This took awhile, and I have to go to work now. I'll be back later to address more posts.

Originally posted by Kazan
WRONG
Dictionary
genocide n.
systematic killing of a racial or cultural group
Doesn't say anything about _why_ just the act of killing a racial/cultural group is genocide. This is the definition you're going to find everyone in academia using to my knowledge
Really? Are you sure you didn't write that up yourself? This is the definition I find:
Main Entry: geno·cide
Pronunciation: 'je-n&-"sId
Function: noun
: the deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial, political, or cultural groupThere's a substantial difference there: in your version, if a group of people is killed who collectively form a racial or cultural group, regardless of the intention behind the action, it is a genocide. In Merriam-Webster's version, it is a genocide if the elimination of the group is the purpose.
The earliests payruses for the NT are in the THIRD century - and there are large gaps in the bible and glaring misognist meddling.
It has sense been translated numerous times, always with intentional alterations. When I said "modern" i was refering to modern translations which are really translations of translations of translations of translations - all translated by people with agendas
No, second century. Lemme see here...
Papayri from the second century: P77, P90, P98 (?), P103, P104
There is also one uncial from the second century: 0189
By "large gaps", what do you mean?
Of course it has been translated, but your English version off of the shelf is not a translation of a translation. They translate directly from the original languages. Or perhaps you meant recopied, not translated? In which case, of course, but textual criticism does an excellent job of sorting through the texts, each with their own scribal errors, and finding the original reading. Where uncertainties exist, they are usually on the order of "you were wandering like sheep" vs. "you were like wandering sheep"--which is hardly a major dificulty.
I have read the bible cover to cover - several translations. IT's all a load of lengendized historical fiction written by a bunch of people who didn't understand the world around them so they came up with a god to explain it - humans have been doing that for thousands of yeras. The problem is now we can explain what was once unexplainable, and that which isn't yet explained some of us have reached the emntal maturity to accept that it isn't explain yet but we will find the explaination.
You are welcome to your interpretation of both this book and of reality, but do recognise that it is your interpretation. Unless you can provide convincing evidence or argument for why one should accept your interpretation over another, do not pretend that your beliefs have any more claim to be true than another's. In all you've written, I've only seen you assert that atheism is true. If I want to claim that God exists, you are perfectly in your rights to demand some corroboration before accepting my claim. But the instant you make a counterclaim, the same obligation falls on you. So, show me that you have somehow gained a better access to reality than I have, and maybe I'll believe you.
However, be careful before accusing people of bias unless you can explain why they would have one.
You have a pro-bais favor because you being in your invisible friend in the sky since it';s emotionally appealing to you
Mikhael is an atheist, and will therefore have a predilection to give more weight to things that support, in one way or another, his position. The aim that both of us are striving towards, however, is to see as much as we can as clearly and truly as we can. I would expect him to call me on places where my bias is causing me to swerve, even as I have done for him.
Of course I am going to defend my beliefs against misrepresentation and assault: they are my beliefs. But I try not to let my bias cause me to ignore the things I find in the world.
Because I can say with 100% certainty and without being stereotyping that everyone who believes in teh bible picks and chooses which verses to believe, for one it contradicts itself in many places - for two that's human nature that is only overcome through a sense of intellectual integrity (which is requisit lacking in relation to the bible to believe it - compartmentalization allows someone who otherwise has it to loose it in relation to the bible)
Ignoring the unsubstantiated pot shot at the end...
Indeed there are contradictions. The reason is that different texts address different situations. Awareness of both the text and the situation allows one to understand the full message. When we then take what we learn from understanding all these different passages in their contexts, and put it all together into a cohesive whole, we are able to learn what the biblical teaching is. It is very much like the old parable about the six blind men and the elephant. Each of their individual statements alone are contradictory, but this comes from a failure to appreciate the whole. With a recognition of the whole, I am able believe the biblical text without having to pick and choose between its various contents.
I don't believe your justificatios until i find indpendant historical documents predating the bible and predating the destruction of Canaan documenting their atrocities - then I'll halfway believe you
Here are a few articles that came up on Google. They mention in one way or another the infant sacrifices practiced by the Canaanites (a.k.a. Phonecians). A large trove of bones was found in Carthage (a Canaanite colony), and others have been found in places like Tyre and on Megiddo. The one in Tyre seems to be the most recent discovery. I tried finding some more info on it, but it seems nothing else has been put on the net about it since--maybe a publication is still in the works?
http://www.pantheon.org/articles/b/baal.htmlhttp://www.ualberta.ca/~csmackay/CLASS_365/Carthage.htmlhttp://www.msn.fullfeed.com/~scribe/digest19983.htm (
http://ddc.aub.edu.lb/projects/archaeology/berytus-back/berytus39/seeden-tophet/I am concerned with the actual history - however for the sake of this argument the actual history is irrevelant - you are supporting and trying to justify genocide with a post facto rationalization and I'm not going to let you get away with it - it smells to high hell of BULLL****...
redundunt stuff about how I supposedly support genocide
That is rather confusing, Kazan. You are concerned with it
and find that it is irrelevant?
Let's go with option one, and assume that you are concerned with the actual history. Well then, the Israelites neither decimated the ethnic group of the Canaanites, nor apparently intended too. They targeted certain smaller groups of Canaanites, made treaties with some, and in general had the sort of long and turbulent relationship with them that one would normally expect. No genocide to be found here.
For option two, I'll briefly recap and say that those sacrificing their children to their gods were the ones targeted in the text. The aim there also was not to destroy a people group--the fate of the people group is not really in view here, only the destruction of those engaging in this practice. So the text's directives do not meet the criteria of Merriam-Webster's defintion of genocide.
If they really were "baby killers" as you want to put it in such an emotinoally provacative manner to try and emotionally blackmail us - then it changes little. It changes from being a post facto rationalization to being an excuse.
Is there a non-emotionally provocative manner of saying that they sacrificed their children as burnt offerings to their gods? There is no emotional blackmail intended here--it is the spontaneous expression of my revulsion.
Now, it seems we have reached an end to our line of argument here. To you, the action of killing children in this way is not sufficient grounds for capital punishment. To me, the action is sufficiently heinous to warrant it. I doubt any argument over which of us is right in this matter will be fruitful, since that decision is a non-rational one at its core.
You have no evidence to support this claim
In some cultures/religions. You conviently ignored my point about your imaginary friend in the sky demanding Job kill his son (only to stay his hand at the last minute - however that is just saying "I want you to be willing to kill your child for me if you have to!") INFACT the bible in multiple places advocates killing of children. In one place it not only ADVOCATES it - it has the "angel of death" doing it. (Don't try to justify it as being pharo's decry - your imaginary sky friend still did it)
Which is it? First you say I have no evidence, then you grant my evidence. Ancient Near Eastern ritual was conducted communally, especially for such major rituals as infant sacrifice. The whole town or nation or whoever was being sacrificed for would attend. Thus, they were all party to it.
God does indeed ask Abraham to sacrifice his son, but it is not at all insignificant that God stops him from doing it. The whole point of including the story is to underline this fact. God doesn't want child sacrifices. In a culture where sacrificing children is an accepted ritual, that stopping is the shocking part, and it says a lot. To the minds of the writer and his intended audience, this story said one thing: God doesn't want child sacrifices. Later on God makes an explicit ban on sacrificing children.
The angel of death, now there's a good one. It is a different sort of thing than the others we've been talking about: it isn't humans sacrificing to the gods. Punishing people for heinous acts is one thing, but this brings us to a new place: how can God take life away from people when he forbids us to do so? In fact, how can he allow any children to suffer and die? How could he let it happen to my sister? Or anyone at all? These are all instances of the problem of evil, and I've wrestled with that a lot. These are my thoughts:
The simplest answer, of course, is that God is God, and both gives and takes away. It is not right if I "play God" with the lives of others, for they are my peers. But if God plays God, he is doing his job. This answer is true so far as it foes, but it isn't very satisfying.
Mostly, we want an explanation for evil. If it can be explained, we think, then that'll make it okay. Why? Because then we'll be able to say it makes sense, that it belongs here. But it doesn't belong here. We might be able to say
how it got here, but
where it came from can never make sense in this world. It'll never be "alright." This is why the simple answer, even if it is true as far as it goes, is not enough. It doesn't do anything about the situation.
You've read the book of Job. Now here's a fellow who is a really great guy. Then all this crap happens to him, and through it all he insists that he didn't deserve it despite the veiled accusations of his three friends that he did. God's answer to Job at the end is the most interesting bit. God basically 1) says that he knows what he is doing, 2) tacitly approves Job's insistence that he didn't do anything to deserve this, 3) also tacitly approves the words of the fourth friend who said that the issue wasn't merely what one did, but that even the best human being is not sufficiently good to be able to make a counterclaim against God, and 4) most importantly, changes things.
In this, parts 1, 2 and 3 are all essentially more detail on the simple answer. It is part 4 that is the most important bit. The author of this story is telling us something significant: explanations are all well and good, but what we want and need is change. The only satisfying answer there can be is for things to be fixed.
And it is this that is the more profound and meaty answer to the problem of evil. God intends to fix it. The whole Judeo-Christian religion is one big exercise in answering the problem of evil. God is God, and he'll deal with the world as he sees fit in the meantime, but in the end he intends to fix it.
However in 21st century Western civilization YOU do not make religion a private thing. There is a very large christian fundamentalist movement trying to rip up the constitution and establish a theocracy .... I will laugh at, and the fundamentalists will rue the day, that they make it a shooting war.
I beg your pardon, but did you really just accuse me of that?
First of all, I am Canadian. I don't care a whit about the American constitution or what you guys do with it. Not my country, not my problem. I have better things to worry about.
Second, I am not a fundamentalist.
Third, fundamentalists are only one tiny fraction of Christianity, so don't equate the two. Just because they are vocal doesn't make them representative.
Fourth, not all fundamentalists think this way. In fact, I would suspect it is a few wackos with big mouths who are saying this, and the average fundamentalist Christian doesn't agree.
Really, you should knock it off with the ad hominem attacks, Kazan. They don't accomplish anything except alienating the people who might otherwise want to support you.
Show me evidence
Of group trials? Probably the fastest way to do that is PM Su-tehp. He's in law school, so he should be able to name a few cases from your own system pretty easily
No really your THINK - you act like I don't. What ever the reasons for you supporting genocide IT'S STILL GENOCIDE. I don't give a rats if your god believesa it - that is unacceptable behavior. IT is made even worse by the fact that you're simply believing in something emotionally appealing that has no semblance of being real, no REAL evidence (you people like calling things which are absolutely not evidence 'evidence for god'), no logic [without logical fallacy]
However YOU are not god, the people who killed the Canaanites are NOT GOD - lots of people claim to know gods word. This is boviously impossible when you a) rationally approach whether god exists and b) lots of people claiming they have gods word contradict e/o on a regular basis
post facto rationalization by the victors
If you'd like to come down from your soapbox and talk to me, I'd like too. You accuse Setekh, and now I, with supporting genocide on the basis of this text. The way Setekh and I read it, it doesn't advocate genocide. Whatever you think it "really" says is irrelevant: we are talking about Setekh and me. The way we read it, it isn't about genocide, and neither of us would give approval to genocide on the basis of this text. Now, if you wish to ignore me and get back on your soapbox and tell me what "really" I think, go ahead. But don't expect me to accept that you know what I think better than I do, or that I am going to support a genocide on the basis of a text when I know myself I am not going to.
And furthermore to the eyes of those of us who have matured enough to be beyond gods (And don't take that as an intetional insult - psychologically, and sociologically speaking those who reach post-conventional morality and value real knowledge are psychologically and sociologically more mature than those who believe in emotionally appealing accounts of reality and in conventional morality, even worse quite often theists are all for pre-conventional morality)
Yes. Of course. Your position is obviously more mature than any other option. Everyone's always is.
I see the logical path for it to be justified in your eyes - however I call you person willing to commit crimes against humanity.
You call me willing to commit crimes against humanity when I say I am not and that in this text I find no legitimation for that. Don't be daft. If I read this text and find no legitimisation for genocide in it, I don't find one, which is all that matters for whether I am going to support one.