kurt vonnegut said:
Group1:
Popular sovereignty (rule by the people), individual rights (like life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness), equality, limited government, freedom of speech and religion, due process, protections against unreasonable use of government power, right to a fair trial, separation of powers among the legislative, executive, and judicial branches, checks and balances to prevent abuse of power.
Group 2:
Or are the core principles of this country as established by the founding documents, keep holy the Sabbath, worship only the Christian God, no blasphemy, don't be jealous of your neighbor, honor your parents, and don't lust?
Nice, thoughtful post.
I think it is interesting that the line that you drew between these two camps are largely about how to treat other people (Group 1) and how to organize your individual priorities (Group 2).
But, I would argue that many of the things in your Group 1 are second and 3rd level deductions from the 1st level principles. I would argue that the core principles you have listed above, and their 2nd level results are:
1st level-> People have inherent worth: they have a right to life, a right to liberty / freedom and to be happy as long as they don't bother people. Why is that? These are inherent rights. There is no objective reason why this is a fact, it just is.
2nd level ->Because people have inherent worth and the rights associate with that worth, you shouldn't treat them like they don't have any worth. You can't lord over them and restrict those rights, because doing this would be evil. Why? Well because the 1st level principles are true. Why? Well, they just are.
3rd level -> Because people tend to do evil things, you have to restrict people from trying to restrict people's rights. You need protections to make sure that people don't lord over others with tyranny. You have to restrict government, you have to support people's rights to voice protest against the government, you have to set up a government in a way that people's own self interest will work against the government turning on its own people (for a while, at least, until Leviathan corrupts the entire kit and kaboodle simultaneously).
I argue that you can have checks an balances of power against the government, and still neglect to recognize those first level principles that our government draws on (as an example, check out the Old South, pre-emancipation. Ewww.). The only reason the third level is important is to protect the 1st and 2nd level.
At the core is the belief in individual human value (if you were white, unfortunately, at the beginning). Everything else is built upon that foundation.
Group 2 is about how to set up good priorities for a meaningful life: work / productivity isn't everything unless you take the time to contemplate the big picture meaning (keep the Sabbath), worship God only (which I would argue for this conversation is altruistic love, but that is another discussion) because everything else is a chasing after the wind, the love of God is a serious concern, and not to be taken lightly, stuff cannot buy happiness, community is important and arrogance is unhelpful (your parents are wiser than you think, you just don't have the experience to know that until you get old, too), and lust is supposed to be a tool to keep married people together, and not abused through empty satiation. All of the restrictions of behavior you list are activities that draw on the wisdom / assumptions in this paragraph above.
Group 1 is mostly external, group 2 is mostly internal.
Quote:
Destroying the Gods of America, as I see it, means removing of individual rights, invasive government, limits on freedom of speech and religion, giving government excessive power, etc. Which of those am I advocating for?
I would submit to you that the laws of the nation as articulated by the founders are primary related to external factors, because they were creating a form of government, not a religion. Governments don't typically address internal factors. There is no law against hate, unless your hate drives you to do something that hurts people externally. But, hating people without hurting the people you hate is no way to go through a meaningful life.
And, again, there are alternative philosophies and religions around those internal factors that would likely support your external factors in group 1. Buddhists believe that attachments are the root of all suffering, and if you can just live in the moment without becoming attached to anything, you can avoid that suffering. There are a lot of second level deductions in Buddhism that you get to with that core underlying priority as the foundation, but none of those are in conflict with the first level assumption that individuals all have an inherent self worth, and the other 2nd and 3rd level deductions you get to on that assumption. But, Buddhism doesn't emphasize individual self worth as much as Christianity.
Sikhs have some similar core 1st level principles as Christianity, but I would say that their 2nd level deductions are more individualistic and less communitive in nature. I would say that Sikhs believe that the best thing for a person to do is live a simple life of service for his direct family and his God (similar to Christians), but, more than any other religion, Sikhs believe that the only thing that prevents evil in the world is the complacency of good men: cowardice and inaction of good men in the face of oppression of the less fortunate is a major sin in Sikhism. You can turn your own other cheek in the face of oppression in Sikhism, but if that person then strikes the cheek of someone who is unable to protect them selves from oppression, it is your moral duty to use the weapons that you are morally obligated to always be on your person to stop that oppression. Their society is not so much built on building a government that is restricted from oppressing people, it is more individualistic. It is the personal responsibility of every good man to directly address and stop tyranny that the individual directly observes. If all good men do the same, government will not have the ability to collectively grow evil. But, the obligation relies on the individual and what they see daily, and not on the collective will of society.
All of that to say that I don't think that you can really establish a strong government if you truly hold the idea that all individuals have self worth that will denigrate into slaughtering people like the communists always seem to get to. I also don't think that you can establish a government that is protected from eventually taking a gruesomely utilitarian point of view about individuals unless you except the inherent worth of the individual as a core principle.
Again, all that to say that even if you proclaim the Christian God as the philosophical core of your society, if you abandon the first two principles of Judeo-Christian values, your society is in jeopardy of committing great evil. Those two first principles are:
2nd most important, love your neighbor as yourself.
1st most important, love the concept and source of wisdom that loving your neighbor as yourself is the best way for you as an individual and society. (ie, love God, who is love and teaches love; so, love altruistic love most of all).
In my opinion, most objections to this are the teachings about how to live your best life. People disagree with God on these teachings, and therefore are hostile to the idea of God, and throw the rest of the relationship away. For example, people that don't want to treat sex as something that should be reserved to keep parents together are often spiteful of that teaching, and therefore view the rest of the teachings with spite. So too do the very ambitious, or very arrogant and prideful.
For me, I prefer a government that is focused on the 2nd deductions of first principles. You can't really judge what is actually in another man's heart, but you can restrict his actions if those actions are not in line with the 1st level principles.
Here is how TJ summarized it: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.
Everything that comes later draws upon that profound declaration as authority on how to form a government. You can hold the truths to be self evident whether you believe in a Creator or not. But you cannot really be a Christian without believing in those profound truths, either, if you know anything about what Christ, the Patriarchs, and the prophets actually taught.
Finally, when tribal identity within the nation becomes more important than individual rights, you absolutely are starting to assault and try to kill the Gods of the nation. People are people. Viewing them first through a lens of their tribe within the nation will just bring about ruin, no matter if that tribe is your race, your thoughts on sexual relationships, your economic status, etc. The rights of the individual, even if you disagree with the beliefs of the individual or the tribe he/she belongs to, have to be paramount, because the individual has inherent worth with self-evident inalienable rights.
It takes a special kind of brainwashed useful idiot to politically defend government fraud, waste, and abuse.
?w=525