I will lay out my intent of the bat, so I don't rope you in deceivingly. I feel that freedom of religion is redundant. All of the things that it should represent are already covered by another freedom. That is to say, even if we did not expressly state freedom of religion in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom, it would still exist per se.
Freedom of religion is redundant precisely because we have:
So, freedom of religion gives me the right to incite hatred against any group if I can find an argument for it in the Torah, Quran, Bible, Pseudepigrapha, Rig'Veda or even the Eddas of the Vikings, I suppose. Is that really beneficial? Is that the sort of thing we expect religions to do? incite hatred? Is it really useful to grant specific organizations the right to deny freedom to certain individuals? To me taking rights from individuals and giving them to abstract entities is a disgrace.
That aside, the only other real privilege that religion grants the ability to demand certain holidays. That being said, how many of you have seen your Muslim colleagues take Ramadan off? Is anyone aware of a minimum wage employee successfully demanding that they get such and such a day off and not being fired? Which is atrocious.
No, I will not argue that people should be denied that right, if anything that right needs to be strengthened. Maybe your family got together each year on the 17th to 21st of August to celebrate simply being a family. You should be able to demand that time off. Society should focus on affirming relationships, not affirming occupation. If you come from another culture you will have other holidays as well, which you probably won't be able to take off. But I say this ability of workers should be strengthened so that it is not only for religion and to ensure that people are able to demand such rights. Making freedom of religion redundant by promoting family customs of all sorts.
You are already free to go to the church, the temple or the mosque. You are free to congregate in the woods, in your home or in the park. You are already free to hold whatever moral beliefs but you are not free to incite hatred towards others. We should all be able to put family and personal life first over work, why do we have to look to Venezuela to see a successful economy considering an enforced six hour workday? What more do we need for religion? Is religion defined by the freedom to incite hatred against certain people, or is it a necessary ingredient?
Maybe I am missing something, but taking away freedom of religion doesn't seem like a bad idea. Its only real purpose is to give a false authority to certain, specific religions because they already have the right to congregate, believe, and express.
So what gives? Am I missing something that religions need?
Freedom of religion is redundant precisely because we have:
- Freedom of thought: I can believe whatever I wish.
- Freedom of association: So long as I am not planning a crime, I can associate with anybody.
- Freedom of expression: So long as I am not endorsing crime, I can say anything. Also, I can wear and write anything subject to the same stipulation and sometimes safety regulations.
Note of course that this denies usage of the Hadith, to any of you that know anything about Islam. Also, this sterilizes the conception of future religions to a certain extent: you can only be considered a religion if you have some sort of "religious text." That is a very narrow definition of religion, I am sorry Wiccans, you don't really have a Canon yet do you? Also, I am not free to start my own religion, unless I can scribe a document with supposed authority. Good faith is virtually impossible for the prosecution to ever prove, so it is largely irrelevant.No person shall be convicted of an offence under subsection (2) if, in good faith, the person expressed or attempted to establish by an argument an opinion on a religious subject or an opinion based on a belief in a religious text.
So, freedom of religion gives me the right to incite hatred against any group if I can find an argument for it in the Torah, Quran, Bible, Pseudepigrapha, Rig'Veda or even the Eddas of the Vikings, I suppose. Is that really beneficial? Is that the sort of thing we expect religions to do? incite hatred? Is it really useful to grant specific organizations the right to deny freedom to certain individuals? To me taking rights from individuals and giving them to abstract entities is a disgrace.
That aside, the only other real privilege that religion grants the ability to demand certain holidays. That being said, how many of you have seen your Muslim colleagues take Ramadan off? Is anyone aware of a minimum wage employee successfully demanding that they get such and such a day off and not being fired? Which is atrocious.
No, I will not argue that people should be denied that right, if anything that right needs to be strengthened. Maybe your family got together each year on the 17th to 21st of August to celebrate simply being a family. You should be able to demand that time off. Society should focus on affirming relationships, not affirming occupation. If you come from another culture you will have other holidays as well, which you probably won't be able to take off. But I say this ability of workers should be strengthened so that it is not only for religion and to ensure that people are able to demand such rights. Making freedom of religion redundant by promoting family customs of all sorts.
You are already free to go to the church, the temple or the mosque. You are free to congregate in the woods, in your home or in the park. You are already free to hold whatever moral beliefs but you are not free to incite hatred towards others. We should all be able to put family and personal life first over work, why do we have to look to Venezuela to see a successful economy considering an enforced six hour workday? What more do we need for religion? Is religion defined by the freedom to incite hatred against certain people, or is it a necessary ingredient?
Maybe I am missing something, but taking away freedom of religion doesn't seem like a bad idea. Its only real purpose is to give a false authority to certain, specific religions because they already have the right to congregate, believe, and express.
So what gives? Am I missing something that religions need?