To my knowledge no one has asked, but I wouldn't have a problem with it.You want to decorate your store for Christmas. That's fine. What if someone wants to decorate your store for Hanukkah just as much as you want to do for Christmas?
To my knowledge no one has asked, but I wouldn't have a problem with it.You want to decorate your store for Christmas. That's fine. What if someone wants to decorate your store for Hanukkah just as much as you want to do for Christmas?
In extant of that if we allow others their celebrations and how they choose to express them then why should we deny our own?
Come on, do you really think that someone who does not align with Warped9's "Christian and Western" values count as a Canadian to him?No one's actually denying you a celebration of Christmas. And the way you talk about Canadians and you use of "we" and "they" is disturbing. "They" are Canadians too.In extant of that if we allow others their celebrations and how they choose to express them then why should we deny our own?
Come on, do you really think that someone who does not align with Warped9's "Christian and Western" values count as a Canadian to him?No one's actually denying you a celebration of Christmas. And the way you talk about Canadians and you use of "we" and "they" is disturbing. "They" are Canadians too.In extant of that if we allow others their celebrations and how they choose to express them then why should we deny our own?
Individuals make the difference. There are good folks as well as jerks from all walks of life, all nationalities and all forms of belief. No one has a monopoly on kindness, compassion and generosity or conversely on narrow mindedness or meanness of spirit.
In extant of that if we allow others their celebrations and how they choose to express them then why should we deny our own?
You assume a lot about someone you don't even know. Of course that's not an unusual thing to see online.Come on, do you really think that someone who does not align with Warped9's "Christian and Western" values count as a Canadian to him?No one's actually denying you a celebration of Christmas. And the way you talk about Canadians and you use of "we" and "they" is disturbing. "They" are Canadians too.In extant of that if we allow others their celebrations and how they choose to express them then why should we deny our own?
Individuals make the difference. There are good folks as well as jerks from all walks of life, all nationalities and all forms of belief. No one has a monopoly on kindness, compassion and generosity or conversely on narrow mindedness or meanness of spirit.
This is very true. I wish I had the exact statement, but C.S. Lewis said something very much like that in Mere Christianity.
In extant of that if we allow others their celebrations and how they choose to express them then why should we deny our own?
Indeed. And to those making the "us and them" comments, the only reason we have an "us and them" mentality is the fact that some people--on both sides--have this mentality that the only way for one group to express itself is at the cost of another, when this is absolutely not true.
I think that you're making a rather pedantic point. Unless you'd like to invent some more neutral pronouns that could be substituted. We could try "Group 1" and "Group 2" or "X" and "Y," but of course we can't have that because sequence implies preference. I suppose we would have to opt for nonsense words like "bleep" and "blip" instead, if apparently the words "us" and "them" must be stricken from the language.
I know a lot of Canadians of different origin and nationality and I don't have a problem with any of them. I'm simply saying that if those Canadians are allowed to express their celebrations in their own way then I and others likeminded should as wellCome on, do you really think that someone who does not align with Warped9's "Christian and Western" values count as a Canadian to him?No one's actually denying you a celebration of Christmas. And the way you talk about Canadians and you use of "we" and "they" is disturbing. "They" are Canadians too.
I would hope so, yes.
I know a lot of Canadians of different origin and nationality and I don't have a problem with any of them. I'm simply saying that if those Canadians are allowed to express their celebrations in their own way then I and others likeminded should as wellCome on, do you really think that someone who does not align with Warped9's "Christian and Western" values count as a Canadian to him?
I would hope so, yes.
You assume a lot about someone you don't even know. Of course that's not an unusual thing to see online.Come on, do you really think that someone who does not align with Warped9's "Christian and Western" values count as a Canadian to him?No one's actually denying you a celebration of Christmas. And the way you talk about Canadians and you use of "we" and "they" is disturbing. "They" are Canadians too.
I think that you're making a rather pedantic point. Unless you'd like to invent some more neutral pronouns that could be substituted. We could try "Group 1" and "Group 2" or "X" and "Y," but of course we can't have that because sequence implies preference. I suppose we would have to opt for nonsense words like "bleep" and "blip" instead, if apparently the words "us" and "them" must be stricken from the language.
To the topic at hand people in Canada are allowed and even encouraged to express their beliefs and their celebrations. In some measure this is a result of Canadian multiculturalism over the past forty years. And, yes, its pros and cons are often enough debated, sometimes heatedly.
In extant of that if we allow others their celebrations and how they choose to express them then why should we deny our own?
Besides which, he seems to not get the difference between the benevolent Canadian Christians of the country ever so politely "allowing" others their pagan beliefs even though we got here first (as long as you don't count the native Canadian population), and his company making a decision as a private entity not to allow Christmas decorations. What does one have to do with the other?
As is whining.You assume a lot about someone you don't even know. Of course that's not an unusual thing to see online.
Unsurprisingly.You're missing the point entirely.I think that you're making a rather pedantic point. Unless you'd like to invent some more neutral pronouns that could be substituted. We could try "Group 1" and "Group 2" or "X" and "Y," but of course we can't have that because sequence implies preference. I suppose we would have to opt for nonsense words like "bleep" and "blip" instead, if apparently the words "us" and "them" must be stricken from the language.
As a habit, yes, she does.Yeah, that's clearly what Kestra was saying.(...)Do you always have to make it a habit of completely misrepresenting what people say to make your point?
^^ The point is, Christians don’t do that here. There’s no systematic, sanctioned, state-supported-and-directed persecution of non-Christians in America. Because we have a little thing called the First Amendment.
^^ The point is, Christians don’t do that here. There’s no systematic, sanctioned, state-supported-and-directed persecution of non-Christians in America. Because we have a little thing called the First Amendment.
There aren't minority groups that many in the Christian and Christian-political orthodoxy in our country have tried - and, in some cases, are still trying - to erase from existence through ostracization, arrest, forced medical "treatment", denial of public sector jobs and rights?
Uh, what part of “persecution of non-Christians” do you not understand? There are plenty of gay Christians. And why specifically “Christian norms”? Every religion has traditionally regarded marriage as a man-woman thing.Yeah, for real. Let's not pretend the Defense of Marriage Act--which is still in force, and still denies many benefits to gay public employees and their spouses--has to do with anything but enforcing Christian norms on people.
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