Can you support that belief by referencing our founding documents and showing the theocratic elements therein? I can point to the prohibition of a state religion, prohibition of religious tests for public office, and Jefferson's stated intent of a wall of separation between church and state as supportive of us being a secular state.
Before you respond let me fix an error I made when I made my claim. I forget to put the words "in between" after the word somewhere.
Good
First, I never claimed to have a lot of knowledge in this area. And to answer your question, the use of such documents in court decisions is not something I've really looked into.
You have made so many claims touting your depth of knowledge compared with mine in this field this is a surprise.
I've posted the one specific to this case and you refused to read that. Why are you asking for more?
It was practically a small book, I do not have time to read that much for a informal debate. I didn't ask for more, I asked for specific quotes instead of references to huge documents.
The way this is supposed to go is:
1. That you make a specific claim.
2. That you quote a specific sentence or paragraph that supports it.
3. Then you supply the link to the full document in case the other person wants to read more about it.
Yes, I'm quite familiar with the conservative Heritage Foundation's positions. Again, it all boils down to one question.....do you believe that providing benefits under specific circumstances incentivizes people to put themselves into those circumstances?
I absolutely believe that. We are an extremely flawed race, and many take the easiest path available.
So on what basis were Jim Crow laws overturned?
I am not sure but I would bet that it is one of the two following reasons.
1. Jim Crow laws were found to be inconsistent with the constitution or at least it's foundation.
2. That the majority changed their minds about race issues. I can give you many reasons why race people changed their mind about race issues if necessary.
So if in say, 10 years the majority of the country is non-Christian, you would be ok if they passed laws specifically targeting Christians?
We were not discussing targeting anyone, there was never a law against being gay that I am aware of. If Christians became a minority they should not be targeted nor should their moral views become law in most cases. However if you want to discuss targeting I can give you many examples where the Christian minority has been targeted by a minority of liberal judges, just as Jefferson feared.
Exactly. So where does it say "unless you're a minority group, in which case your rights are determined by the majority"?
I never said that amendment 14 had anything to do with that. Your the one who used amendment 14 to back up a claim you made. I simply showed it doesn't. You keep changing contexts based on convenience.
I already did when I cited the 14th Amendment Equal Protection Clause. As you quoted it above, all citizens have the same rights, regardless of their majority/minority status.
You changed from laws to rights for some reason (despite the amendment you chose using the word law). So let me restate my position.
1. In a democracy or representative republic the majority establishes what rights we have, or what laws follow from those rights.
2. Then those rights and/or laws are applied equally to everyone.
BTW I noticed you did not respond as to whether our rights are objective or subjective.
First, I've made many arguments here, and they are not all based on "reading between the lines".
Not all, but most are based on paraphrasing the actual laws or documents and reading between the lines.
Second, in the specific cases I've cited (separation of powers and separation of church and state) I've given specific reasons and citations to justify the conclusion that those are valid legal concepts even though they are not explicitly spelled out in the Constitution.
The separation of powers is irrelevant to the thread and all that is denied to the government by the actual binding documents is the establishment of a religion by the state.
Then show where I've said that.
It was a definition not a quotation.
No, I did not call you racist.
Again, a reasonable description or summation, not a quote.
Again, you've been arguing that the morals of the majority always trump those of minorities. As a counter-example to that belief, I cited the courts overturning Jim Crow laws. Now try and focus on the point here.....obviously the majority of citizens in the US south during those times wanted blacks and whites to be separate and for blacks to be treated as second-class citizens. At the time the courts overturned those laws, it was still the majority view in those states.
No, I have been arguing that they should not that they are. The great evil Jefferson feared is coming to pass. Liberal judges are ruling in cases contradictory to the will of the majority. I heard the other day that in a state (Colorado I think) 4/5ths of the people polled wanted the traditional bathroom partitions left in place but a judged defied their wishes. A quasi oligarchy is being erected by secular leftists. The supreme court's greatest possible failure was said to make law from the bench yet that is exactly what Sotamayor said she intended to do. Secularists are doing exactly what the founders feared.
The civil war decided that power rests with Washington, not Alabama or Virginia. So local majorities do not prevail against the general majority.
So, if you truly believe that "majority morals" always rules, on what basis did the courts overturn the Jim Crow laws? Or do you believe those rulings were wrong?
You asked and I answered the exact same question above.
When I cited Jefferson's letter to the Danbury Baptists, you waved it away because it was a personal letter and not a "founding and binding document". But then you turned right around and cited letters yourself. That's hypocritical.
No, I suggested that we use no personal correspondence or all of it. I basically left it up to you.
If you notice I deleted several statements by you based on grounds I stated in my previous post.