10A,

I find it interesting that what you believe to be a better version of the definition

It's a much better dictionary in general. I'm not going to cherry-pick dictionaries to back up a point I'm trying to make. I'm sure there are Christian dictionaries out there that could do that. But Wiktionary's pretty great just on general grounds.

As for the nature of freedom, it's really not contradicted by these definitions. The only way to achieve freedom from sin is to submit oneself to serve God. The aspect of that arrangement which is freedom from sin is represented well by the definitions.

An increase in the people's control over the government is a good thing. You seem to be implying it is not.

First off, I was not implying that positive rights are "bad". I was trying to say that they're not legitimate rights in the traditional American sense, which had always been negative rights. I wasn't saying anything is "good" or "bad", just that they're not traditional American rights.

As for your idea that an increase in the people's control of the government is a good thing, I wholeheartedly disagree. That's the whole reason why the US was established as a republic, if we can keep it, instead of a democracy. Tyranny of the majority is a disastrous problem. Many people would gladly vote away our freedoms, and indeed you yourself are part of the effort to eliminate the Christian foundation of our culture. Our republic enforces our freedom to worship God and do His will whether we like it or not, and that's a very good thing.

I can choose when to sleep and when to blink my eyes.

I think you missed my point on this. I meant it's binary. A light-bulb is either on or off. There's no third state possible. You're like a light-bulb acknowledging it's not on, but also denying that it's off, instead insisting there's some third option. I'm telling you that as a light-bulb you must be either on or off.

I don't think there is any good argument out there to prove that we have free will, even under a theistic world view.

This is arguably the single biggest topic in the history of philosophy, so I'm not going to get into it here. There have been many well-written books on the topic penned by minds far superior to ours both. Suffice it to say that yes, there are good arguments out there, and if you really want to get into it, you can easily devote fifty years to studying the topic.

Or in other words, to brainwash children into believing falsehoods. That's an immoral thing to do and thus not a moral responsibility.

Your premise is incorrect. I do not advocate for brainwashing children into believing falsehoods. You have rejected truth, and you are convinced that Jesus, who is the way, the truth, and the life, is somehow actually not the truth. You have been seduced by the Devil, and you are continually convinced by him to deny the truth.

I haven't claimed it is a physical force.

I'm sorry. I used the word "physical", and it was a bad choice of words. I meant it's impossible to force anyone else to pray, physically or otherwise. You can force someone to shut up, bow their head, and close their eyes, but that's about the extent of it.

The scientific evidence overwhelmingly supports the conclusion that humans are responsible for climate change. I can provide you with sources if you like.

Nearly 100% of the scientists who insist that's true are funded by the government. There have been quite a few cases of rogue scientists questioning that established dogma, only to be silenced and to lose their government funding. The governments have a vested interest in spreading the lie that humans are responsible for the climate because it gives them an excuse to expand their power and pass arbitrary powerful laws controlling people. If you were to provide me with those sources (which no, you don't need to spend time on), we'd find that nearly 100% of them involved government funding. Follow the money.

mindbogglingly huge quantity of greenhouse gasses into our atmosphere

Imagine finding out that most ants believe their ancestors created the moon, and that they're all responsible for keeping it up in the sky. I'm familiar with the theory of global warming, and that is what it sounds like. There's nothing in the Bible about carbon emissions. But you know what is in the Bible? Proverbs 3:5, "Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding."

You cannot have control over something without also having responsibility. Therefore even within your own world view we ought to fix this problem.

We cannot "fix" a "problem" that God wants. It is hubris to pretend we could, and disrespectful to God to pretend we should.

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