get too far down this road! I'm sure he has a nuanced opinion he is going to
put forward. This question is all about nuance and wisdom. I'm looking
forward to hearing from an orthodox person who manages to reconcile his
orthodoxy with the diversity of voice and intention that is the internet....
-Patrick
-----Original Message-----
From: Lyons, Larry [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: May 20, 2004 2:01 PM
To: CF-Community
Subject: RE: Newspaper article
At the same time, is it right for a religious representative (be he/she the
CFO, chief thug, imam, priest, minister, rabbi, etc) to dictate what others
who may not follow your religious beliefs should or should not see?
The problem with having religiously based bans is that it always impinges on
others who may not share your religious views. Very shortly we end up with
situations like in Salt Lake City (where the Mormons were able to enforce a
ban on speaking against their church on certain parts of the city's main
street), Afghanistan under the Taliban or Iran.
larry
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, May 20, 2004 1:53 PM
> To: CF-Community
> Subject: Re: Newspaper article
>
>
> Just because it's everywhere doesn't mean it's right or that
> people of a religious nature should be forced to view it.
> We've had this discussion before about when and how to expose
> children to material of this sort and it always runs down to
> personal choice. I don't want my kids seeing a naked chick on
> a billboard while others feel it's ok.
>
>
> > And life. I mean really... That crap (porn, etc) is everywhere, not
> > just the internet.
>
>
>
_____
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