Why want these religious symbols & mottos retained?Oh really, then why are people wanting them to come down.
If your right, that no feels threatened by Religious symbolism.
Then why bother with them.
I assume you're not threatened by their lack.
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Why want these religious symbols & mottos retained?Oh really, then why are people wanting them to come down.
If your right, that no feels threatened by Religious symbolism.
Then why bother with them.
My true motive is adherence to an originalist interpretation of the Constitution.
Look at the Bill Of Rights....all those things...I actively support all those things.
If government can violate one of them, then then can violate any of them.
Because they violate the constitution according to the SCOTUS. They are endorsing Christianity, which violates the establishment clause.Oh really, then why are people wanting them to come down.
If your right, that no feels threatened by Religious symbolism.
Then why bother with them.
What are you basing this claim on specifically?Yeah, Your Right about that.
That's exactly what the democrates did for 8 years by Obama. Violated the Constitution in every way they could.
To try and bring about a Dictatorship Government.
Oh really, then why are people wanting them to come down.
If your right, that no feels threatened by Religious symbolism.
Then why bother with them.
"God" is a proper name for the Xian god.
"Creator" is generic, including Allah, God, Lakshmi, Zeus, etc, etc.
Would you be OK with replacing "God" with "Allah"?
Actually the pilgrims fled Europe to get away from the persecution of the Roman Catholic Church of 1400 years. To worship God in the way they chose.
Then in 1798 Emperor Napoleon sent his General into the Vatican to arrest the Pope to bring an end to the 1400 years of persecution under Roman Catholic Church.
What are you basing this claim on specifically?
Thats the story the pilgrims told. You will note that england was not RC then and hadn't been for over 200 years, perhaps a history lesson would help you sort fact from fiction.
Note Napoleon was French, what has this to do with England?
If you study out about history, The Roman Catholic Church controlled alot of the European countries and including England.
Hey, if you want to ask another question make your own thread. The question in this one isIt's not a question whether to allow them or not.
The question is, Why do people feel threatened by them.
Of course not, because you have no concept of Separation of Church and State.When I see them, I'm don't feel quilty about anything.
In my best Gomer Pyle voice: "Surprise!" "Surprise!" "Surprise!"You literally did exactly what I asked you not to do, and failed to answer my question.
If that's the context he appears in, with other law-givers, then I have no problem.Those I agree with, since the Tanach is a book of law. That is, they are legitimate and not necessarily religious so much as cultural. Do we not have other historical mythological figures from other founding cultures such as Greece? Is not the Washington Monument a giant Egyptian phallus? I think having a picture of Moses is appropriate since he is influential in our laws.
Hey, give him credit for at least quoting an American document.That's not in the Constitution. It's in the Declaration of Independence.
You are talking about the DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE, not the Constitution.
Hey, if you want to ask another question make your own thread. The question in this one is
Why do the religious, the vast majority being Christians, need these symbols of their faith on secular pieces of property?
Of course not, because you have no conception of Separation of Church and State.
In my best Gomer Pyle voice: "Surprise!" "Surprise!" "Surprise!"
If that's the context he appears in, with other law-givers, then I have no problem.
Hey, give him credit for at least quoting an American document.
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Makes one wonder, doesn't it.
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Not that it will make any difference to you, and I really don't care that it doesn't, but for any on-lookers who may be wondering, here's an FYI from Wikipedia.Show as to when in the Constitution where it is stated Separation of Church and State.
I guess Homer Simpson is in line for the next influential figure. "0)I don't think that matters. Its still fine to put pictures of influential figures on the walls of the court buildings. They are just carvings. Moses, Judge Blackstone, Abraham Lincoln...no difference.
If you study out about history, The Roman Catholic Church controlled alot of the European countries and including England.
To answer this question, I think it helps to ask a parallel one: why might a fan of Star Wars decorate their spaces with Star Wars accouterments?
People like to decorate and infuse places with symbols and representations of things that are special and valued to them. We like to be surrounded by things we love and by things that give us comfort or make us smile. It's also a way of paying a nod of respect to those special things in our lives, and a way of putting it on display for others to enjoy too.
Unfortunately, the video is blocked in the USA.You may find this informative
Not that it will make any difference to you, and I really don't care that it doesn't, but for any on-lookers who may be wondering, here's an FYI from Wikipedia.
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"Separation of church and state" is paraphrased from Thomas Jefferson and used by others in expressing an understanding of the intent and function of the Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States which reads: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof..."
The phrase "separation between church & state" is generally traced to a January 1, 1802 letter by Thomas Jefferson, addressed to the Danbury Baptist Association in Connecticut, and published in a Massachusetts newspaper. Jefferson wrote,
Jefferson was echoing the language of the founder of the first Baptist church in America, Roger Williams who had written in 1644,"I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should 'make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,' thus building a wall of separation between Church & State."
"[A] hedge or wall of separation between the garden of the church and the wilderness of the world."
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But...but...suppose you were a Star Trek convert? Wouldn't you feel a little left out?
Unfortunately, the video is blocked in the USA.
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