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| Religion Forum Index » Ásatrú Forum » Student punished for spaghetti beliefs... |
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| scottlowther at (no spam) ix.netcom.com... |
Posted: Wed Sep 30, 2009 9:11 am |
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Snerk.
http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/article.html?in_article_id=43272&in_page_id=2
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A student has been suspended from school in America for coming to
class dressed as a pirate.
But the disciplinary action has provoked controversy – because the
student says that the ban violates his rights, as the pirate costume
is part of his religion.
Bryan Killian says that he follows the Pastafarian religion, and that
as a crucial part of his faith, he must wear 'full pirate regalia' as
prescribed in the holy texts of Pastafarianism.
" |
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| scottlowther at (no spam) ix.netcom.com... |
Posted: Wed Sep 30, 2009 6:17 pm |
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On Sep 30, 9:05 pm, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bru... at (no spam) gmail.com>
wrote:
Quote: scottlowt... at (no spam) ix.netcom.com wrote:
Snerk.
http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/article.html?in_article_id=43272&in_page....
"
A student has been suspended from school in America for coming to
class dressed as a pirate.
But the disciplinary action has provoked controversy – because the
student says that the ban violates his rights, as the pirate costume
is part of his religion.
Bryan Killian says that he follows the Pastafarian religion, and that
as a crucial part of his faith, he must wear 'full pirate regalia' as
prescribed in the holy texts of Pastafarianism.
"
Maybe the school should hold him to that.
And hold every student who professes a religious belief to their
expressed religious beliefs. it'll be fun to see how the school
decides to enforce Sharia on any Muslims students. It'd be
entertaining to see how they'd respond to an Asatruar student who
shows up with a spear and a sword.
Here's a thought: how about treat everyone by the *same* set of rules?
If "pirate regalia" is beyold the pale for this school, imagine what
they'd think of a burkha.
This sort of thing is *exactly* what Pastafarianism is all about. The
school is making the FSM's point for it. |
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| Dirk Bruere at NeoPax... |
Posted: Wed Sep 30, 2009 9:05 pm |
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| Dirk Bruere at NeoPax... |
Posted: Wed Sep 30, 2009 10:50 pm |
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Guest
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scottlowther at (no spam) ix.netcom.com wrote:
Quote: On Sep 30, 9:05 pm, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bru... at (no spam) gmail.com
wrote:
scottlowt... at (no spam) ix.netcom.com wrote:
Snerk.
http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/article.html?in_article_id=43272&in_page...
"
A student has been suspended from school in America for coming to
class dressed as a pirate.
But the disciplinary action has provoked controversy – because the
student says that the ban violates his rights, as the pirate costume
is part of his religion.
Bryan Killian says that he follows the Pastafarian religion, and that
as a crucial part of his faith, he must wear 'full pirate regalia' as
prescribed in the holy texts of Pastafarianism.
"
Maybe the school should hold him to that.
And hold every student who professes a religious belief to their
expressed religious beliefs. it'll be fun to see how the school
decides to enforce Sharia on any Muslims students. It'd be
entertaining to see how they'd respond to an Asatruar student who
shows up with a spear and a sword.
Here's a thought: how about treat everyone by the *same* set of rules?
If "pirate regalia" is beyold the pale for this school, imagine what
they'd think of a burkha.
This sort of thing is *exactly* what Pastafarianism is all about. The
school is making the FSM's point for it.
Actually, everyone should be judged by, and held accountable to, their
religious/ethical beliefs. The problem is that right now we do not have
a sufficiently technically advanced society to be able to do so.
FFF
Dirk
http://www.transcendence.me.uk/ - Transcendence UK
http://www.theconsensus.org/ - A UK political party
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/onetribe - Occult Talk Show |
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| scottlowther at (no spam) ix.netcom.com... |
Posted: Thu Oct 01, 2009 6:03 am |
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On Sep 30, 10:50 pm, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bru... at (no spam) gmail.com>
wrote:
Quote: Actually, everyone should be judged by, and held accountable to, their
religious/ethical beliefs.
Ummm... huh. So if one guy believes in nonviolence due to his
religion, and the other guy believes in killing the infidels due to
his different religion, then a murder can take place and since that
murder was part of the one guys religion, there'll be no negative
judgement against him?
Sheesh. If your point of view is common in Europe, it's no wonder that
Europe will soon be a historical footnote. |
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| root... |
Posted: Thu Oct 01, 2009 9:51 am |
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On 1 Oct, 05:50, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bru... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: scottlowt... at (no spam) ix.netcom.com wrote:
On Sep 30, 9:05 pm, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bru... at (no spam) gmail.com
wrote:
scottlowt... at (no spam) ix.netcom.com wrote:
Snerk.
http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/article.html?in_article_id=43272&in_page...
"
A student has been suspended from school in America for coming to
class dressed as a pirate.
But the disciplinary action has provoked controversy – because the
student says that the ban violates his rights, as the pirate costume
is part of his religion.
Bryan Killian says that he follows the Pastafarian religion, and that
as a crucial part of his faith, he must wear 'full pirate regalia' as
prescribed in the holy texts of Pastafarianism.
"
Maybe the school should hold him to that.
And hold every student who professes a religious belief to their
expressed religious beliefs. it'll be fun to see how the school
decides to enforce Sharia on any Muslims students. It'd be
entertaining to see how they'd respond to an Asatruar student who
shows up with a spear and a sword.
Here's a thought: how about treat everyone by the *same* set of rules?
If "pirate regalia" is beyold the pale for this school, imagine what
they'd think of a burkha.
This sort of thing is *exactly* what Pastafarianism is all about. The
school is making the FSM's point for it.
Actually, everyone should be judged by, and held accountable to, their
religious/ethical beliefs. The problem is that right now we do not have
a sufficiently technically advanced society to be able to do so.
I'd always thought that each person judges others on their merits and
flaws, on a case by case basis, unless it is more convenient to do
otherwise.
golwg
Matthew |
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| root... |
Posted: Thu Oct 01, 2009 9:53 am |
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On 1 Oct, 17:03, "scottlowt... at (no spam) ix.netcom.com"
<scottlowt... at (no spam) ix.netcom.com> wrote:
Quote: On Sep 30, 10:50 pm, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bru... at (no spam) gmail.com
wrote:
Actually, everyone should be judged by, and held accountable to, their
religious/ethical beliefs.
Ummm... huh. So if one guy believes in nonviolence due to his
religion, and the other guy believes in killing the infidels due to
his different religion, then a murder can take place and since that
murder was part of the one guys religion, there'll be no negative
judgement against him?
Sheesh. If your point of view is common in Europe, it's no wonder that
Europe will soon be a historical footnote.
Hehehe, don't underestimate Europeans.
golwg
Matthew |
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| Dirk Bruere at NeoPax... |
Posted: Thu Oct 01, 2009 10:20 am |
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scottlowther at (no spam) ix.netcom.com wrote:
Quote: On Sep 30, 10:50 pm, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bru... at (no spam) gmail.com
wrote:
Actually, everyone should be judged by, and held accountable to, their
religious/ethical beliefs.
Ummm... huh. So if one guy believes in nonviolence due to his
religion, and the other guy believes in killing the infidels due to
his different religion, then a murder can take place and since that
murder was part of the one guys religion, there'll be no negative
judgement against him?
Sheesh. If your point of view is common in Europe, it's no wonder that
Europe will soon be a historical footnote.
All it means is that pacifists would be in short supply.
FFF
Dirk
http://www.transcendence.me.uk/ - Transcendence UK
http://www.theconsensus.org/ - A UK political party
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/onetribe - Occult Talk Show |
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| scottlowther at (no spam) ix.netcom.com... |
Posted: Thu Oct 01, 2009 1:54 pm |
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Guest
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On Oct 1, 10:20 am, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bru... at (no spam) gmail.com>
wrote:
Quote: scottlowt... at (no spam) ix.netcom.com wrote:
On Sep 30, 10:50 pm, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bru... at (no spam) gmail.com
wrote:
Actually, everyone should be judged by, and held accountable to, their
religious/ethical beliefs.
Ummm... huh. So if one guy believes in nonviolence due to his
religion, and the other guy believes in killing the infidels due to
his different religion, then a murder can take place and since that
murder was part of the one guys religion, there'll be no negative
judgement against him?
Sheesh. If your point of view is common in Europe, it's no wonder that
Europe will soon be a historical footnote.
All it means is that pacifists would be in short supply.
Wow. "Genocide" as school policy. Sure, that makes more sense than
either a complete lack of dress code, or a strict dress code. |
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| robert bowman... |
Posted: Fri Oct 02, 2009 7:42 pm |
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Guest
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scottlowther at (no spam) ix.netcom.com wrote:
Quote: Yes. Serbia is one of those examples... started off with the genocide
thing (on both sides), and then NATO came in on the side of Al Queda
and bombed the Serbs and enforced pussification.
NATO probably would have slept through the whole thing except for the
cheerleading of President Blowjob. |
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