Oops, I forgot about this. The day I tried to look it up my DOD server's selective firewall barred any type of search. I will try again.
Hunted around, and can only find reference to the following;
Commandments 6-10 are shown on a carved tablet carried by Moses.
There are also carvings on the door of the Supreme Court showing a tablet with numbers I through X in Roman Numerals. Some see these as depicting the Commandments. However, this is repeated on a frieze within the court room, and the designer of that frieze (Adolph Weinman) claimed it represented NOT the commandments, but instead the Bill of Rights. So effectively, you're left with commandments 6-10 near as I can tell.
Various sources, but Snopes was pretty handy on this.
That is what I am saying. The secular revolution began in the late 50's. It of course did not begin strong and so theists did have some political successes early on but the balance of power has shifted these days. All kinds of laws restricting and preventing even the exercise of faith in setting it is appropriate to has taken place, morality has shifted in a horrific direction, and politics has all but given up on faith (Last election the democrats took God out of their platform all together).
Understand your opinion, simply don't agree with it. There have been 'secular revolutions' before. Indeed, it would be quite possible to view the Enlightenment itself as a secular revolution, and this greatly informed the very foundation of your nation. Secular doesn't equate to atheism.
As for God not being in politics...well, I suspect we'll run into the problem of 'No True Scotsman'. When an open atheist is elected, that may have some credence. When senior government officials of the country can say things like this;
No, I don't know that atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots. This is one nation under God.
...and barely even raise an eyebrow, or potentially even WIN votes, it has none.
I agree but don't see the relevance. Now we are becoming the Godless commies anyway.
I see little evidence of that.
Subtract from that the presence of faith in party platforms, the abolishment of congressional chaplains, the rules restricting even mentioning Christ in military prayers, the moments of silence instead of actual prayer in public settings, the rise of abortion, the rise of teen pregnancy, drug abuse, sexual violence, violence in schools, violence and sex on TV, etc.......
Too many issues to deal with there, so here's a quick pass comment on each. Happy to explore any in detail, but exploring all in detail would be derailing.
FAITH IN PARTY PLATFORMS - The 2012 Democrat one included the following;
"Faith has always been a central part of the American story, and it has been a driving force of progress and justice throughout our history," it says. "We know that our nation, our communities, and our lives are made vastly stronger and richer by faith and the countless acts of justice and mercy it inspires. ...People of faith and religious organizations do amazing work in communities across this country and the world, and we believe in lifting up and valuing that good work, and finding ways to support it where possible."
CONGRESSIONAL CHAPLAINS
Sorry, I'm not across the details of this. To my knowledge, attempts to remove this as a violation of Church and State have been unsuccessfully going on since the 1850's. Despite that, Congress commences with a prayer. The Chaplain apparently doesn't have to be Christian (but invariably is) and when a guest chaplain spoke a Hindu prayer, they were howled down, not by secularists, not be atheists, but by Christians.
MENTION OF CHRIST IN MILITARY PRAYERS
The very concept of mandatory prayer in the military is not a great place to dig in your flag, so to speak. There are a thousand examples of mandatory prayer, no matter what the official rules say. You'd have to be more specific in terms of what you see as a problem here, honestly.
MOMENTS OF SILENCE
Question for you. Why does the Christian prayer need to be spoken out loud? What is it about speaking it aloud that you see as important? It's not to do with your relationship with God.
ABORTION - Meh, I'll leave this. It's not going to lead anywhere, simply do to our difference of opinion.
DRUG ABUSE - It's a major problem. It's a societal problem, but unless you can see a correlation between religiousness and drug use that I can't, I don't see the point you're making.
SEXUAL VIOLENCE - C'mon now. Are you really going to argue that sexual violence is worse now, and that this is linked to secularism? This may fly if you completely ignore the claimed religious affiliations of perpetrators, and exclude things like spousal rape.
VIOLENCE IN SCHOOLS - School violence is a major issue. No doubt.
VIOLENCE AND SEX ON TV - Meh...I'm less worried by that than by linking it to any sort of impact, but I'll deal with that more in your point below;
If you want to see the greatest theological and moral barometer in history look at TV programming from the 50's compared with today. I don't think anything beyond XXX porn and live dissections is not allowed on today's TV programming. We went from leave it to beaver to sex and the city, from the Andy Griffith show to the Texas chain saw massacre, etc..... I need no argument beyond two TV guides.
Interesting. I don't see television as a particularly accurate representation of the world it lives in, honestly.
Do you think Leave it to Beaver accurately represented society? Compare Stanley Fafara's life to his character...