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Sexed-Up New Haven (Yale hosts a campus-wide orgy)
National Review ^ | February 17, 2004 | Meghan Clyne

Posted on 02/17/2004 4:10:43 PM PST by presidio9

Last week, every Yale undergraduate received an e-mail heralding "Sex Week: A Celebration and Exploration of Sex and Sexuality at Yale University."

Imagine a modest student's reaction to "Grandmother of Masturbation" Betty Dodson's impending lecture on the topic, "One Woman's Illustrated Sexual Revolution." Yale sophomore David O'Leary, upon returning from five o'clock mass, found in his inbox the promise of a "Porn Party! sponsored by Wicked Pictures with porn star Devinn Lane."

According to event organizer and Yale senior Eric Rubenstein, Sex Week was supposed to open discussion about issues of love, intimacy, and romance, and was timed to coincide with Valentine's Day, to distract the many unattached Yalies who, Rubenstein says, are made lonely and depressed by the holiday. In truth, however, it was little more than a week-long bacchanal.

It was all under the guise of education, of course: Take, for example, the talk with "Rebecca and Claire from Toys in Babeland: 'Sex Toys 101.'" Or the lecture by professor — yes, that's right, a Yale professor — Naomi Rogers, on the "History of the Vibrator."

Sex Week was run by Students for a Sexually Aware Campus, an officially registered and university-approved "student organization," which (along with Sex Week) got a green light from Yale College Assistant Dean Edgar Letriz, who oversees administrative matters for student organizations (registration, funding, etc.). According to Rubenstein, Letriz knew what Sex Week was about when he approved it, and was "fine with it."

But how, exactly, does Sex Week enrich the quality of campus activity and education? David O'Leary wanted to know; after overcoming the initial revulsion he felt upon receiving the Sex Week e-mail, he was overcome by curiosity. "I went to a Sex Week event to see how offensive it might actually be," he explains. "On my way in, people attempted to hand me condoms and literature about sex-toy cleaning, vaginal and anal-sex tips, and safer-sex tips. When the speaker asked who in the room had never used a sex toy, I raised my hand. When she began to throw miniature vibrators to the people who had their hands raised, I quickly put my hand down and hoped she wouldn't throw one my way."

"Shortly thereafter, she began asking people why and how they masturbate, and read an explicit story about a boy and his mother's vibrator. I left with face red, directly after... I have never been more embarrassed in my life."

O'Leary may have been mortified, but Rubenstein doesn't really care. When asked whether he was worried that people might take offense at the vulgarity of Sex Week, especially as it invaded their inboxes, Rubenstein responded: "No, not really. People might be offended, but they won't openly reprimand me." And about this kind of sexual activity: "People need to accept the fact that it's here, because it is here. And the response I've gotten has been overwhelmingly positive — there were only three people who sent me e-mails back saying 'don't send me any more of this.'" Besides, "If Bush can handle most of the country voting for his opponent and his still being in office, I can handle a few people not liking my emails."

It's not just that Sex Week was in bad taste: It went beyond vulgarity to promote downright pernicious behaviors, and sometimes with odd allies. Take, for example, the seeming obsession with pornography. Strangely enough, Sex Week was put on with the help of Yale's Women's Center, the locus of radical feminism on campus. Feminists are always decrying the objectification of women, and yet pornography is one of the most demeaning and widespread means of objectifying women available.

Or consider that the proceeds from Sex Week's concluding party will go to Planned Parenthood. Or think about Sex Week's promotion of inappropriate relationships: On its website, it has a photograph captioned "Detention will be served in my bed," with an image of a young girl writing over and over on a chalk board, "I will not suck d*** in class." Having sex with a student, at least at most serious academic institutions, is grounds for dismissal; if the student is a teenager, as this girl appears to be, it's grounds for arrest and jail time for statutory rape.

In Rubenstein's eyes, though, nothing depicted on his website was "inappropriate." And again, it's probably true that most people agree with him.

But just because they do, doesn't mean everyone does. And just because people could put on Sex Week, doesn't mean they ought to have. And certainly Yale — insofar as it is a respected institution of higher learning and a supposedly serious environment for a supposedly serious education — didn't need to put its seal of approval on it.

In the e-mail and on its site, Sex Week was touted as "the only event of its kind on any college campus." That's a relief — there are at least a few Sex Weeks to go before Yale introduces the Janet Jackson Chair in Cultural Studies.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Connecticut
KEYWORDS: academia; boolaboola; college; culturewar; degenerate; degeneratecrowd; doasthouwill; evil; hedonists; highereducation; homosexualagenda; indoctrination; itsjustsex; ivyleague; lalalalalive4today; leftselites; libertines; luxetperversion; newhaven; noshame; permissivesociety; perversion; perverts; playboy; playboyphilosophy; prisoners; promiscuity; reprobates; romans1; sex; sexed; sexualeducation; sexualperversion; university; valentinesday; whateverfeelsgood; yale
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To: Paul C. Jesup
johnmorris886 wrote:

Below are some of the Communist Goals for destroying America (published way back in the 60's) look how closely they mirror the libertarian/liberal agenda today

_______________________________________

Paul C. Jesup wrote:

Socialism/Communism is like and infection that must be cut out. Some people think that the infection is so deep that the only thing that MIGHT be able to cure it is Global Nuclear War that will bomb to the human race as a whole back to the time of the city states.






How typical. You two blabber on about the evils of socialism while you attack its greatist enemies, american libertarians.

Daft.
21 posted on 02/18/2004 5:46:25 PM PST by tpaine (I'm trying to be 'Mr Nice Guy', but the U.S. Constitution defines conservatism; - not the GOP. .)
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To: LibertarianInExile
Libertarians are HUGE on running down the Constitution and Founding Fathers. [sarcasm]

Actually on this board and other boards that I post on most libertarians will be very quick to discredit the founding fathers as being "Slave Owners" "Moralists" "Archaic" ect... When I point out the truth about the founders.

The founders were not libertarian at all. The Founding Fathers believed in the ideology of Edmund Burke who stated that liberty must be connected with order or else it becomes License, which is not freedom at all.

Liberty, too, must be limited in order to be possessed. The degree of restraint it is impossible in any case to settle precisely. But it ought to be the constant aim of every wise public council to find out by cautious experiments, and rational cool endeavours, with how little, not how much, of this restraint the community can subsist; for liberty is a good to be improved, and not an evil to be lessened. It is not only a private blessing of the first order, but the vital spring and energy of the state itself, which has just so much life and vigour as there is liberty in it. But whether liberty be advantageous or not (for I know it is a fashion to decry the very principle), none will dispute that peace is a blessing; and peace must, in the course of human affairs, be frequently bought by some indulgence and toleration at least to liberty: for as the sabbath (though of divine institution) was made for man, not man for the sabbath, government, which can claim no higher origin or authority, in its exercise at least, ought to conform to the exigencies of the time, and the temper and character of the people with whom it is concerned, and not always to attempt violently to bend the people to their theories of subjection. The bulk of mankind, on their part, are not excessively curious concerning any theories whilst they are really happy; and one sure symptom of an ill-conducted state is the propensity of the people to resort to them— Edmund Burke

In some people I see great liberty indeed; in many, if not in the most, an oppressive, degrading servitude. But what is liberty without wisdom, and without virtue? It is the greatest of all possible evils; for it is folly, vice, and madness, without tuition or restraint. Those who know what virtuous liberty is, cannot bear to see it disgraced by incapable heads, on account of their having high-sounding words in their mouths.— Edmund Burke

Men are qualified for civil liberty in exact proportion to their disposition to put moral chains upon their own appetites; in proportion as their love to justice is above their rapacity; in proportion as their soundness and sobriety of understanding is above their vanity and presumption; in proportion as they are more disposed to listen to the counsels of the wise and good, in preference to the flattery of knaves. Society cannot exist unless a controlling power upon will and appetite he placed somewhere, and the less of it there is within, the more there must be without. It is ordained in the eternal constitution of things that men of intemperate minds cannot he free. Their passions forge their fetters.— Edmund Burke

This ideology is opposite of what the libertarians stand for. Libertarians want everyone to be free to do whatever they want. This is the defintion of LICENSE not LIBERTY.

I pointed out some of the goals of the communists to achieve the destruction of America. Your response shows how much it hurts. You see most conservatives have much more in common with the Founding Fathers than modern libertarians.

The Founders had no qualms banning sodomy, adultery, sex outside of marriage, blasphemy, pornography and many other vices that destroy society and thereby limit freedom.

They understood that when a society's morality is destroyed that the people become corrupt and those corrupt people then proceed to limit freedom.

Please tell me how you and modern libertarians are more enlightened than the following men:

"The only foundation of a free Constitution is pure Virtue, and if this cannot be inspired into our People in a greater Measure, than they have it now, they may change their Rulers and the forms of Government, but they will not obtain a lasting liberty." John Adams

"We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge, or gallantry, would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." John Adams

"Man, considered as a creature, must necessarily be subject to the laws of his Creator, for he is entirely a dependent being....And, consequently, as man depends absolutely upon his Maker for everything, it is necessary that he should in all points conform to his Maker's will...this will of his Maker is called the law of nature. These laws laid down by God are the eternal immutable laws of good and evil...This law of nature dictated by God himself, is of course superior in obligation to any other. It is binding over all the globe, in all countries, and at all times: no human laws are of any validity if contrary to this... Sir William Blackstone

"Bad men cannot make good citizens. A vitiated state of morals, a corrupted public conscience are incompatible with freedom." Patrick Henry

"It is when people forget God that tyrants forge their chains." Patrick Henry

"Religion is the only solid basis of good morals; therefore education should teach the precepts of religion, and the duties of man toward God." Gouverneur Morris

"By removing the Bible from schools we would be wasting so much time and money in punishing criminals and so little pains to prevent crime. Take the Bible out of our schools and there would be an explosion in crime." Benjamin Rush

"If thou wouldst rule well, thou must rule for God, and to do that, thou must be ruled by him....Those who will not be governed by God will be ruled by tyrants." William Penn

These are not quotes that seem to support a libertarian agenda of Anti-Christian Ammorality.

I think my post may have upset you by showing you how closely the libertarian platform on social issues mirrors the communist goals for destroying America.

The fact is Libertarians are not for smaller government. I can point out a good example for you. Lets take a look at the homosexual marriage issue.

The libertarians have no problem with 1 state forcing it's standards on the rest of the 49 states. They have no problem with the FEDERAL courts being used as agents to FORCE that change. Libertarians are hypocrites. To hear them say that they are the party of "small government" is laughable. They will use the full force and power of the FEDERAL Government and the FEDERAL courts when it suits their underlying ammoral agenda. Then they will sit back and claim that anyone who opposes them also supports "Big Government."

They have been quite effective in silencing many conservatives with this propaganda tactic.

The fact remains that libertarians have no problem with a small minority in a small state forcing it's values on the entire nation through the Federal Court system, in a manner that is completely incompatable with the founders intent.

The simple fact that the libertarians are Ok with the idea of an Activist Court inventing a new right out of the blue with no basis in law, no basis in common sense and no basis in the Constitution, Shows that they do not support limited Government at all.

The libertarians support perversion and immorality, not limited government.

To even suggest that John Adams intended for Homosexuals to be married when he wrote the Constitution of Massachusetts is laughable. Anyone seriously suggesting such nonsense probably needs to quite smoking the crack.

The libertarians will line up lock step behind activist judges inventing new rights when it suits their agenda, then they will sit back and claim that it is "Big Government" to oppose this garbage.

Problem is if you can invent a right out of thin air, then you can take away a right just as easily. We shouldn't be needing a Constitutional Amendment to BAN sodomite marriage, the perverts should have to propose an amendment CALLING for it. Not one of the Founders intended for marriage to be open to degenerate sodomites. In the entire history of our nation to just bring up something so stupid would have gotten you laughed out of any conversation now look where we are.

The libertarians are so bent on destroying society's morality and pushing an AMMORAL code on everyone else, that they cannot even see how pro big government they really are. IF it suits their agenda.

TRUE liberty is not LICENSE.

And what is this liberty which must lie in the hearts of men and women? It is not the ruthless, the unbridled will; it is not freedom to do as one likes. That is the denial of liberty, and leads straight to its overthrow. A society in which men recognize no check upon their freedom soon becomes a society where freedom is the possession of only a savage few; as we have learned to our sorrow. Judge Learned Hand.

22 posted on 02/18/2004 6:12:52 PM PST by johnmorris886
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To: tpaine
How typical. You two blabber on about the evils of socialism while you attack its greatist enemies, american libertarians.

What are you talking about I like libertarians, if they have a decent leader I would support them. Their political platform is amazing.

I don't know where you got this idea from, but it wasn't from me.

23 posted on 02/18/2004 6:32:29 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: Paul C. Jesup; johnmorris886
johnmorris886 wrote:
Below are some of the Communist Goals for destroying America (published way back in the 60's) look how closely they mirror the libertarian/liberal agenda today


_______________________________________



Paul C. Jesup wrote:
Socialism/Communism is like and infection that must be cut out. Some people think that the infection is so deep that the only thing that MIGHT be able to cure it is Global Nuclear War that will bomb to the human race as a whole back to the time of the city states.


_______________________________________


How typical. You two blabber on about the evils of socialism while you attack its greatest enemies, american libertarians.
Daft.
21 tpaine

_______________________________________


What are you talking about I like libertarians, if they have a decent leader I would support them. Their political platform is amazing.
I don't know where you got this idea from, but it wasn't from me.






Just above johnmorris886 was bashing libertarians as commie socialists, and you posted in agreement, seemed to me..
Feel free to revise & extend your remarks to him, explaining how he is wrong about libertarians.
24 posted on 02/18/2004 7:14:49 PM PST by tpaine (I'm trying to be 'Mr Nice Guy', but the U.S. Constitution defines conservatism; - not the GOP. .)
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To: tpaine
So I missed the libertarian word in his post.
25 posted on 02/18/2004 7:16:14 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: Paul C. Jesup
Bad on you..
26 posted on 02/18/2004 7:17:29 PM PST by tpaine (I'm trying to be 'Mr Nice Guy', but the U.S. Constitution defines conservatism; - not the GOP. .)
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To: tpaine
Well, I am not the one going nuclear over it. Just let it go.
27 posted on 02/18/2004 7:20:12 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: johnmorris886; Paul C. Jesup

Paul C. Jesup wrote: Well, I am not the one going nuclear over it.

_____________________________________

Didn't say you were..

Your boy john88 is doing that, and I challenge him.. -- Find the commie socialism in this librertarian position.

Address:http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-rlc/721810/posts
28 posted on 02/18/2004 7:36:55 PM PST by tpaine (I'm trying to be 'Mr Nice Guy', but the U.S. Constitution defines conservatism; - not the GOP. .)
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To: I got the rope
Looks like their daughters are getting a Girls Gone Wild party on Daddy's dime.
29 posted on 02/18/2004 7:46:53 PM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: tpaine
Since you seem to be more rational than your libertarian partner, I will attempt to have a discussion with you.

First, Respectfully, the list that you posted is not the official libertarian party platform. The list that I posted underneath the communist goals is taken word for word from the libertarian party platform.

Secondly On the list you posted It stated "Judges have *no* authority to make new law."

Do you agree with this statement, and if so what is your position on the MA Supreme Judicial Court inventing new law out of the blue and ordering the State Legislature to enact sodomite marriage?

What is your position on the United States Supreme Court inventing new law and overturning sodomy statutes of individual states?

What is your position on the United States Supreme Court inventing new law and making legal the murder of unborn children?

30 posted on 02/18/2004 8:11:47 PM PST by johnmorris886
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To: johnmorris886
Since you seem to be more rational than your libertarian partner, I will attempt to have a discussion with you.

Having read you posts here, I find your own rationality is suspect.. But sure, we can try..

First, Respectfully, the list that you posted is not the official libertarian party platform. The list that I posted underneath the communist goals is taken word for word from the libertarian party platform.

So what? I consider american libertarians as those supporting our constitution. I don't care what the big 'L' party plank says.

Secondly On the list you posted It stated "Judges have *no* authority to make new law." Do you agree with this statement, and if so what is your position on the MA Supreme Judicial Court inventing new law out of the blue and ordering the State Legislature to enact sodomite marriage?

Did they? I'm positive they do not have that power.

What is your position on the United States Supreme Court inventing new law and overturning sodomy statutes of individual states?

That they did not do so. They simply overturned the verdict in that case, as it violated the individual rights of the queers..

What is your position on the United States Supreme Court inventing new law and making legal the murder of unborn children?

That they did not do so.. They simply overturned the verdict in that case, as it violated the individual rights of the mother..

31 posted on 02/18/2004 8:40:29 PM PST by tpaine (I'm trying to be 'Mr Nice Guy', but the U.S. Constitution defines conservatism; - not the GOP. .)
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To: tpaine
Find the commie socialism in this librertarian position.

The closest thing I can think of on the libertarian platform is open immigration, but that it not really true because they don't want the immigrants on welfare and/or other social programs, or anyone else for that matter.

32 posted on 02/18/2004 8:44:03 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: tpaine
Did they? I'm positive they do not have that power.

Yep, the 4 Activist Judges gave the Legislature 180 days to bring the statutes in line with their opinion.

The MA Supreme Judicial Court had no precent, no law, nothing other than their own activism for making the decision that they did. In fact they had to quote a Canadian Court Decision as precedent because never in the History of this nation has the idea of sodomite marriage been thought of as legal. No one can seriously say that it was the intent of John Adams (who wrote the MA Constitution) To allow sodomites to marry.

That they did not do so. They simply overturned the verdict in that case, as it violated the individual rights of the queers..

Once again there was no basis for the courts decision. Just 17 years prior the same court had ruled that: "The Constitution does not confer a fundamental right upon homosexuals to engage in sodomy. None of the fundamental rights announced in this Court's prior cases involving family relationships, marriage, or procreation bear any resemblance to the right asserted in this case. And any claim that those cases stand for the proposition that any kind of private sexual conduct between consenting adults is constitutionally insulated from state proscription is unsupportable.

At the founding of our nation Every single state had laws banning sodomy. Once again no one seriously considered that the Constitution protected sodomy. The Same men that wrote the Constitution BANNED sodomy and made it a very serious crime.

That they did not do so.. They simply overturned the verdict in that case, as it violated the individual rights of the mother..

Once again there was no basis for the Court's decision in law. Nothing. The Founding Fathers never intended for a FEDERAL court to tell individual states what they could and could not do.

It seems that my take on libertarians was correct. You seem to have no problem with the United States Supreme Court using it's FEDERAL power to force individual states to confirm to a certain social position. How this can be called "small government" is beyond me.

The Founders never intended for any branch of the FEDERAL government to force individual states to do anything.

In fact the USSC back in 1833 found that:

The constitution was ordained and established by the people of the United States for themselves, for their own government, and not for the government of the individual states. Each state established a constitution for itself, and in that constitution, provided such limitations and restrictions on the powers of its particular government, as its judgment dictated.

The counsel for the plaintiff in error insists, that the constitution was intended to secure the people of the several states against the undue exercise of power by their respective state governments; as well as against that which might be attempted by their general government.

Had the people of the several states, or any of them, required changes in their constitutions; had they required additional safe-guards to liberty from the apprehended encroachments of their particular governments; the remedy was in their own hands, and could have been applied by themselves. A [32 U.S. 243, 250] convention could have been assembled by the discontented state, and the required improvements could have been made by itself. The unwieldy and cumbrous machinery of procuring a recommendation from two-thirds of congress, and the assent of three-fourths of their sister states, could never have occurred to any human being, as a mode of doing that which might be effected by the state itself. Had the framers of these amendments intended them to be limitations on the powers of the state governments, they would have imitated the framers of the original constitution, and have expressed that intention. Had congress engaged in the extraordinary occupation of improving the constitutions of the several states, by affording the people additional protection from the exercise of power by their own governments, in matters which concerned themselves alone, they would have declared this purpose in plain and intelligible language.

We are of opinion, that the provision in the fifth amendment to the constitution, declaring that private property shall not be taken for public use, without just compensation, is intended solely as a limitation on the exercise of power by the [32 U.S. 243, 251] government of the United States, and is not applicable to the legislation of the states.

33 posted on 02/18/2004 9:11:05 PM PST by johnmorris886 (It is ordained in the eternal constitution of things that men of intemperate minds cannot he free.)
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To: johnmorris886
Since you seem to be more rational than your libertarian partner, I will attempt to have a discussion with you.

Having read you posts here, I find your own rationality is suspect.. But sure, we can try..

First, Respectfully, the list that you posted is not the official libertarian party platform. The list that I posted underneath the communist goals is taken word for word from the libertarian party platform.

So what? I consider american libertarians as those supporting our constitution. I don't care what the big 'L' party plank says.

Secondly On the list you posted It stated "Judges have *no* authority to make new law." Do you agree with this statement, and if so what is your position on the MA Supreme Judicial Court inventing new law out of the blue and ordering the State Legislature to enact sodomite marriage?

Did they? I'm positive they do not have that power.

Yep, the 4 Activist Judges gave the Legislature 180 days to bring the statutes in line with their opinion.

And then what? Will they send in the bailiffs?

The MA Supreme Judicial Court had no precent, no law, nothing other than their own activism for making the decision that they did. In fact they had to quote a Canadian Court Decision as precedent because never in the History of this nation has the idea of sodomite marriage been thought of as legal. No one can seriously say that it was the intent of John Adams (who wrote the MA Constitution) To allow sodomites to marry.

BIG deal. Get over it..

_________________________________________

What is your position on the United States Supreme Court inventing new law and overturning sodomy statutes of individual states?

That they did not do so. They simply overturned the verdict in that case, as it violated the individual rights of the queers..

Once again there was no basis for the courts decision.

Not true.. They cited their basis. Read the case.

Just 17 years prior the same court had ruled that: "The Constitution does not confer a fundamental right upon homosexuals to engage in sodomy. None of the fundamental rights announced in this Court's prior cases involving family relationships, marriage, or procreation bear any resemblance to the right asserted in this case. And any claim that those cases stand for the proposition that any kind of private sexual conduct between consenting adults is constitutionally insulated from state proscription is unsupportable. At the founding of our nation Every single state had laws banning sodomy. Once again no one seriously considered that the Constitution protected sodomy. The Same men that wrote the Constitution BANNED sodomy and made it a very serious crime.

Yep, common law of the day had many laws against sin & sodomy. And against many of our other individual rights, -- all long since struck down as unconstitutional.. -- You want the return of autocratic rule?

-------------------------------------

What is your position on the United States Supreme Court inventing new law and making legal the murder of unborn children?

That they did not do so.. They simply overturned the verdict in that case, as it violated the individual rights of the mother..

Once again there was no basis for the Court's decision in law. Nothing.

Wrong again. The court cited their basis. Read the case.

The Founding Fathers never intended for a FEDERAL court to tell individual states what they could and could not do.

Read Art. VI.. The States are bound to obey the Law of the Land.

It seems that my take on libertarians was correct. You seem to have no problem with the United States Supreme Court using it's FEDERAL power to force individual states to confirm to a certain social position.

The US Constitution 'forces' states to conform. ALL officials swear to honor it in their oaths of office.
It seems my take on you was quite correct. You are as irrational about our constitution as you are about libertarians.

How this can be called "small government" is beyond me. The Founders never intended for any branch of the FEDERAL government to force individual states to do anything. In fact the USSC back in 1833 found that: --

'Barron' and misguided 'states rights' movement it fostered was settled by a bloody civil war, and the 14th amendment..

Give it up, -- you anti-constitutionalists lost.

34 posted on 02/18/2004 10:00:25 PM PST by tpaine (I'm trying to be 'Mr Nice Guy', but the U.S. Constitution defines conservatism; - not the GOP. .)
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To: johnmorris886
Actually on this board and other boards that I post on most libertarians will be very quick to discredit the founding fathers as being "Slave Owners" "Moralists" "Archaic" ect... When I point out the truth about the founders.

>I have yet to see such a thing. Maybe it is because you impute intentions to the founders government that the libertarians find unsupported. The founding fathers WERE slave owners and moralists, and were certainly archaic, in the sense that they aren't modern men. But none of those things runs down the vision they crafted. What's run it down has been interventionists like yourself running the government.

The founders were not libertarian at all. The Founding Fathers believed in the ideology of Edmund Burke who stated that liberty must be connected with order or else it becomes License, which is not freedom at all.

>You can quote Burke all you like, but I'm not going to sit there and just go, "Oh, well then. Burke was quoted. John Morris must be right about the founders. They must be theocrats like him."

>Certainly, the founders were more religious for the most part. But they were also highly interested in a tolerant country that didn't allow government to get involved in religion. That schools were more religious back then is in large part because there weren't other kinds of schools, and there weren't other kinds of religions!

>But you quote Burke as if he supports your theocratic dreams. Not one of these quotes actually says anything about him being for government limiting people in the way you want. Burke is pro-liberty, and leaves it to the people to tinker with just how much advantage they take of that liberty and just how much liberty is allowed. That doesn't bode well for your theocratic notion, since the people tend to disagree with them.

This ideology is opposite of what the libertarians stand for.

>Saying the quote supports you doesn't make it so.

Libertarians want everyone to be free to do whatever they want. This is the defintion of LICENSE not LIBERTY.

>I don't think that's the case at all. Libertarians want people to be free to do what they want as long as it doesn't harm others. Seems to me that's very different from the lie you're telling.

I pointed out some of the goals of the communists to achieve the destruction of America. Your response shows how much it hurts. You see most conservatives have much more in common with the Founding Fathers than modern libertarians.

>I responded showing that your comparison doesn't hold water. Your comments only 'hurt' because you lied about libertarians being remotely like communists. The only thing theocrats like you have in common with the founding fathers is that they were archaic compared to today because they lived in the past literally, while you do it figuratively.

The Founders had no qualms banning sodomy, adultery, sex outside of marriage, blasphemy, pornography and many other vices...

>And? They also didn't ban indentured servitude and women didn't get to expose their calves. They were HUMAN. They weren't perfect. They knew that, while you refuse to accept it. They knew societal norms and needs might change. Laws and the interpretation of some laws have changed with them. There is no Constitutional provision saying 'we must have theocratic approval for all changes in Constitutional interpretation.'

The Founders had no qualms banning...vices that destroy society and thereby limit freedom.

>Vices limit freedom? This is where you apply that interesting 'logic,' where up is down, black is white, and good is bad. Okay. Let's be clear here: indulging vice is extreme application of freedom, but it still is freedom.

>But based on your wonderful 'logic,' that they're destroying society and thus destroying freedom, vices are only destroying freedom in that they are destroying some imaginary society that YOU perceive as the ideal. The Founders certainly had their perception of the ideal. I have my perception thereof. But your issue is not with me. It's with the people you cannot sway without having the government under your control.

>If you want 'Leave it to Beaver' back on TV and women wearing burkhas and cooking you dinner, get more of your type elected and appointed or lessen the interpretive ability of judges under law as you put your ayatollahs in place. I won't be happy with the results, probably, because your Puritan ethics will likely result in huge expenses on police and jails (to a degree, they already do), but you'll have basically abided by the Constitution in so doing. What frosts you about the whole thing is that what you want is just not what society wants, Wally, and you know you can't get it Constitutionally any more.

They understood that when a society's morality is destroyed that the people become corrupt and those corrupt people then proceed to limit freedom.

>Like, say, if they became internationally powerful and that made them want more power and to preserve that power and thus eager to concentrate more power in the hands of their government? Corrupt has lots of interpretations. What qualifies as limits on freedom can be subject to differing interpretations, too.

Please tell me how you and modern libertarians are more enlightened than the following men [John Adams, Sir William Blackstone, Patrick Henry, Gouverneur Morris, Benjamin Rush, William Penn].

>Obviously, your hero worship of these humans is over the top. I don't have to compare my 'enlightenment' to theirs to be right. You've put up a barrier to try to make me look foolish, but I ain't the fool in this debate. And obviously, I can't speak to the 'enlightenment' of other libertarians.

But I can speak to a major difference between these dead white males and me. In a nutshell, these people you cite would be stunned with the realities of modern life. I can deal with it easily. For example, they would tell you that man can't fly. I know he can and does on a daily basis. In that sense, they are unenlightened in comparison.

Your challenge is a double-edged sword. You want me to run them down so that you can claim I hate the founders; you want me to say they're perfect and NOT run them down so that you can say you're right. I will do neither, since you are wrong to claim authority when even these men would have accepted the authority of the American voters over their government, and did, and you are wrong when you say they would support your theocratic dreams.

These are not quotes that seem to support a libertarian agenda of Anti-Christian Ammorality.

>Again, you try to drag in the notion that libertarians are Anti-Christian. If you want to claim that we're Anti-Christian you have to show that a state that isn't imposing Christian precepts is therefore ANTI-Christian. But you don't understand the difference.

>God allows free will. He is also omnipotent and omniscient. He is good. Why then would he allow humans to become bad? Wouldn't that make him bad, under your logic?

>Answer: yes. We probably should stop that whole believing in Him thing, according to you. He's EVIL! [sarcasm]

I think my post may have upset you by showing you how closely the libertarian platform on social issues mirrors the communist goals for destroying America.

>No, that you spew ad hominems and think that makes you a great debater, even while you refuse to even respond to my comments (other than plopping down more quotes from authorities that you THINK support you here) doesn't upset me. There are lots of jackasses like you. What upsets me is you might breed.

The fact is Libertarians are not for smaller government.

>BWAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHAHA! I couldn't let that pass without a big belly laugh.

I can point out a good example for you. Lets take a look at the homosexual marriage issue. The libertarians have no problem with 1 state forcing it's standards on the rest of the 49 states.

>I do. Read my Freeper home page. I'm for states' rights.

They have no problem with the FEDERAL courts being used as agents to FORCE that change.

>I do, but I can't see how you have problems with the notion of feds being used, theocrat. Constitutionally, the federal courts can. People like you signed it, gave them power, and then they used it to give themselves more power via the supremacy clause. If we the people had never signed on to that document, it wouldn't be an issue. But well-intentioned people like you ran the government and the power that document concentrates resulted in the liberties it purported to guarantee being abrogated for exigency's sake.

Libertarians are hypocrites. To hear them say that they are the party of "small government" is laughable.

>Theocrats like you are jackasses. At least I have support for my argument.

They will use the full force and power of the FEDERAL Government and the FEDERAL courts when it suits their underlying ammoral agenda. Then they will sit back and claim that anyone who opposes them also supports "Big Government."

>First, it's spelled 'amoral.' And I don't know any libertarians who have any such agenda, except in the eyes of jackasses like you who want a theocracy and claim that anyone who doesn't is amoral.

>Second, let's take a look at what 'most libertarians support.' Your imagined situation is fanciful but just that, imagined.

>Libertarians want the government out of the marriage business in the first place. Marriage isn't something government should be involved with at all. The marital vows should be between a man and a woman and God if they want, in my view, not between man, woman, and the feds or state or any other combination thereof. As long as government is involved with anything, and forces everyone to pay for it, the people who do will want to be entitled to share in its benefits and will eventually achieve that goal. Whether that makes sense or not on a Constitutional basis will only be problematic if the extension of the law in these areas was Constitutional to begin with. You refuse to accept that under theocrat guidance the feds stuck their nose in and caused this problem. Live with the results.

They have been quite effective in silencing many conservatives with this propaganda tactic.

>Because you ARE for big government, and it just demonstrates that you want government to continue to be involved there, just not for groups you find abhorrent.

The fact remains that libertarians have no problem with a small minority in a small state forcing it's values on the entire nation through the Federal Court system, in a manner that is completely incompatable with the founders intent.

>Wrong. Libertarians would generally prefer that states stayed the hell out of other states' business, and that government stay the hell out of people's lives and marriages, but that the federal government is already involved because jackasses like you changed the tax code to suit your own preferences means it's been benefitting you and people like you. Government benefits should devolve to all without jumping through hoops like the convoluted laws your buddies in Congress generate or avoiding the Constitution by giving benefits to preferred classes. There should never have been tinkering with the tax code to benefit married people in the first place. We wouldn't have this problem federally if it weren't there because of theocrats like you, and we wouldn't have lost almost all the states' rights if it weren't for theocrats like you, either. So don't try pinning it on the only folks out there still against Leviathan, jackass.

The simple fact that the libertarians are Ok with the idea of an Activist Court inventing a new right out of the blue with no basis in law, no basis in common sense and no basis in the Constitution, Shows that they do not support limited Government at all.

>God 'invents rights' for man. Ruling that government does NOT have a right to do something IS limiting government. That government is forced to equally treat everyone is limiting its power of discretion, jackass. That the Bill of Rights doesn't even begin to list all the rights humans have was evident to the Founders. They expected 'new rights' to be invented. Try reading it.

>And yes, I'm all for an activist court. Of course, I'm for it restricting government to its Constitutional requirements. Meanwhile, you'd be screaming your head off if the government took away dependent tax credits.

The libertarians support perversion and immorality, not limited government.

>No, libertarians just support government not defining perversion and immorality when it isn't part of any Constitutional mandate. Meanwhile, jackasses like you truly support perversion and immorality. You would have the words of the founders twisted to allow federal intervention into every sphere in an attempt to expand your perception of Christianity into public policy. This would be good if you believed in Christ other than as a dead man you can rally around, but you Pharisees pay no heed to his words at all.

To even suggest that John Adams intended for Homosexuals to be married when he wrote the Constitution of Massachusetts is laughable. Anyone seriously suggesting such nonsense probably needs to quite smoking the crack.

>Who said that he did? To even suggest that someone said anything of the sort is just throwing up a straw man, and and anyone seriously expecting to get away with that is just a jackass.

The libertarians will line up lock step behind activist judges inventing new rights when it suits their agenda, then they will sit back and claim that it is "Big Government" to oppose this garbage.

>As will conservatives, but then you prefer to imagine that history does not exist in any way that doesn't back you up. And again with the 'inventing new rights.' Man has all the rights God has given.

Problem is if you can invent a right out of thin air, then you can take away a right just as easily.

>That's right--which is why government shouldn't be involved at all, Pharisee.

We shouldn't be needing a Constitutional Amendment to BAN sodomite marriage, the perverts should have to propose an amendment CALLING for it. Not one of the Founders intended for marriage to be open to degenerate sodomites.

>BWAHAHAHAHAAHAHA. Too bad your tinkering with the Constitution bit you on the ass there, Pharisee.

In the entire history of our nation to just bring up something so stupid would have gotten you laughed out of any conversation now look where we are.

>Well, I think probably two years ago it wouldn't have. Or five. Or ten. Of course, I may run with a crowd who's actually willing to acknowledge that humanity has flaws and that there are gays alive, mostly because of repression and abuse heaped on them by people like you. Your crowd denies that there are gays, all the while creating them. And that you couldn't talk about homosexuality didn't mean that it was wrong or evil in everyone's opinion. Just that people like you ran the societal show. Shoe's on the other foot, must be a real bitch.

The libertarians are so bent on destroying society's morality and pushing an AMMORAL code on everyone else, that they cannot even see how pro big government they really are. IF it suits their agenda.

>Again, it's 'amoral,' and again, I haven't seen anyone forcing you to be gay or even be tolerant of gays personally. You really are projecting.

TRUE liberty is not LICENSE.

>True cats aren't dogs. Duh. We've been over this.

And what is this liberty which must lie in the hearts of men and women? It is not the ruthless, the unbridled will; it is not freedom to do as one likes. That is the denial of liberty, and leads straight to its overthrow. A society in which men recognize no check upon their freedom soon becomes a society where freedom is the possession of only a savage few; as we have learned to our sorrow. Judge Learned Hand.

>Hand also said:

"Our dangers are not from the outrageous but from the conforming, from those, the mass of us, who take their virtues and their tastes, like their shirts and their furniture, from the limited patterns which the markets offer."

>Go back to patting yourself on the back for being such a good man, Pharisee.
35 posted on 02/19/2004 6:53:34 PM PST by LibertarianInExile (THIS TAGLINE VETTED BY THE TSA...it was sharp and had a point before they got to it.)
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To: tpaine
RE: the states' rights arguments, I am not a big fan of federal intervention in states myself. I don't disagree with some of the results of their rulings, but I disagree with the notions that their rulings extending federal power over states engendered.

I think we thus diverge. Do you not agree that the extension of the federal power over the states was a major impetus for the expansion of federal law? I think its results have not been positive and while I agree it's a settled issue, I would prefer it hadn't been settled in this way.

For once, it seems, we have an honest difference of opinion. I'll relish this--a debate that is reasoned and respectful, unlike the FR normal name-calling and talking points we've come to expect from our normal bot 'debating' partners.
36 posted on 02/19/2004 7:01:12 PM PST by LibertarianInExile (THIS TAGLINE VETTED BY THE TSA...it was sharp and had a point before they got to it.)
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To: LibertarianInExile
Where do we diverge?

-- You're asking questions wherein you seem to assume I have certain positions..
Can you reframe them to include examples of what I've written that you disagree with?
37 posted on 02/19/2004 7:46:58 PM PST by tpaine (I'm trying to be 'Mr Nice Guy', but the U.S. Constitution defines conservatism; - not the GOP. .)
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To: tpaine
>Sorry about that. I was pleased to see you're taking on Mr. Morris, who is truly a jackass. I was curious as to our divergent opinions here:

The US Constitution 'forces' states to conform. ALL officials swear to honor it in their oaths of office. It seems my take on you was quite correct. You are as irrational about our constitution as you are about libertarians.

>I don't think that the Constitution forced any states to conform except in very limited circumstances, and I don't believe that the Supreme Court was intended to have the role that Marshall pushed it into.

>And here:

'Barron' and misguided 'states rights' movement it fostered was settled by a bloody civil war, and the 14th amendment. Give it up, -- you anti-constitutionalists lost.

>I am 100% grade-A pro-Constitutionalist, in that I think that the Constitution should be a limiting document and speaks in plain language that has been consistently misinterpreted. But I do think that the Constitution doesn't speak to secession, and I think that before the Constitution, the States had the right to nullify any acts by the unifying government. So I think the States should have had the same rights after the Constitution was ratified as well.

>That the cause was lost doesn't mean that they were wrong about the limitations on the power of the federal government. It's just that the wrong guys won, and ever since, federal intervention in all sorts of unConstitutional spheres has been expanding as a direct result.
38 posted on 02/20/2004 9:10:37 AM PST by LibertarianInExile (THIS TAGLINE VETTED BY THE TSA...it was sharp and had a point before they got to it.)
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To: LibertarianInExile
The US Constitution 'forces' states to conform. ALL officials swear to honor it in their oaths of office.

I don't think that the Constitution forced any states to conform except in very limited circumstances,

Read the supemacy clause, Art VI.. All States are bound by our "Law of the Land" is pretty forceful language.

and I don't believe that the Supreme Court was intended to have the role that Marshall pushed it into.

He pushed no one. The role of the USSC is part of our separations of power doctrine. The three branches are supposedly roughly equal in powers.
____________________________________

'Barron' and misguided 'states rights' movement it fostered was settled by a bloody civil war, and the 14th amendment.

I am 100% grade-A pro-Constitutionalist, in that I think that the Constitution should be a limiting document and speaks in plain language that has been consistently misinterpreted. But I do think that the Constitution doesn't speak to secession, and I think that before the Constitution, the States had the right to nullify any acts by the unifying government.
So I think the States should have had the same rights after the Constitution was ratified as well.

Sorry, that's not the way it worked. The people of the states gave up some of their power to benefit from union under our constitution.
They can't change that decision [nullify acts] without amendment.

That the cause was lost doesn't mean that they were wrong about the limitations on the power of the federal government.

Who said limiting fed power is wrong? Not me..

It's just that the wrong guys won, and ever since, federal intervention in all sorts of unConstitutional spheres has been expanding as a direct result.

The civil war did not change the power structure that much, imo..
I see the major change coming at the turn of the century, when both parties started to support socialistic programs..
Party politics have ruled both fed & state since then, and socialism has won.

The 'states rights' movement is wrongly blaming constitutionalism for our political socialism, imo.
They should be blaming republocratic 'two party' politics.

39 posted on 02/20/2004 10:14:45 AM PST by tpaine (I'm trying to be 'Mr Nice Guy', but the U.S. Constitution defines conservatism; - not the GOP. .)
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To: presidio9; *Homosexual Agenda; EdReform; scripter; little jeremiah
LUX ET PERVERSION

40 posted on 02/22/2004 12:36:55 AM PST by ppaul
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