Quote:
Originally Posted by Hybrid247
 I was talking about the crucifix in the legislature.
|
You seemed to be talking about crosses in general.
If you admit a cross isn't automatically an "active" Christian symbol, then we're on the same page (and the centenarian decoration on the wall, put there by one of our forebears and most prominent PMs, can continue to be passive heritage decoration).
The flag, the Mount Royal cross, the Duplessis crucifix, all the crosses that are part of the brickwork and granitework in our public schools and public hospitals, all of those crosses are passive heritage items nowadays. Which is why no one (except trolls) has a problem with them not going the way of the Bamiyan Buddhas, despite state secularism.
Quote:
Lio, I'm not sure why you think bringing up false equivalencies is helping your position here. It seems to me that you are not debating in good faith and are only interested trying to poopoo every point that I've made by taking damn near everything out of context.
Not going to respond to you if that's how you want to go about discussing this.
|
?
It's not a false equivalency at all. Your argument was that it's supposedly not a problem because only a tiny minority do it. That argument obviously cannot work in society, it's a slippery slope.
At ToxiK pointed out, if we act early and nip it in the bud while only "a tiny minority" is affected, we're blamed because it's apparently not (yet) a problem so there's apparently no need to act yet, and if we wait until it's a bigger problem, then we're blamed because we're now affecting a much less tiny minority.
The former of the two makes more sense -- if we know it's a problem, which we do, then why wait idly until it's become a bigger one? Makes no sense at all. As soon as the problem is identified as such (by both 1) a resounding majority of the people and 2) by our democratically-elected, legitimate government) then it's ideal to just address it right away.