It clearly states it is only to be in socials that are held in School or Church buildings. That means that if, say, my sister was to move to North Carolina (My sister does Terot cards, not me. Lol...) and to practice such things inside her house, she would be put in jail.
Which does sound slightly ridiculous I have to agree. The reason though I think is probably precisely because they don't want people to do this in their homes on their own. If it is in a church and/or school, they can keep track of it. At home, it becomes hard to track. And manage.
PlugY for Diablo II allows you to reset skills and stats, transfer items between characters in singleplayer, obtain all ladder runewords and do all Uberquests while offline. It is the only way to do all of the above. Please use it.
Supporting big shoulderpads and flashy armor since 2004.
PlugY for Diablo II allows you to reset skills and stats, transfer items between characters in singleplayer, obtain all ladder runewords and do all Uberquests while offline. It is the only way to do all of the above. Please use it.
Supporting big shoulderpads and flashy armor since 2004.
It most likely is unconstitutional, but that's not really interesting to argue. The interesting aspect is whether or not the law has any good aspects to it.
So, it limits certain practices that are deemed religious. Ok, fair enough. From a governmental point of view, it's entirely logical. People cooperate better when they agree than when they disagree, and they obey better when they agree than when they disagree. And religion has always been an enourmous mountain or problems. Everyone thinks they're right, and by definition that must in almost all cases make everyone else wrong. And when God gives you the right, why should you listen to some human- elected leader? Thus, making all people believe the same thing creates less friction, and small occult groupings can easily be targeted and removed, creating a more homogenous society.
That's a bit cynical of me, and not specifically related to this law, but I think it does very much represent one of the underlying reasons for all acts that limit religion.
Quote from "Requiem" »
The reason I find laws like that hypocritical (and maybe that was the wrong word to use) is because America was founded on certain beliefs and freedoms, yet state governments are taking it upon themselves to tell people what they may or may not do as far as religious beliefs are concerned.
Bah, Americans. You always think there's omething special about the founding fo your country
PlugY for Diablo II allows you to reset skills and stats, transfer items between characters in singleplayer, obtain all ladder runewords and do all Uberquests while offline. It is the only way to do all of the above. Please use it.
Supporting big shoulderpads and flashy armor since 2004.
To post a comment, please login or register a new account.
So, it limits certain practices that are deemed religious. Ok, fair enough. From a governmental point of view, it's entirely logical. People cooperate better when they agree than when they disagree, and they obey better when they agree than when they disagree. And religion has always been an enourmous mountain or problems. Everyone thinks they're right, and by definition that must in almost all cases make everyone else wrong. And when God gives you the right, why should you listen to some human- elected leader? Thus, making all people believe the same thing creates less friction, and small occult groupings can easily be targeted and removed, creating a more homogenous society.
That's a bit cynical of me, and not specifically related to this law, but I think it does very much represent one of the underlying reasons for all acts that limit religion.
Bah, Americans. You always think there's omething special about the founding fo your country