How do you see your particular laws actually becoming reality in the United States?
One of two ways, both extremely unlikely.
Either:
A group of Christians get elected to positions of power simultaneously and once everyone is in place, peacefully reform the government to a monarchy, after which lots would be chosen for a king, and the constitution (or similar to the one) provided by Pastor Enyart would become the new law of the land.
OR
Another nation overthrows America in a just war against us, and installs a new government.
Could you give me a few of the most important steps describing the process of the implementation of these laws?
Well, a new government would need to be established, the current one is unusable.
With the new government would come a new justice system, and a new constitution.
Bob's book "The First Five Days" goes into a bit of detail about this, and the proposed constitution of his details the steps for choosing a king and his successors.
You and fundamental Islamists would like to see adulterers, homosexuals, fornicators, etc, etc executed. What other group has this in common? It's not a stretch at all to see the relation.
Please explain why you feel it is unjust? Your legal ideals have more in common than you do with the current US Constitution.
I did not come here to discuss Islam.
I came here to discuss the current legal just-a-system of America and a replacement for it based on God's law.
The shadowgov constitution is a perversion of His Law. That's my point. It's a cherry-picked, jumbled mess.
Saying it doesn't make it so.
In what way is it a perversion? In what way is it cherry picked?
Let's get into greater detail and discuss the similarities and differences.
No.
How was it more effective?
There was less crime. :think:
What about the law was more just then?
I didn't say it was more just.
I said that it was more effective.
Here
Herman Atkins was innocent. Yet, you still said...
Taking what I said out of context doesn't help you.
What did Atkins do that deserved execution?
Nothing.
Yet, at the time, he was shown using multiple witnesses to be guilty. He should have (justly) been put to death.
And since he was later found to be innocent, the case should have been reopened, the false accuser found, tried for capital perjury, and then executed.
:dunce:
This isn't hard, WoOz.
If someone is shown to be guilty on the testimony of two or three witnesses, then they are punished according to the crime committed.
If evidence comes up later that exonerates them, then the judge is removed from his position and the one who bore false witness is punished according to the crime committed, along with whoever actually committed the crime (after a trial, of course).
The law against perjury (bearing false witness) would deter false accusations (and accusations that while they may be true do not have enough evidence to back them up). A man would be very cautious of accusing his neighbor falsely, why? Because the punishment for perjury is whatever is at stake in the trial.
Falsely accuse a man of theft? The accuser pays restitution to the accused according to what he was accused of stealing.
Falsely accuse a man of beating his wife? Up to forty lashes for the accuser.
Falsely accuse a man of murder, rape, adultery, or any other capital crime? The accuser is put to death.
All that to say, the number of innocent people wrongly accused would be VERY, VERY low, almost non-existent.
Now, under your system, an innocent man and a judge are executed.
Please stop twisting my words.
I didn't say the judge was to be executed. Nor did I say he was NOT to be executed.
I said the false accuser would be executed, and the judge would lose his standing as a judge.
That doesn't raise any red flags for you? You even conceded that there were more than the required 3 witnesses. Would you have also sentenced Atkins to death were you the presiding judge?
Cause, then we would have to execute you too. You wouldn't even survive your own legal system.
False premise.
No, it's my opinion. I debated it in that thread. Start with
post 82
And you voicing your opinion is defamation.
It's an appeal to ridicule, which is a logical fallacy.
By the way, that thread was made and ended well before I made my account.
:idunno:
I may be mistaken but it seems to have been down since 2008.
:idunno: