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Discrimination in Texas Constitution? |
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| May30-12, 11:19 AM | #18 |
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Discrimination in Texas Constitution?Either way, this is off topic. |
| May30-12, 11:24 AM | #19 |
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As I've mentioned, it's not just Texas. There are six other states with nearly identical clauses. None of those seven clauses are used or are enforced because they are unconstitutional. There are lots of examples of state constitutional clauses and laws that are still on the books but are never enforced because they have been found unconstitutional. There is no practical way to remove these obsolete clauses from these constitutions. A legislator would have to propose amending the constitution, a super-majority would have to pass that proposed amendment, and in Texas at least, the proposed amendment would have to be approved by the voters. There's little chance that a legislator in Texas would make such a proposal (it would be political suicide), even less chance that the legislature as a whole would approve it (this would be mass political suicide), and zero chance that it would pass that final test by the voters (we voters can be downright stupid and very bigoted.) There isn't a law that prohibits voters from being stupid or bigoted. Such a law would in fact be unconstitutional. |
| May30-12, 01:04 PM | #20 |
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Umm Prohibition is still in the federal constitution it was an amendment. There is another amendment removing its effects but once somehting is passed you never just delete it. It happened it was the law it may be superceded or countmanded by later bills or amendments but you do not strike it from the books as if it never happened. That is revisionist history and honestly not the way I would want my children taught.
No matter what you do it will not remove anything from the old books unless you scrap the entire code and start over with a new constitution that is why "all these nonsense laws" are still on the books. What do you want to wipe out of history next? How about old voting laws I bet you can find some about land owners or what race you need to be. Should we pretend women and minorities could always vote? Like it or not its our history but that is the point its history and as has been pointed out has been resloved at the federal level years ago. |
| May30-12, 01:05 PM | #21 |
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Ryan, you are of course completely free to feel whatever you want, particularly since feelings are somewhat involuntary. But I am similarly free to disagree with the basis for your feeling and argue against it. There is nothing off topic about that. Moreover, if I can convince you that your understanding of the issue is flawed, thereby removing the basis for your feeling, I may even be able to relieve you of this unpleasant sensation. But at the same time, if there is something truly sinister under the surface in the US, I'd like to know what it is, even if learning it causes me to feel a similar unpleasant feeling.
Now: 1. Freedom to practice (exercise) your religion (or lack thereof). 2. Prohibition of establishing a state religion (even implicitly). The Texas Constitution violates #2. Your framing of the issue is a violation of #1 -- as well as the speech clause of the First Amendment. There can be no more basic/fundamental reasoning in a democracy for choosing an elected leader than picking someone who's belief structure - the concepts on which they will base their decision-making process - is similar to yours. Trying to "separate religion and politics" - as you would have us do - violates the fundamental right to freely decide - based on whatever criteria I wish (free speech), even religious ones (free excercise) - who to vote for. The fact that this line in the Texas Constitution remains, at its core, has little to do with religion: it is an issue in how Democracy works that can be seen in other areas, such as the poorly-worded and out of date 2nd Amendment or the lack of reference to the Air Force in the Constitution (only Army and Navy). Broader, I'm sure every country's books are littered with silly or bigoted old laws that haven't been removed because no one in Congress has bothered to interrupt their golf game to do so, even without political capital being on the line. But the fact that political capital would be on the line here? Yes, it tells us that Texans want Christian leaders and whether they would oppose removal of this for keen political strategem (no better way to support your side than to prevent the other from even running!) or just due to succeptibility to "godless commie" rhetoric (and chicks in bikinis in Bud Light commercials), this deep/serious flaw you see underlying the issue just plain isn't there. |
| May30-12, 03:35 PM | #22 |
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That law is a reflection of a past culture. Not a reflection of the current culture (however similar). It is a record of the culture, not the driver of culture. Lastly, birds of a feather flock together. Take a poll in Texas, it's not that crazy of a "law". We're talking purely culture here, so easy on the personal opinion on what you think is "proper" culture...lest the tables turn. |
| May30-12, 03:39 PM | #23 |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_c...ited_States%29 |
| May30-12, 03:47 PM | #24 |
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You and some others (I can't remember who said what) are missing one important fact. As evidenced by the Texas rewriting of history in textbooks and Tennessee promoting Creationism, neither of those states gives a damn about the US constitution. They are blatantly defying it, and nobody is doing anything to stop them. Just because the state mandate that this thread is about isn't enforced doesn't mean that they won't enforce it if it suits their political agenda. Even if such enforcement is eventually overturned by the federal government, lives will have been ruined in the meantime. |
| May31-12, 08:52 AM | #25 |
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That's the true rewriting of history. The rewrite is taking the Constitution and Bill of Rights out of the context in which they were written and applying a "new" interpretation to what the founders, framers, and ratifiers meant. Fortunately, the people of the great state of Texas can still choose elected officials based on their personal beliefs…… at least for now. Perhaps someday the government will pass a law that prohibits citizens from voting against someone that doesn’t share their values. One final thought, the Constitution still has discrimination in it, or did you forget about the age discrimination for holding some public offices or the discrimination against non-natural born Americans to become President? |
| May31-12, 09:22 AM | #26 |
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A few semesters ago, I gave a presentation in my "teaching and learning in a diverse society" class about discrimination against atheists. My professor, who has been teaching diversity courses for a decade or more, said he had no idea that atheists see themselves as an oppressed group. Discrimination against atheists is so pervasive, that nobody seems to notice it, much like fish don't notice the ocean they're swimming in. These clauses in the state constitutions are just another few drops of the ocean of discrimination, and it's hard for me to be outraged over this over the fact that family members of mine tell me I'm going to hell. |
| May31-12, 10:20 AM | #27 |
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To all of you who say this clause should be removed: How? Courts cannot remove it. What courts can do is to say that it can't be used. They cannot rewrite the constitution. The governor cannot remote it; rewriting the constitution is not his job. In Texas, even the legislators cannot remove it without the final consent of the people of the state. The constitutions of most states are a lot harder to change than are the laws of that state. This is in general a good thing in that it makes for greater legal stability. Constitutions takes the difference between English law and European continental law one step further. (The United Kingdom does not have a constitution.) There are cases such as these clauses where this built-in immutability is a bad thing. Fortunately we have the US constitution and the courts that can keep the somewhat unwieldy states in line. |
| May31-12, 10:22 AM | #28 |
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![]() I was referring to their rewriting of the history of the world to suit their religious/political agenda. By the way, I probably know more about your political system than you know about mine, so forgive me if I make an occasional mistake in details. edit: DH, you sneaked in while I was composing. In response to your statements, I repeat: no one is stopping them, constitution notwithstanding. How can you explain the rewriting of history in Texas or the Tennessee Idiot Bill in terms of constitutional observance? |
| May31-12, 10:23 AM | #29 |
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I've read the entire thread. I don't recall who precisely said what, but one view was that it was wrong to use the word atrocity when referring to archaic laws. It should be reserved for events such as the butchering of children in Syria.
My view: it is the complacency of accepting that archaic laws remain on the books, that it is OK because they are not enforced, it is that indifference that leads to atrocities such as those in Syria. Ignore the little things and one day they will be big things. |
| May31-12, 10:29 AM | #30 |
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| May31-12, 10:49 AM | #31 |
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Aren't they teaching in Texas that the Civil War was about "states' rights?" While it technically was, it was primarily about slavery, and I don't think that's referenced once in the books. |
| May31-12, 10:52 AM | #32 |
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Seems like the country is becoming more progressively (I guess how you view the term "progressive") religious. I actually giggled when reading the article.
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| May31-12, 11:11 AM | #33 |
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| May31-12, 11:50 AM | #34 |
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