From: roger@hayter.org
On 5 Aug 2025 at 15:02:43 BST, ""Jeff Gaines"" wrote:
> On 05/08/2025 in message
> Jon Ribbens wrote:
>
>> On 2025-08-05, Jeff Gaines wrote:
>>> On 05/08/2025 in message <106sgpv$2c33g$1@dont-email.me> Jethro_uk wrote:
>>>> On Mon, 04 Aug 2025 21:14:53 +0100, JNugent wrote:
>>>>> On 04/08/2025 10:12 AM, Jeff Gaines wrote:
>>>>>> On 03/08/2025 in message <5996360858.0795274f@uninhabited.net> Roger
>>>>>> Hayter wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Yes, why should any one religion have precedence? It would refer to
>>>>>>>> "religion" (to be defined) rather than each specific religion.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I'm rather confused; what law are you referring to that protects one
>>>>>>> religion more than another? Are you sure they just haven't been any
>>>>>>> attempts to persecute or whip up hatred agains members of most
>>>>>>> religions? Are you sure that a serious threat to persecute or kill
>>>>>>> methodists would not be severely punished in the unlikely event that
>>>>>>> it happened?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I have pruned this, it's getting a bit long.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The various laws relating to antisemitism protect the Jewish faith, I
>>>>>> am not aware of anything similar for other faiths.
>>>>>
>>>>> Those laws don't protect the Jewish faith and that isn't the intention.
>>>>>
>>>>> They protect Jewish people.
>>>>
>>>> And it seems we are back at the beginning of a large circle.
>>>>
>>>> Is "Jewish" a designation of the religion a person practices ? Or of
some
>>>> sort of geographical origin ?
>>>>
>>>> Can I become Jewish tomorrow (or later today if the barber is open) ?
>>>>
>>>> Would that make me a semite ? Like all the other people from historical
>>>> Judea - including Muslims ?
>>>>
>>>> Can I have my cake and eat it ?
>>>>
>>>> These - and no other questions - are still to be decided. Luckily we now
>>>> have the concept of quantum physics to guide us. We may yet get there.
>>>
>>> This is completely new to me as may have been apparent from my posts.
>>>
>>> I have never been taught that being a Jew reflected anything other than a
>>> religion and "Jewish People" to me is people of the Jewish religion.
>>
>> But the membership of the religion is almost entirely defined by your
>> mother being a member of the religion, because they very rarely accept
>> converts. So it's both a religious group and an ethnic group, because
>> there's very little difference between the two in this specific case.
>>
>>> If it is something else it throws me back to my original post on this
>>> which, broadly, asked why we had antisemitism laws but nothing similar
for
>>> other religions, it now seems I should have been asking why we have
>>> nothing similar for the equivalent of "Jewish People" not for other
>>> religions but for what, other races, nationalities, origins?
>>
>> We don't have any laws about Jewish people either (any more), except
>> for the Marriage Act thing I already mentioned.
>
> Still confused, antisemitism seems to be a crime, how does that arise if
> we have no laws
> about Jewish people?
Antisemitism *isn't* crime. Any more than other forms or racism or religious
intolerance isn't a crime. Even paedophilia is not a crime. Expressing
antisemitic views in the wrong place can make one unpopular or unemployable,
but it is not a crime.
It is what one says or does to promote or practise antisemitism that may be
criminal. Just as with my other examples of unpopular ideas.
--
Roger Hayter
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
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