Originally posted by SlowwHand
Going by your criteria, everyone at Notre Dame, Southern Methodist University, or wherever is of that faith, or even believe?
You going to a school doesn't count for much.
Going by your criteria, everyone at Notre Dame, Southern Methodist University, or wherever is of that faith, or even believe?
You going to a school doesn't count for much.
a) It was high school. Loyola High School, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. We had 5 hours of religion class every year for 5 years. That class (and a great number of my other classes) were taught by Jesuit priests. Every last one of them was against capital punishment.
b) 94% of the attendees of that high school were raised Catholic. That was guaranteed. The school had 6% of its available slots left to non-Catholics. It was in the student handbook. I was one of those 6%, my parents having become lapsed Catholics at some point in their early adulthood.
c) None of this changes the simple statistical hypothesis that people who identify themselves as "Christian" in the United States are more likely to support the death penalty than those who don't. Hell, just take a gander at the geography of it...
Comment