The Monkey
The Freeman
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2004
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I'm reading Dawkins' "The God Delusion" at the moment, and one chapter in particular grabbed my attention. He writes for many pages about how the Founding Fathers of the US were, if not atheists, then at least secularists, and that the state they intended would be separated from the church. This is something I see appearing constantly in the debates, and while I don't contest the statement itself (I lack enough knowledge to do so), it makes me wonder.
Say, just for the sake of argument, that the founding fathers indeed had thought religious institutions should be exactly like they were in contemporary Europe, with religion very highly influencing the public life. Would that mean that the US for all future would be doomed to follow the same trail? This, after all, follows the same logic as Dawkins and many others use, namely justifying American secularism only by saying that the Founding Fathers were of the same opinion.
People speak as though the founding fathers are some perfect, divine beings, capable of nothing but good. Why can't anyone say (in any matter): "The Founding Fathers and the Constitution is wrong in this matter, and we will do the right thing regardless". Let's not forget that all the Founding Fathers were slave-owners.
I think a major problem for the US is that the constitution is far too strong. Take the electorate system as an example. Because of a 230 year old document, the world's second-largest democracy is forced to stick to a system that's ****ed up by anyone's standards. A constitution exists to protect basic values, rights and freedoms, not to halter the development and modernization of the nation. It would be a blessing to hear an American politician say that the constitution is flawed and the the founding fathers were plain wrong in a great deal of things. I think it would greatly accelerate the pace of improvements over there.
Just some thoughts.
Say, just for the sake of argument, that the founding fathers indeed had thought religious institutions should be exactly like they were in contemporary Europe, with religion very highly influencing the public life. Would that mean that the US for all future would be doomed to follow the same trail? This, after all, follows the same logic as Dawkins and many others use, namely justifying American secularism only by saying that the Founding Fathers were of the same opinion.
People speak as though the founding fathers are some perfect, divine beings, capable of nothing but good. Why can't anyone say (in any matter): "The Founding Fathers and the Constitution is wrong in this matter, and we will do the right thing regardless". Let's not forget that all the Founding Fathers were slave-owners.
I think a major problem for the US is that the constitution is far too strong. Take the electorate system as an example. Because of a 230 year old document, the world's second-largest democracy is forced to stick to a system that's ****ed up by anyone's standards. A constitution exists to protect basic values, rights and freedoms, not to halter the development and modernization of the nation. It would be a blessing to hear an American politician say that the constitution is flawed and the the founding fathers were plain wrong in a great deal of things. I think it would greatly accelerate the pace of improvements over there.
Just some thoughts.