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"Lazarus Cooke" wrote in message
om... What's more in a lot of parts of scotland fishing on a sunday is illegal. The scots are a god-fearing bunch. Sounds like what some of the religious fanatics here in the States want to do. Impose their self centered ideas on everyone's rights. Damn sure would be nice if they went fishing more often instead of sitting around complaining about the rest of us fishing!! |
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![]() "Hooked" wrote in message ... "Lazarus Cooke" wrote in message om... What's more in a lot of parts of scotland fishing on a sunday is illegal. The scots are a god-fearing bunch. Sounds like what some of the religious fanatics here in the States want to do. Impose their self centered ideas on everyone's rights. Actually, it sounds more like the situation that, until recent decades, held sway here in the U.S. for a couple of centuries. When I was a boy, growing up in what was then a small city of fifty thousand or so back in the fifties, Sunday, as a "day of rest", was a long standing tradition accepted by virtually everyone. True, "rest" was already interpreted somewhat differently than it had been in the heyday of religion's grip on secular life, and a distinct aroma of the change to come was already in the air, but Sunday was still markedly different from the Monday through Friday work week, and even from Saturday, the other weekend day. Saturday was the day to catch up on the personal business that languished through the week. In rural areas it was the day to go into town to shop. On Sunday there was no place to shop. In my home town there was typically one drug store open....a relatively new concession to the fiction that it was necessary for the maintenance of public health....but that was about it, and it was only allowed to stay open for a few hours in the middle of the day. Many of the activities we take for granted....for RIGHTS....were, if not officially proscribed, then at least heavily frowned upon. And, of course, a lot of things actually were banned. Prohibitions against fishing or hunting (among other things) on Sunday do not, for the most part, stem from any actions on the part of the new religious right, but rather from a hoary religious mainstream. There are places in the U.S. where you may not legally hunt (or fish?) on Sundays, but these are not radical new policies. Personally, and as anyone who knows me will attest, I don't take well to being dictated to. I guess I never quite outgrew the adolescent male fascination with whatever is prohibited. But, at the same time, I'm susceptible to a degree of the same nostalgia for an undoubtedly idealized past that eventually strikes virtually all of us who live long enough. For all the many very real faults of an era that, among other things, encouraged rampant institutional racism, held women in vitrual chattel slavery, and viewed expressions of individuality as suspect at best, it's still hard to deny a certain bucolic charm to a past that enforced a periodic break from an ever more frenetic lifestyle. It is interesting and instructive, I think, that apart from the weather there is nothing in American life today that generates more impotent complaints than the pace of modern life. The irony of this impotence in the face of much vaunted and jealously treasured personal freedom is, of course, sublime. As for rights......well, most of the uninformed and specious twaddle spewed forth about them (which is to say nearly everything) has been masticated and spit out so many times by so many people of questionable moral and intellectual hygiene that even looking at it is more than can reasoanbly be asked of anyone lacking a fascination with excretory functions. Thomas Jefferson was, by all accounts, an extremely bright individual. His use of the damnable adjective "inalienable" can hardly be viewed as accidental and thus, as two centuries of inane nattering clearly demonstrates, his disingenuousness leaves him with a lot to answer for. Rights come.....and they go. Damn sure would be nice if they went fishing more often instead of sitting around complaining about the rest of us fishing!! Physician, heal thyself. Wolfgang |
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![]() "Wolfgang" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP Wolfgang An excellent analysis. Fits in a lot of places too. Most unfortunately. TL MC |
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... Actually, it sounds more like the situation that, until recent decades, held sway here in the U.S. for a couple of centuries. (snip) Damn, you are difficult to read sometimes, but always worth the effort. --riverman (at least, when you are in Textbook mode) |
#5
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![]() "riverman" wrote in message ... Damn, you are difficult to read sometimes, Hell, if you think that's tough you should try WRITING this **** some time. ![]() but always worth the effort. Ah, the minority report! It wouldn't be much trouble to shoot a few holes in it.......but we are content to leave that as a traditional exercise for the incoming freshman class. --riverman (at least, when you are in Textbook mode) We live to instruct. Pedagogy is merely the most easily recognizable of the instruments in the didactical toolbox. Wolfgang who remains unashamed of his occasional flirtation with other more subtle methods. ![]() |
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