Thanas wrote:ShadowDragon8685 wrote:You're not dialing in on what I'm transmitting, mate.
Ah, good. That allows me to point out another of your idiotic habits, namely using the word mate. You are a) not a Brit b) not a chav and c) I am not your mate. You think using this word makes you appear sophisticated, despite your actual level of speech being closer to that of a redneck stereotype.
1: No, but when I've been spending hours speaking with Brits (or South Africans, or Australians,) on Skype, I shift towards using their idioms. For what it's worth, that was typed in an Australian accent.
2: Certainly not. (Nor a bogan, either.)
3: Would you have preferred "wanker" or something even more derogatory? I was attempting to give you the benefit of the doubt in explaining that you were not understanding what I was attempting to communicate, but now it's clear you're just being an asshole.
It's not that I'm saying "I find this part of canon law disturbing," I'm saying I find the existance of an extragovernmental judicial system that comports itself as any kind of a legal system disturbing.
And here we come back to the imbecile part. It has been a legal system far longer than the United States has existed. So screech all you want, but the fact is that it existed far longer and was here first. That said, your ignorance is also showing in that you seem to think that it replaces "normal" courts (parenthesis used because a trial under canon law is much fairer and much more professional than any US trial) when it does not, except for in extremely narrow circumstances in which the state has voluntarily relinquished jurisdiction and never would have had it in the first place.
Several other churches in the USA are allowed to do the exact same thing. Grow up and realize the world is not as you think it is.
Duration does not equal jurisdiction. It is not a legal system empowered to pass judgment of law in this country at the least, and the fact that they masquerade as such and comport themselves in the trappings thereof is disturbing to me. "Screech" about that, jackass.
A government is not a pre-requisite for having jurisdiction over things. The International criminal court for warcrimes in former Yugoslavia is no governemnt, but by international treaties has jurisdiction over specific issues, just like the canonical law court.
The ICC is
empowered by governments, and effectively is a governmental function of many governments. The RCC, on the other hand, is a religious institution. Apples and martians.
That said, if you manage to get the United States to declare you a sovereign entity and to relinquish jurisdiction over all cases to you then yes, you could theoretically set up your court. However, as you are a proven ignoramus and imbecile, I doubt they would give it to you.
When, exactly, did the United States of America cede jurisdiction at all to the Roman Catholic Church?
By the way, the qualifications required to even being allowed to pass judgement or argue before a canonical law court are way higher than they are for lawyers to argue before the United States Supreme Court. Think about that for a second, will you?
You're quite right.
You're not required to be a Roman Catholic to argue before the Supreme Court of the United States of America, for instance.
Or what, did you expect me to be impressed by their "exacting standards"? When any of those standards include religious qualifications, that's
frightening, not impressive.
So due process taking place disturbs you?
When it's taking place under the auspices of the Roman Catholic Church instead of, say, a court of law, yes. Yes it does.
How? If a lawyer gets disbarred, he is being warned not to appear in court. Why should this be any different, especially considering the frock is the most visible symbol of priesthood? If a Naval officer gets thrown out, should he still be allowed to wear the uniform?
If a lawyer gets disbarred, the Bar association can't tell him he's not allowed to wear Armani business suits and carry a briefcase, just that he's not allowed to argue a case in court. They can have legal action taken against him for misrepresenting himself as a practicing attorney, but they can't tell him how to dress.
Whereas, apples to martians again, you're comparing an
actual government armed force to the Roman Catholic Church. The difference is the force of law:
18 USC section 711 states:
Except as otherwise provided by law, no person except a member of
the Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marine Corps, as the case may be, may
wear -
(1) the uniform, or a distinctive part of the uniform, of the
Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marine Corps; or
(2) a uniform any part of which is similar to a distinctive
part of the uniform of the Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marine
Corps.
A civilian impersonating a member of the Navy is
committing a crime as defined by Federal law. The Federal government, being the
actual government of the United States of America, has both a compelling interest in, and the legal authority to regulate civilians wearing the garb of its employees, whereas the Roman Catholic Church may have a compelling interest in such regulation, but they are
not empowered to enact such regulation in this country.
That whole "wall of separation between Church and State" thing, you know.
Q.Q. moar.
PR 1. Go violate it some more, eventually this will come to a resolution highly beneficial to the board.
"Q.Q". is an understood emoticon to represent a pair of crying human eyes, just as if I had told you "chill out and go have a
, maybe you'll feel better." And "moar" is a deliberate misspelling which is likewise understood in context to mean that you should feel free to continue bitching.
But to clarify: Feel free to continue bawling your baby blue eyes out because you're gifted with approximately the comprehension faculties a fruitcake possesses after having been processed by the gastro-intestinal tract of a dog with a bowel upset disorder.
Funny, nobody else is. This happens all over the world and the only one who is so hurt about it that your tears and whimpers are as plentiful as raindrops is you. Oh no, how dare the catholic church regulate who is and who is not allowed to wear the insignias of priesthood?
You're exactly right. How
dare they? Frankly I find it disturbing to the highest degree that the Roman Catholic Church is attempting to exercise the regulatory functions of government - to wit, restricting a person's freedom of expression by attempting to forbid him from wearing garb - within a secular nation which purports to have a law preventing the state from respecting an establishment of religion.
The options that I can see are three, and all are disturbing:
1: In clear violation of the Establishment Clause, the Roman Catholic Church may forbid a person from wearing something and some governmental arm of the United States of America will enforce that restriction for them.
2: The Roman Catholic Church is pronouncing a judgment forbidding a person from wearing what he likes as though they had the authority to do so when in fact they do not and there can be no enforcement of the judgment.
3: The Roman Catholic Church is forbidding a person from wearing what he likes, and should he violate that judgment they will act on their own to enforce the ruling.
Thanas, grow a brain in your head. I am not attacking them for defrocking the bastard, I'm stating my disturbance with the way they chose to do so. It's ridiculous, overbearing, and disturbingly like they're trying to assume some of the functions of government unto themselves.
All that an organization like the RCC should have to do to banish a member is to say "we've heard what this guy has to say, we find it clear and compelling, you're not a priest, hand in your collar and get the fuck out."
That is exactly what they did, idiot.
No, telling a person to hand in their badge of office and get the fuck out takes approximately five minutes, even if you've gone out of your way to compose a particularly eloquent dismissal or vitriol-dripping lengthy diatribe. Listening to what the other people have to say, even if we get outrageous and assume a complicated, muddled affair, should take
at most two, three months, and that's only if there's a lot of travel time and/or tracking down people involved.
This took
eight years and required two
freaking appeals to go through, all enshrouded in the trappings of law as if that law had legitimacy! And the press is reporting it as if it were a criminal prosecution being undertaken by the District Attorney of New York,
lending them that sort of legitimacy.
Are you really so
blind as to be unable to see why I find this
disturbing?! Or are you just scoring cool points with the other oldbies by mauling a titled newbie?