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New twist in tablets case
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The issue: Government's promotion of ONE religious belief, Christianity, above all others.
To think as you do, you had better start a drive to amend the US Constitution, to make Christianity a required belief....with penalties.
Gee, haven't we learned more than that, YET?
PS - name a government that owns a car with a "Jesus Fish" on it.
The Jewish ones?
The Catholic ones?
Or the Protestant ones?
They aren't really concerned that on monument displaying the 10 Commandments in a public park somehow establishes religion, they just want to make this a completely secular/Godless society where the mention of God or faith in any public setting is strictly prohibited.
WHICH religion is permissible? Yours or mine?
Why does one religion's version of the Ten Commandments belong on government property, and not another religion's?
WE are the ones protecting ALL religion. Trying to make YOUR religion mandatory, is not why this country was established.
The idea of those fighting with you to "protect[] ALL religion" is to get us to the Horace Mann standard:
"When in doubt, leave it out."
Allowing public display of religion makes nothing "mandatory." I've lived in a foreign country where the dominant religion (Philippines, Catholic) was not my own. Though a democratic country that espouses US-style values, including religious liberty, they might at times cross the line when it comes to state sponsorship of religion. But it never hurt me or burdened my own freedom. It's just the reality of dealing with a cultural/religious majority different from your own.
Many people on your side really want "freedom from annoyance", not freedom of religion.
If the people really love freedom and liberty, there won't be a problem with freedom of religion (except we'll always have to live with the complainers, I imagine). But if people don't really want liberty--want comfort or freedom from annoyance or something else--then not even the courts will eventually be able to protect their rights.
hold it together, then it is too late. It will explode, just like Yugoslavia did.
I find it interesting that whenever I read about this, the reports never state why the city denied the Summum Aphorisms. Was it on religious reasons or simply because it had nothing to do with PG?
A distinction that needs to be made: there is a huge difference between forcing one religion upon a nation or community, and celebrating the religious history of the nation or community. The PG community culture was clearly built upon Christian beliefs (along with most of Utah) and it would be fundamentally wrong to deny, change, or erase it from our culture meerly because it doesn't fall in line with everyone's beliefs.
Just my opinion here: in this case, the majority should rule, not the minority.
Folks, you are free to practice your religion because the government doesn't endorse any religion.
Keep your religious beliefs off of taxpayer-paid property -- in Unpleasant Grove or elsewhere -- and we can all get along. But if you try forcing your religion into venues paid for with the help of my tax money, you're going to have a war on your hands.
Do you think for a moment that if the "PG Society of Athiests" wanted to donate a monument to PG with their viewpoint written on it that the PG leaders would act any differently?
No, this is about PG trying to preserve "their" way of thinking to the exclusion of all other viewpoints.
First, there is a material difference between promoting religion and acknowledging the historical, cultural, and legal influence that a particular religious text has in a community. The ten commandments are a bedrock of western civilization.
Secondly, they are widely enough accepted that they represent basic values held by vast majority of the residents of Pleasant Grove.
Finally, their long standing placement in a public park does NOT "establish" any one religion over another, nor does it prohibit the free exercise of religion by anyone. THAT is the language of the 1st amendment and the standard that ought to be applied. While Jefferson's language regarding a "wall of separation" contained in his letter to the Danbury congregation is useful for insights into his original intent, it is NOT the language that was ratified and the analogy he drew should NOT replace the actual language of the constitution in deciding these cases.
There is no doubt this alternative monument has been offered up for the SOLE purpose of forcing removing of the original monument. It ought to be rejected on those grounds alone.
This isn't about the ten commandments. Be honest. This is about one religion, one theology, putting itself above all others.
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Also anybody that has a "Jesus Fish" on their car since they are driving on public roads ... yea, just as rediculous.