[On ten commandments courthouse controversy about whether or not they should keep it up]
Yes they should
The "seperation of church and state" m,yth is a lie told by people that hate God.
36 comments
"The "seperation of church and state" m,yth is a lie told by people that hate God. "
This is a lie told by people who hate America.
Yes they should
Dam' right! Sure, Judge Moore knew that most of the good people of northeast Alabama are God-fearing little Southern Baptist angels who don’t need the (the Protestant version of the) Ten Commandments shoved under their noses to remind them of God’s eternal law, praise the Lord, amen. But some people don’t have that evangelical spirit. They’re devil-spawned pagans (i.e., Jews, Catholics, etc.) who need evangelical Baptists to set them straight. Otherwise, they might go to Hell; or worse yet, get drawn into that effete, godless, college-educated, Volvo-driving, Starbucks-latte-sipping Northeast liberal conspiracy that’s destroying American civilization as we know it. And what better way to give them prayerful guidance than to remind them that the Baptists’ personal Holy Spirit watches over things in Judge Moore’s court! Hallelujah. Praise Jesus. Amen. [/sarcasm]
[The "seperation of church and state" m,yth is a lie told by people that hate God.]
Separation of church and state is established in the Constitution.
Are you calling the founding fathers liars and God-haters?
Good...then hopefully Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, Wiccans, Jains, Baha'i, Shintos, Taoists, and Confuscianists can put up prominent displays of their own religious faiths on public property at a whim as well as you Christians. But, I'm sure you wouldn't like that...church and state are only unseparated for Christians, right?
Okay, since you Christians and Jews get your 10 Commandments up on the courthouse walls, That means the rest of the theists can set up the 12 Principles of Buddhism, and the Hindu Dharma, and the laws of a bunch of other religions, right? What? That's not what you had in mind? It's only fair.
No, no! Don't you all see, the Constitution doesn't have the words "Separation of Church and State" anywhere! It just has some crap about Congress making no law regarding the establishment of religion or some such.
Completely different stuff that!
The Constitution denied, superseded and negated any and all religious authority from the beginning. Those bible-suckers who persist in propagating the lie of "religious authority", are traitorous scoundrels.
Support your local Sunday club if that's what floats your boat. Nobody is stopping you. Cross the line of civil jurisdiction though, and you will know persecution.
The "seperation of church and state" m,yth is a lie told by people that hate God.
To talk like that about the founding fathers is very unpatriotic of you. For shame...
The purpose of separation of church and state is to keep forever from these shores the ceaseless strife that has soaked the soil of Europe with blood for centuries.
-- James Madison, 4th U.S. President and one of the main authors of the Constitution. He obviously was an opportunist political hack who didn't have the slightest clue on what the Founding Fathers intended.
Confused?
So were we! You can find all of this, and more, on Fundies Say the Darndest Things!
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