A plant pundit comments on plants, the foibles and fun of academic life, and other things of interest.
National day of unreason
Today is actually the national day of prayer here in the USA a day when that
one religious segment of the country, albeit a majority, gets some pseudo-official
sanction as the one true religion of this country no matter what our
constitution says. This seems pretty
unreasonable, but probably it will be found constitutional as has the phrase that
was only recently inserted into our pledge of allegiance and put on our money,
which isn’t for religious purposes, or to promote one particular religion, wink, wink, but just see who howls if you
try to remove it. Today will allow the
sanctimonious to declare that all of our national problems would be solved if only we
were more religious, and prayed more, or at least were reasonable enough to let the most
religious run things the way they wish. Could we pray that the sanctimonious learn that theocracies
of all flavors have a terrible track record on human rights and freedoms, the
kind of things that keep blogs like this from being declared blasphemous
because it might hurt someone’s religious feelings? Is that
being unreasonable? Now if we all would
just pray for reason to prevail, and our prayers were answered, would religion just totally disappear thus proving the power
of prayer once and for all, but when it’s too late? There must be some paper clips to sort or
something else even less useful to do rather than think about this.
4 comments:
Markup Key:
- <b>bold</b> = bold
- <i>italic</i> = italic
- <a href="http://www.fieldofscience.com/">FoS</a> = FoS
Enjoyed the post thoroughly; I agree 100%.
ReplyDeleteCould we pray that the sanctimonious learn that theocracies of all flavors have a terrible track record on human rights and freedoms
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure the terrible track record on human rights and freedoms is part of the appeal.
I find religion is merely differing points of view....so religion, in essence, is nothing more than a difference of opinion. And it is totally STUPID to argue over a difference of opinion.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately, I live in the south, where differing opinions are frowned opon if it involves church.... Many is the time where I've gone to work and found religious literature convienently left behind... This offends even *me*, and I am Christian!
I certainly agree.... religion is a good thing...but it is only part of what makes up the jigsaw puzzle that is the human race.... I think religion, like pretty much everything else, is best in moderation...or as someone else said it, "religion should be how you live your own life, not how you judge the morality of others".
Thanks
HF
Hang in there! Help is on the way! Thy will will be done, soon!
ReplyDelete