Freedom of conscience is the root of all our freedoms

Freedom From Religion Foundation
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Freedom of conscience is the root of all our freedoms because no one can be a self directing individual free of parents, governments or religious institutions without this bedrock principle. The men most responsible for the bill of rights, Jefferson and Madison, had a clear notion that freedom of conscience was the principle they were protecting in the first amendment. Madison wrote: that religion “must be left to the conviction and conscience of every man; and it is the right of every man to exercise it as these may dictate”.

Accordingly, secular parents do not steer their children towards atheism, if they are wise. Instead the idea must be to explain the religious “menu” so that when they mature, children can place an order intelligently. This is the essence of the Humanist ethos. People of limited imagination believe that everyone shares their way of looking at the world and cannot put themselves in a humanist’s shoes. Theists think they are commanded by their holy books to dominate and control their children. I suppose they just cannot fathom the notion that children are persons in their own right with their own life to direct as they see fit. Or, that the prevailing ethos among atheists and Humanists is to NOT dominate their children but to help them learn how to make decisions for themselves based on rational thinking and self reflection.

Children did not ask to be born and they are under no obligation to fulfill some master plan of their parents and especially some master plan of a religious institution. Teaching a child to think for themselves is the best insurance a child could have against being duped into a cult or other controlling group of people. To succeed, the insidious indoctrination process must diminish the ability to reason. Instead of how to think for themselves, children are taught dogmatism and to distrust their own ability to think.

There are clearly different outcomes for children raised to enjoy intellectual autonomy (personal independence) and those burdened with intellectual heteronomy (the condition of being under the domination of an outside authority, either human or divine). In many churches, homes, and faith schools, children are taught intellectual heteronomy. I quote from Donald Capps’ book, “The Children’s Song, The Religious Abuse of Children”:

“What is at stake here is the freedom of children to think for themselves and to feel secure in the knowledge that adults will not hold their expressions of intellectual autonomy against them. Especially where biblical literalism is taught and practiced, and where punitive attitudes towards sinners are voiced and countenanced, children are unlikely to experience such freedom to think and reason for themselves. Rather, they are likely to feel that it is wrong for them to think for themselves and that, if they do, they are likely to incur the disapproval, if not the wrath, of precisely those adults who have power over them. Fearing the negative consequences of their exercise of intellectual autonomy, they are likely to overreact, to place even greater strictures on their own freedom of thought than these adults may have required of them.” (p. 59)

Parents who promote intellectual heteronomy likely grew up in such a stifling environment themselves and simply cannot imagine any other way of thinking or being. This is a key argument for ending childhood indoctrination. The chain must be severed once and for all. Every parent who contemplates imposing their religion on their children should study Donald Capps’ book before they do that.

Both Madison and Jefferson were strongly against any establishment of a state religion, although the practice was widespread in the original colonies. Today the most dangerous threat to our free and open society is coming from theocrats that sincerely want to sweep away the constitution and institute biblical laws. Seriously, and they managed to get G. W. Bush elected twice. Ok, I am drifting off topic.

Today, the institutions and parents do every thing they can to thwart the ability of children to grow up with a mind that is untainted by a particular flavor of faith. Parents are swayed by clerics, family members and co-religionists. However, freedom of conscience is an inalienable right which “people cannot possibly relinquish to civil government”. — Madison (or if you follow the logic to parents or priests).

Yet parents and clerics step all over this right for the simple reason that they are in a position to do so and they claim children are too young to exercise such a right. Well they are too young, but who says children need to choose at the ripe old age of three, or four?

Why on earth is religion different? Because it is religion, that’s why and a majority of religious people and the clerics want it that way because they know it will get harder to impress their wild improbable dogma on an adult mind. For all the noble justifications offered, there is little doubt that the institutions are in this indoctrination game to save their institutions. Which makes children simply instruments of their plan. In any other sphere of human activity, using others as instruments is an abhorrent practice. Not where religion is concerned.

The incredible fact is we reserve a special measure of loathing and disgust for people who mistreat small helpless animals or helpless people. Why? Precisely because they are vulnerable and helpless.

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Posted on Sunday, October 4th, 2009 at 3:13 pm in Childhood Indoctrination, Children's rights, Human rights, Secularism.

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anti_supernaturalist

The US is a Secular State — not a xian entity of any kind

Fundies are fond of using 'xian country' or 'xian nation' since 'country' and 'nation' are weasel words. It's their ambiguity in meaning that allows fundies to use fallacious reasoning or to make lying claims.

The United State of America is a Secular STATE. Let's say it again: the US is a secular state. It was founded as a secular state. It remains a secular state.

Search on the text of the U.S. Constitution. You will find that the word 'God' does not occur. The word 'religion' occurs only once in the so-called Establishment Clause, in Amendment I.

Freedom from religion is the right protected first by the Bill of Rights, before freedom of religion, freedom of speech, or freedoms of the press, assembly, and petition.

James Madison, primary author of the Constitution, explained the two religion clauses to Congress ". . . Congress should not establish a religion, and enforce the legal observation of it by law, nor compel men to worship God in any Manner contrary to their conscience." (1 Annals of Congress 730. August 15, 1789). (Well into the 19th century, the code words for the right not to believe were 'freedom of conscience'.)

Fundies and other religious zealots look rather to the Declaration of Independence to claim that God (really some deistic proxy) is the source of "inalienable rights". The Declaration did not establish the United States of America — the Constitution did, as its Preamble states.

Rights arise because free agents cede them to each other within a structured polity governed by rules (The Constitution) which maximize individual freedom, subject to defined restraints.

God, as Laplace said to Napoleon, is "an unnecessary hypothesis" in cosmology. The U.S. Constitution avers the same — God is an unnecessary hypothesis to the foundation of a well-functioning, secular polity.

The Constitution makes freedom of conscience a necessary condition for unfeigned religious belief to be possible. Without the free choice not to believe, xians could impose their limitations on all other rights enumerated in Amendment I. Exactly the course endorsed by George W. Bush, Clarence Thomas, and notoriously, Anthony Scalia.

Millions of Americans, including Supreme Court Justices, cannot accept how radically free we are. They will not accept anyone's right to be free from religion. They cannot grasp what 'freedom of conscience' means.

The thought recently crossed my mind that fundamentalists use “nation” because that casts the sentence in a biblical context.

dancingfoolvb

http://www.endhereditaryreligion.com/2009/10/free…

I attended a presentation over the weekend that reminded me of the brilliance of the founders in how they architected our government.

The Executive and Legislative branches are intended to reflect the opinions and will of the majority of the population.

But the founders knew that this could lead to abuses of the rest of the population, people in the minority on an issue – this is referred to as the tyranny of the majority.

So the Judicial Branch, and in particular the Supreme Court, was set up to represent the interests of the minority, to block the tyranny of the majority.

This was expressed in the recent Prop 8 ruling in California, which stated that the majority do not ever have the right to deprive any minority population or interest of their rights, that rights cannot be taken away just because the majority of our population desires this.

totanaca

Right you are. The so called Virginia plan that Madison and Jefferrson crafted envisioned a government ruled by educated people who would settle their differences through reasoned debate and compromise. Factionalism was a hazard they meant to avoid. Yet the past mid-term election has witnessed the ascension to power of people who refuse to compromise or even debate. This should alarm every thinking person in the country. Stalemate is not a governing regime we can long tolerate and the petulant impatient "pox on both your houses" independents who advocated a "balancing" vote have helped the most rabid anti-secular elements in the country bring us to the edge of anarchy and collapse. Chaos is the avowed goal of the insane dominionists and they have worked surreptitiously for decades to bring about a national crisis.

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