It may have been immensely preferable for you, gruff, but a non
religious ceremony would have sent a stark message which essentially
would have been the wrong message.  The ceremony was just another in a
long line of presidential ceremonies.  The right thing to do in this
climate of chaos is not to throw a wrench into the workings but to
give people the sense that things are relatively calm.  Radical
changes may take place in the future but to use a inaugural ceremony
to make a statement seems to me, bad timing.  That segment of the
ceremony was so insignificant and probably forgotten 10 minutes later
by the majority of people.  It is no longer a news tidbit in the least
sense and I think it's a dead issue.   I started a thread awhile back
about the Warren pick for invocation in which chaz responded with: "I
agree and I would not give it a single thought. Personally I doubt
that a man of his intelligence give much thought to god except as a
vehicle for political credibility. I would not be surprised if he is
an atheist."  Therefore I would agree with chaz that the choice is not
indicative of Obama's personal views but more so, as politicians go,
indicative of his ability to perform as a top notch politician, none
of which I personally have any use for.   Plus I say that Obama must,
in every sense of the word, apply serious discernment in every
decision, as it is at this point in history always going to be a
critical decision.  People respond from their own personal stance.
First there were the squawking gay proponents and now it's the
squawking atheists.  In this type of political arena there will always
be some group that will squawk, no matter what the decisions are. As
it has been said "you can please some of the people some of the time
but you can't please all of the people all of the time".  I hope you
are pleased with my post, at least some of it, lol.

On Jan 23, 2:10 pm, gruff <[email protected]> wrote:
> "... On Jan 23, 10:53 am, chazwin <[email protected]> wrote: ..."
>
> > Apparently the particular choice of the "invocator" was controversial,
> > him being some kind of born-again type. With 20,000 Christian sects
> > across the world, as well as other religions, any choice must alienate
> > the majority in some way.This make my point well that to have had a
> > non religious ceremony would have been preferable.
>
> Without doubt a non-religious ceremony would have been immensely
> preferable but Obama was reaching out to that mass of religious
> ideologues who supported Bush -- there were quite a few of them.  I
> recall one of my favorite headlines in 2004 which came from a Kingdom
> newsrag -- The Daily Mirror -- on November 2, 2004: "How can
> 59,084,087 people be so stupid?"
>
> I'm hoping November 4, 2008, elicited a much better headline.
>
> /e
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