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originally posted by: rickynews
As the United States of America is the greatest nation on the face of the earth, I'll take that as a blessing. Maybe its just me though...
originally posted by: crazyewok
originally posted by: rickynews
As the United States of America is the greatest nation on the face of the earth, I'll take that as a blessing. Maybe its just me though...
Yes its the greatest military superpower. But many military superpowers have come and gone over the years. Britain and Spain. Did they have gods blessing?
What about Rome or the mongol empire? They were not even Christian?
Seems to me super powers are made and fall on human merit alone.
Plus we are only talking Military super power here. Might does not always equal right.
As for happiness and standard of living, Scandinavia country's seem to lead those rankings. Are they blessed by god?
originally posted by: rickynews
As the United States of America is the greatest nation on the face of the earth, I'll take that as a blessing. Maybe its just me though...
originally posted by: peter vlar
originally posted by: rickynews
As the United States of America is the greatest nation on the face of the earth, I'll take that as a blessing. Maybe its just me though...
Sure it is. Unless youre a racial minority, a woman, live below the poverty line, a member of a minority religious sect(like a polygamist group)or a disabled vet. I think there are a lot of marginalized groups of Americans who would disagree with that. For what it's worth I don't necessarily disagree with the statement in principle, but after almost 2 decades battling the VA over things I'm supposed to be entitled to I think that the bureaucratic nightmare that this country ha become is anything but blessed. I fact I'd go so far as to say that the naive, blind patriotic love I once had for this country has turned out to be a curse that neither buracracym nor any sort of god has the ability to fix. For what it's worth, I'm glad that you're in a place where you can think that this country is so great when it is a crumbling shamble and shadow of what the founding fathers started us off with.
originally posted by: peter vlar
originally posted by: rickynews
As the United States of America is the greatest nation on the face of the earth, I'll take that as a blessing. Maybe its just me though...
Sure it is. Unless youre a racial minority, a woman, live below the poverty line, a member of a minority religious sect(like a polygamist group)or a disabled vet. I think there are a lot of marginalized groups of Americans who would disagree with that. For what it's worth I don't necessarily disagree with the statement in principle, but after almost 2 decades battling the VA over things I'm supposed to be entitled to I think that the bureaucratic nightmare that this country ha become is anything but blessed. I fact I'd go so far as to say that the naive, blind patriotic love I once had for this country has turned out to be a curse that neither buracracym nor any sort of god has the ability to fix. For what it's worth, I'm glad that you're in a place where you can think that this country is so great when it is a crumbling shamble and shadow of what the founding fathers started us off with.
originally posted by: Benevolent Heretic
It's silly to sue the school district for the words contained in it. The school didn't make up the Pledge.
If anything, they should be either working with the school district to excuse their kids from saying it, or to abolish it altogether from the daily curriculum (my preference). If kids want to pledge "under God", they should do it in church, in their homes or somewhere that is NOT a government institution.
The phrase "under God" IS discriminatory (to atheist kids and other religions where God isn't their central figure) and not only that, it's a state institution (public school) "respecting an establishment of religion", which we all know about from the First Amendment.
Yes, it's really extremist to want to remove a line of dialogue (pandering to one group of people) that wasn't even in the original pledge to begin with, located in a country where there are multiple groups of people other than that aforementioned collective. Just think about what you're saying here.
originally posted by: Mailman
Wondering if they are taking legal actions against vacations that revolve around religions? Do they sue their employers for not having work on said holidays? What a bunch of wannabe extremist hypocritical a-holes... I am not religious...but get a freaking life already.
originally posted by: AugustusMasonicus
originally posted by: rickynews
It says " in the year of our Lord". They all signed it, even if some were atheists, they signed off on language that included reference to "our Lord".
Two things.
First, this is not the quote you kept insisting was in the Constitution and was actually in the Declaration.
Second, the phrase 'in the year of our Lord' is a euphemism and not a religious connotation. Is anyone who walks into a building that has 'AD 1910' cast in the cornerstone a Christian?
Stop being absurd with your premises.