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Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
Tue Dec 12, 2017, 05:14 PM Dec 2017

Arkansas panel clears way for new Ten Commandments marker

Source: Associated Press


Jill Bleed, Associated Press
 Updated 1:25 pm, Tuesday, December 12, 2017

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — An Arkansas commission cleared the way Tuesday for the installation of another Ten Commandments monument outside the state Capitol, after a prior marker was shattered when a man crashed his car into the monolith than 24 hours after it was put in place.

The Arkansas Capitol Arts and Grounds Commission signed off on the final design, which will include four concrete posts for the monument's protection.
 
Officials and supporters said there's no guarantee that such security measures will prevent the monument's destruction but that they're confident with the final design.

"There's nothing you can do to make it perfect," said Republican state Rep. Bob Ballinger, who attended Tuesday's meeting as a representative of the American History & Heritage Foundation, the private group that's paying for the monument. "We think that considering cost, time and everything, we've done everything reasonable possible."

Read more: http://www.chron.com/news/us/article/Arkansas-panel-clears-way-for-new-Ten-12424634.php

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Arkansas panel clears way for new Ten Commandments marker (Original Post) Judi Lynn Dec 2017 OP
If it's on private land, I have no problems with it sakabatou Dec 2017 #1
Sorry. It's to be on the State capitol grounds. TomSlick Dec 2017 #5
Then it shouldn't be there sakabatou Dec 2017 #6
Agreed. TomSlick Dec 2017 #7
They need to make one too for the Temple of Satan statue that will go up next. Ligyron Dec 2017 #2
Moses smashed the first set Angry Dragon Dec 2017 #3
Katha Pollitt's excellent opinion piece about how bizarre the Ten Commandments are progree Dec 2017 #4

progree

(10,908 posts)
4. Katha Pollitt's excellent opinion piece about how bizarre the Ten Commandments are
Tue Dec 12, 2017, 06:44 PM
Dec 2017
https://www.thenation.com/article/stacked-decalogue/

(non-subscribers to The Nation can view 6 online articles a month free)

...the commandments are a decidedly odd set of directives to be looming, physically or spiritually, over an American courtroom.

... Consider Commandment One: God identifies himself as God–as if you didn’t know! Who else crashes about with thunder and lightning? He reminds the Jews that he brought them out of Egypt and orders that “thou shalt have no other gods before me.” What does that mean, exactly? No other gods, period, or no other gods come first? No other gods because they don’t exist, or no other gods because they are minor and inferior and God doesn’t like them? His need for constant reassurance is one of God’s more perplexing characteristics. If you had created the universe and everything in it down to the seven-day week, would you care if people believed in you? Wouldn’t it be enough that you knew you existed? Why can’t God give anonymously? So what if people give Baal or Ishtar the credit?

In any case, God’s status anxiety has precious little to do with the civil and criminal codes of the state of Alabama, where worshiping Baal and Ishtar is legal. Commandments Two, Three and Four continue God’s preoccupation with himself. No graven images, indeed, no “likeness” of anything in nature, to which he holds the copyright; no taking his name in vain; no work on the Sabbath. Representational art and sculpture, swearing a blue streak and working on Saturday (or, in Alabama, Sunday) are all legal; nor does the law require that we honor our fathers and mothers as enjoined in the Fifth Commandment, despite God’s barely veiled threat of death and/or exile if we sass them. Adultery is legal (well, actually, not in Alabama), as is coveting your neighbor’s house, wife, servants, livestock–or husband, a possibility God seems either not to have considered or not to have minded. In fact, the only activities banned by the Ten Commandments that are also crimes under American law are murder, theft and perjury. But those are illegal (I’m guessing) under just about every civil and religious code. Even Baal and Ishtar presumably took a dim view of them.

... When you consider that God could have commanded anything he wanted–anything!–the Ten have got to rank as one of the great missed moral opportunities of all time. How different history would have been had he clearly and unmistakably forbidden war, tyranny, taking over other people’s countries, slavery, exploitation of workers, cruelty to children, wife-beating, stoning, treating women–or anyone–as chattel or inferior beings. It’s not as if God had nothing more to say. The minute he’s through with the Decalogue, he gives Moses a long list of legal minutiae that are even less edifying: what happens if you buy a Hebrew slave and give him a wife who has children (he goes free after six years, but you keep the rest of the family); what should happen if a man sells his daughter as a “maidservant” and her master decides he doesn’t fancy her after all (he can give her to his son). God enjoins us to kill witches, Sabbath violators, disrespectful children, and people who have sex with animals, but not masters who beat their slaves to death, especially if the death takes place a day or two after the beating, because the slave is the master’s “money.” No wonder the good white Christians of Alabama believed the Bible permitted slavery! It does!

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