Religious symbols on Florida's plates?
by
JohnDavidPrince
04/27/2008, 3:05 PM
A religious symbol is as much a label
as the label its self.
In Germany during the 40’s a whole
group of people were branded, identified, marked, and issued by the
government a religious symbol for their home, cloths, business, and
life. This was the negative, discriminatory, segregation through
symbolic labeling. The same mind set or behavior that happened in
Germany during World War Two can happen through what at first seems
like positive labeling. When the government or state entities or any
related function become or allow specific labeling of religious
symbols they open Pandora’s Box. Even though we have a hard time
considering the thought of discrimination based on belief happening
here in the land of the free, we seem to be heading toward allowing
the camel into the tent. We assume that people will choose who is
hired for work on merit rather than what symbol or lack of symbol is
on my license plate, bumper, or trunk. I would hope that we refrain
from choosing who we talk to based on what symbol might or might not
be draped in advertisement around our neck, wrist, or finger. If the
state issues a license plate say in Florida they open up the
potential for everyone to put their symbol on the plate. Now imagine
road rage based on religion instead of someone cutting you off.
Allowing the state to get into the business of religious symbols can
create the visual ability to discriminate against those who have no
symbol on their license plate. What don’t you love Jesus enough to
order the special plate? Are you a believer? There are the thoughts
that go through some peoples minds, either consciously or
subconsciously. We all know someone who always declares a strangers
life story based on nothing more than the visual first impression.
Even so-called positive labeling by believers who view the labeling
as positive are not the victim of the discrimination. It is the
non-believer or the person without the label who usually suffers
potential discrimination or segregation. Yes we do not consider that
the lack of a religious symbol is as much a label as the label its
self. It is who receives the segregation or discrimination that
determines which is negative.