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#474 | |
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"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
13×89 Posts |
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Probably 4, you'd have to ask the scientists from the Kingdom of Krull to know for sure. |
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#475 | |
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Nov 2003
164448 Posts |
Quote:
was told that she would have to join a church before she would be allowed to become a citizen. Right wing religious intolerance, stupidity, and bigotry strike again! http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/0...n_3469358.html |
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#476 | |
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"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
115710 Posts |
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The implementation of this standard has a long and rich history of abuse, and this is one of the few places that I completely agree with Dawkins in the God Delusion: that it is incredibly stupid that merely being a member of a religious group can grant CO status, whereas having a PhD. in Philosophy and being published and even renowned for pacifism does not. The problem, of course, is that given the simple check box "yes, I'm a pacifist" most rational people who didn't want to go to Vietnam, as an example, would check the box instead of running off to Canada. |
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#477 | |
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"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2·3·1,693 Posts |
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Just to call attention, there is a petition at Daily Kos. http://campaigns.dailykos.com/p/dia/...action_KEY=442 |
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#478 |
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Apr 2010
Over the rainbow
1010001011102 Posts |
Being part of the FSM church is acceptable, then?
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#479 |
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"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
13·89 Posts |
Serious answer: I would guess that officially no it would not. But, depending on the circumstances, such as wording and letterhead the worker bees probably wouldn't notice and it would pass.
Less serious answer: Of course! I'd bet they'd accept even the fake religions like Methodists. I'd have been a lot happier with a non-sensical "This is completly fair for the following stupid reasons." response from ZetaFlux to respond to. I'd even have settled for the "it is because it is that way" response from Jasong. It sucks to have to argue the middle path when my gut rebels against the fact that this situation still comes up today. Last fiddled with by chappy on 2013-06-20 at 19:47 Reason: bet is spelled with a 't' |
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#480 | |
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May 2007
Kansas; USA
2×41×127 Posts |
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What I believe will happen over the next few centuries or millinea is that science will ultimately come up with a definitive proof for how mankind evolved -and- how the universe came to be or that it has always been here (I believe the latter; i.e. that there was no actual beginning). Despite these proofs, there will still be a certain (hopefully) small percentage of people that will hold on to their "god" beliefs because they just cannot let them go. It will be too painful to be proven wrong. It will then be that people who profess a belief in a higher being will be ridiculed or persecuted in a manner similar to the way that people who do not believe now or did not believe in the past. Last fiddled with by gd_barnes on 2013-06-20 at 20:10 |
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#481 | |
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Nov 2003
164448 Posts |
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who do not share their views. |
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#482 | |
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"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
100100001012 Posts |
Bob, it isn't worth fighting over since we both agree that it is wrong (see how easy that is Kasekoph?) but you are putting a label of "religious" on people who are enforcing a stupid policy without having any proof of their beliefs.
Ultimately this is a good thing, because it will force a review of a slowly evolving policy that hasn't seen a real improvement since the end of the Vietnam Conflict. And some of the spirit and language of the current law stems from the brutality with which religious pacifists have been treated in the past. The US military has a more nuanced statement of CO's including this language: Quote:
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#483 |
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"Serge"
Mar 2008
Phi(4,2^7658614+1)/2
9,497 Posts |
I've fetched my old copy of the N-400 form and found that there are separate statements #37, #38, #39, of which she answered "no" only to #37 and "yes" to #38, #39. These items are later followed by the "Part 14. Oath of allegiance" that summarizes all items together (without exceptions) and ends with emphatic "...so help me God."
But at least that last part you may chose not to say (no paperwork required), everything else has its bureaucratic pathways to modification requests. The clerk was just implementing the policy, which is of course rigid and outdated. The clerk stands to lose his/her job if they don't follow the formal procedure, so it is hard to blame them for the lack of imagination. This case is going to be of great help for future applicants. |
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#484 | |
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"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
13×89 Posts |
Quote:
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