Quote:*gasp!*
Well, I'm in favor of decapitating as many cats as possible, and Noah should have tossed both cats overboard (as well as swatted both flies), but on your broader point, I think that goes to the values question I raised in my "another approach" comment.
Quote:I have to agree with you that more harm is done by bad religion. But utilitarian arguments such as this are only part of the picture. The greatest good is important, but there are many other factors to consider as well. In any event, I do favor a theocracy, specifically one in which King Jesus turns over the kingdom to his Father. Maranatha! At any rate, it seems to me that the best human approximation of the reign of God is not a democracy or a republic. I would prefer a righteous theocratic monarchy to what we have now.
I'm not a pure libertarian though I do have tendencies in that direction, and I place a high value on individual autonomy. So if somebody really wants to be tortured to death with dull knives, I would not accommodate him myself but I'm not sure I'd prosecute a volunteer who stepped forward. After all, we allow people to go to churches whose theology is the spiritual equivalent of being tortured to death with dull knives (and I would argue the stakes are higher since such churches destroy souls and spirits whereas the guy with the actual dull knife only destroys the body). I would argue that if you are a theocrat who wants to make God's law the law of the land that euthanasia does far less social harm than does Mormonism so you'd be better off going after the Mormons..
Quote:I think you mean "should be to get out of the way," not "is." I don't think this is a scripturally defensible picture of human government's obligations.
But again, this really comes down to a clash of premises. I start with the premise that the government's primary objective is get out of the way. You don't.
