If God were allowed in our schools, there would never be a problem ever

If there’s one argument that really bugs me, it’s that one. “Our children aren’t allowed to read the Bible in school or pray! No wonder people who are not in the school come in and shoot them!”

Besides being absolutely wrong — you are allowed to pray in school and bring your Bible. You can even have Bible study groups after school and everything. What you can’t do is force everyone else to do it, too — this argument doesn’t make a damn bit of sense. What, if the kids had been forced to pray, then the gunman would have gone somewhere else? Should I point out the number of shootings that have taken place in churches?

Or maybe they are saying that God is so petty that he allows innocent children to be killed to make a point?

You want religion in schools, go to a private school. You want your country to support a religion? Maybe you should try one of those countries the Taliban runs.

Editorial cartoon of the day

(In case you don’t know, the only ones objecting to the treaty are the three countries above — and the NRA. Nice company, huh?)

Editorial cartoon of the day

Editorial cartoon of the day

Listening to experts

Doctor: “Based on my examination of you and my experience, I can say with a degree of professional accuracy that you have the flu.”

Patient: “Thank you, doctor, you obviously know best.”

Auto Mechanic: “I’ve been studying cars for years and know them backwards and forwards, and can say without fear of error that the problem is the starter.”

Car Owner: “You certainly know your work better than I do.”einstein11a-7-web

Lawyer: “I’ve spent years getting my law degree, studying the Constitution and the laws and taking constant continuing education classes. I can say with certainty, having studied the cases and history, that the Supreme Court has declared that the 2nd amendment is not absolute and reasonable restrictions on gun ownership and use are perfectly Constitutional.”

Citizen: “Oh yeah? What do you know? I know that the exact opposite is true and there’s nothing you can say that will change my mind.”

That was something I posted on my Facebook page a few months ago that generated a bit of conversation (including notice from my US Representative who “liked” it).

Some folks tried to read more into this than was intended. I am not saying that every “expert” is always right, or that you should never question authority — far from it. My point was that when you personally have little or no knowledge of something, paying attention to an expert is not a bad thing. And disagreeing without having any evidence to support your view won’t get you far.

Doing some research, educating yourself, and presenting an argument based on facts is different. It is certainly possible to make yourself into someone knowledgeable.

However, discounting an expert’s opinion simply because he or she disagrees with you doesn’t seem like the best way to win an argument.

Note that disagreeing with what the law is is not the same as denying the law exists. There are lots of laws I disagree with. I think laws denying gays the right to marry should be declared unconstitutional, in my opinion. But they currently are not.

My problem is when I say “Here is what the current law on the Constitution is” and have someone respond “No it isn’t” and be absolutely wrong and unwilling to accept that. Currently, the Supreme Court has ruled that the 2nd amendment allows for individual ownership of guns but also that this right is not absolute. That’s the law. There should be no debate over that. It’s clear cut and in black and white for anyone to read. When gun lovers say “Nuh uh! The 2nd amendment is absolute!” they are merely giving their opinion and are, therefore, wrong. They’re as wrong as people who deny that evolution is real simply because it goes against what they personally want.

I guess, in a roundabout way, I’m agreeing with Isaac Asimov: “Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.’”

Editorial cartoon of the day

Editorial cartoon of the day

The Slippery Slope

Banning assault rifles obviously means that all guns will be banned eventually.

Just like how allowing gay marriage means we will have to allow people to marry penguins. And how legalizing marijuana means we have to also legalize heroin.

Just like our history! We installed a minimum wage and the next thing you know, the government is setting all salaries for every single person. We gave women the right to vote and now all children get to vote, too. We registered cars and made provisions for their safety which immediately led to all cars being banned.

Because, of course, we have no possible way of doing anything reasonable as a population and can only do the most absurd outrageous outcome at the end of the slippery slope.

Guns and Mental Health Cuts

I see here in today’s newspaper that Republicans think our problem with all the violent shootings we’ve had lately is with mental health, not with guns themselves.  There are just too many crazy people, and we need to deal with them.

Someone remind me, please — which political party was it that has cut funding for mental health services year by year since the days of Reagan?

Everybody is a Tyrant!

Senator McCain today predicted broad support in Congress to require universal background checks for gun purchases.

Oh my God!  Do you realize what this means?  Not only is Obama a tyrant, but so are most of the people we elected through our democratic process!

To make matters worse, so are the vast majority of Americans, including the vast majority of NRA members!  Tyrants, all of them, out to destroy our way of life!  We must gather our guns, hide in our shelters, and get ready for the tryants to come after us and install military law!

gun

The only other possibility is that background checks in order to purchase guns is completely Constitutional, that democracy works, and that there is nothing wrong with doing everything we can to prevent criminals and the insane from getting guns.

But no — that would be crazy!