No, not voting for Biden and voting for Cornel West is voting for Cornel West, just like not voting for Cornel West is not the equivalent of not voting for Trump — Jack Rogozhin
Biden is a worse authoritarian than Trump.
Predictions are one thing, but conspiracies are another. I'm just wondering how you’ve come to believe that him and Trump and Stone were engaging in a criminal conspiracy. — NOS4A2
Trump said some things. I want to know what crime he committed, and what evidence there is that he did so corruptly. What act, which thought, and what combination of words was the crime? Who is the victim of said crimes? — NOS4A2
They continued to count votes after election day, on days when there is no election, after the election was over, and magically Biden pulled ahead. — NOS4A2
He said he would not concede and would contest the results if the election wasn't free or fair. — NOS4A2
I’m sure you could find it if pressed. But comments from Stone and Bannon don’t mean much, I’m afraid. — NOS4A2
The claims that he did so knowingly and fraudulently are without evidence and therefor bullshit. Maybe some evidence will drop in the future but here is nothing. — NOS4A2
The way you frame it sounds criminal, but the alternate electors scheme has precedent in the JFK/Nixon election of 1960. The judge there seemed to think them legitimate. Would you call that scheme criminal? An effort to overthrow/subvert an election? — NOS4A2
The best analogy I've heard so far is that these attempts to hide behind the 1st amendment are equivalent to a bank robber claiming that his instructions to have the teller hand over money are covered under the 1st amendment. — EricH
Now we’re on the road to criminalizing political speech because a man dared to doubt the results of an election. — NOS4A2
Right - now I see your reasoning. I guess my analysis would be that the ‘divine hiddenness’ and the denial of the reality of Satan would arise from different sources. The decline of belief in Satan maps against the overall decline of religion in secular culture. Likewise for the belief in sin (which I think is the most politically-incorrect term in the English language, isn’t it?) Whereas the divine hiddenness of God is due to God being altogether transcendent. — Quixodian
Terrible responses and inadequate reasoning are often part of the fundamentalist worldview, so I don't think you're going to get far with this kind of argument. The other response is likely to be - 'God has his reasons, which as mere humans we can't possibly understand. I have faith God has a plan.' This is the argument I have usually encountered when the faithful are faced with challenges.
What do they say? You can't reason a person out of ideas that weren't arrived at by reason. — Tom Storm
Do you mean, it is used to dissuade them from believing in God? Do you think that such a shallow --as I have expalined-- construct would succeed in that? I believe that it would succeed in the opposite: it would rather strengthen their belief in God! — Alkis Piskas
So, I'm interested in why you would start a thread on this topic. Is it to polish your polemical skills against Christian opponents? — Quixodian
The whole construct is built on thin ice and falls easily apart ...
1) the statement "[God] wants all humans to believe God exists before they die" is totally arbitrary. I have never even heard about that.
2) ... other similar assumptions ... I skip them and come to the most important part ...
3) (2) is unfounded. It is based on the assumption that all people should believe what God wants.
4) The conclusion (4) cannot be drawn from (3). That some people do not believe that God exists doesn't not mean that he doesn't.
To summarize, the whole construct is based on the assumption that if God exists whatever he wishes should be necessarily affect all people. — Alkis Piskas
You presume if there’s a deity, that this deity A) has a sense of morality like humans B) that he abides by a morality that is recognizable to humans. — schopenhauer1
For A, is there really evidence if this? Look at the world. There is immense negatives of suffering, fighting, displeasure. IF that was part of his plan, how is this justified as moral to create? You can only appeal to the idea of a higher kind of morality that suffering is necessary but then is that moral itself? It seems like gods morality resembles nothing like our our own god is an immensely cruel “dungeon master” creating a suffering stage so he could watch the action unfold like watching a tragic comedy in real time. Either way is problematic for the theist.
What can you say here about Satan and what God wants from us, based on actual Biblical scholarship?
A lot of what you are referring to might well come from popular culture and certain narrow fundamentalist interpretations of Christianity. — Tom Storm
No, it's not that they 'don't believe in god'. How could they not, they've seen him in action? Satan has a role as a tempter and adversary. Some others ignore god's commands. Judas makes it possible for Jesus to fulfil his sacrifice so there are traditions (Gnostics) that consider him special.
If we have freewill in this space then the only way this can really work, as far as I can tell, is to know god exists and choose not to follow him anyway. If we don't believe he exists, or we have never heard of him, then we are not making a free choice not to follow him. We are unable to follow him because we think he is fictional. What you beleive in is not generally a matter of choice - you either believe in something or you do not.
Meanwhile, Biden is trying to jail his political opponents.
There was a moral panic when Trump showed up on the scene. He was the next big dictator, compared to everyone from Mussolini, to Mugabe, to Mao. He was the harbinger of a new fascism. He was a Manchurian candidate. He was going to start world war 3 and throw us into nuclear holocaust.
None of this would turn out to be true <snip> — NOS4A2