ongoing process (and one your latest parade undermines at every point). And I'd say respecting the principles of our compact is at least as important as respecting the person impacted by them.Though we are incapable of these ideals, it is the process of admitting them and striving towards them that allows a person to experience of our obligations to these ideals that guarantee "rights."
Except that we don't actually have that right.... I'm entitled to the quiet enjoyment of my property and can seek an injunction if you decide to use your property in a way that interferes with my right. Now building a mosque works no imposition on anyone unless it is the knowledge of the presence of the mosque that causes offense. If that's the case we're back to why and is it rational, reasonable, and right. The answer to all three, as I've set out prior and exhaustively, is no.Though we have the right to impose ourselves upon others, we have the obligation to consider the consequences of doing so.
We have no obligation to bigotry, paranoia, or unreasoned emotionalism that approaches both.This is the essence of the mosque controversy. The developers have the right to build it but is it in the spirit of American ideals that make us feel the obligations we have to others and a community?
Which isn't what you're doing at all. You're advocating the submission of right to an errant understanding that is at its core as anti American a notion as any torch bearing mob could be.How do we find the balance between obligations and rights? For America to survive as a free country, we must restore this balance.
Then stop siding with people who are doing exactly that, waiting until an election cycle to decry something in the works and partially functioning for a year. And ask yourself why the cry went up so late...well, you should, but I don't expect you to.I respect the space that is symbolic of the national tragedy requiring it to be free of political manipulation.
That's not remotely true. I've clarified on this point more than once. Now try to hold up your end of things honestly. I've noted repeatedly that this has nothing to do with a right that no one is arguing. It has everything to do with principle. And I've been clear on the remarkably narrow focus of your feeling argument and the people it omits from consideration prior to making an unreasoned demand upon innocent American citizens. One that denigrates their faith by inference and should by no means be conflated with compassion.You think the rights of the developers are what is important and the feelings of others you believe to be unfounded, must be ignored.
Hallowed ground that contains strip clubs and gambling dens? Were this remotely connected to that idea you're outrage would be more widely dispersed. No, wrap your odious internal difficulty in any flag that suits you. The smell still gives it away.Will it just die or can it remember its unique value. I don't think it can. Just this obvious denial of respect for hallowed ground and what it means to the psych of people over political rights proves we are on the way out.
So you don't understand that principle either then...we are drawn to like and repelled by the other. That's the nutshell. If we concentrate on being bound by our better commonality, to live peacefully and with respect, then we approach a positive use of the principle by subjugating the lesser values and differences that would drive us apart. That's the ecumenical spirit in play.The ideas America is built upon require the positive side of ethnocentricity.
I omit the continuing, vague use of hidden lies until you make the phrase meaningful in particular and by example.
Well, at least you're coming closer to seeing what it is and isn't geographically speaking.The area around ground zero has an effect on many.
I agree it's your choice and the people like you who have turned a plan long in the making into a political football. So cut it out already.Do we profit from it by keeping it clear of political manipulation for the sake of objective self awareness or do we sacrifice it to those seeking to take advantage of its vulnerabilty. It is our choice.