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Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof...
The Constitution does not require complete separation of church and state; it affirmatively mandates accommodation, not merely tolerance, of all religions, and forbids hostility toward any. Anything less would require the "callous indifference,"...that was never intended by the Establishment Clause.
( emphasis added )
Rather than taking an absolutist approach in applying the Establishment Clause and mechanically invalidating all governmental conduct or statutes that confer benefits or give special recognition to religion in general or to one faith, this Court has scrutinized challenged conduct or legislation to determine whether, in reality, it establishes a religion or religious faith or tends to do so.
So what then, constitutes as an establishment or endorsement of religion? Shouldn't "In God We Trust" be viewed as Government endorsing religion? If so, which religion? Can we not replace the Christian held view that God is Jesus -- or the Jewish belief that God is Yahweh -- or the atheist view that God is nothing? Merely printing such upon our money or use as a national motto doesn't preclude an endorsement of any religion, but rather the respect towards all walks of life; religious or not; that were the heritage of this nation.
No one has a right to force others to be silent!
Originally posted by lonewolf19792000
reply to post by SaturnFX
You have the freedom to walk away if you do not want to hear what we have to say, there's your freedom from religion. Stick your fingers in your ears and walk away.
If you obtained "freedom from religion" then all churches, synogogues, mosques, buddhist temples, masonic lodges and well....even soup kitchens and food pantries for the poor would have to be burned down. Not constitutional by any means so, no you do not have freedom from religion.
If we can feed your sorry ass when you're broke and destitute you can at least sit and listen to stories about Jesus, it aint gonna kill you.edit on 26-5-2012 by lonewolf19792000 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Jean Paul Zodeaux
it must be understood that unalienable rights do not come from government. Wherever they do come from, and in God I trust, they preexist government.
Originally posted by Jean Paul Zodeaux
"Freedom from" is a game of semantics, a tyrants cloying plea for the world they want to impose on others. As the honorable Redneck correctly and so succinctly pointed out:
Your rights do not trump the rights of others.
You can feign injury all you want on this issue, but your frail sensibilities so prone to being offended do not fairly constitute injury. If hurt feelings were criminal we'd all be criminals, and all be victims.
Originally posted by Jean Paul Zodeaux
People pray in public by right because it causes no harm. If you use force to stop this, that is a demonstrable injury, and is certainly not a defense of life, or property.
Originally posted by blueorder
well I am not "free" from any advertising, I am not a "coca colaist" or a "mcdonaldists", however, as a consequence of a free society they are free to ply their wares and try to convince me of their worth.
You cannot filter religion out of human existence, I believe Pol Pot tried that, and failed, butchering a million along the way- dramatic I know, but you get the drift
Originally posted by OpinionatedB
reply to post by jiggerj
here is my experience. atheism is a religion with preachers same as any other. its the one anti god religion we have, and they want to push it upon innocent minds and indoctrinate our children.
hmmm... freedom from religion should be free from anti god religions also!
Would you be alright with the money being stamped "There is no God"?
I would also suggest that a government acknowledging a higher power, as every single State Constitution also does, is a necessary reminder that there is a limit to what government can grant, and while a government certainly can and does grant "civil rights", there are also unalienable rights, and regardless of ones religiosity or lack thereof, it must be understood that unalienable rights do not come from government. Wherever they do come from, and in God I trust, they preexist government.
If you complained about someone elses opinion being on money everyone must use, may I laugh at your hurt feelings?
Originally posted by SaturnFX
I encourage you to read the wiki on the pledge
relevant bits start at the "Changes" part..read that and continue on, to include the scotus dissenting voices.
You will see a few things
1) the whole movement is saturated in christian promotion (knights of colombus to be exact), that the challenges were dismissed due to partisan/unconstitutional reasons, and its constitutionality is in violation, but ultimately its left in because of personal beliefs of the judges over any legal citation.
It is understood by many in the movement that talking sense is not an option since the other side refuses to listen to sense...so, instead, it is time to show by example what the issue is.
...refuse to acknowledgement of either the blatant promotion of a specific religion (establishment of), or think somehow only christianity exists on earth..
It is an establishment of religion...you cannot swap that name out with another name spoken by more people on earth with no issues.
Originally posted by Keeper of Kheb
the state religion is Atheism.