To: PatrickHenry
Teachers should be force to read the following disclaimer everytime the pledge is recited:
"The God this nation is under probably does not exist."
Schools should also be forced to put up a sign on cash registers in the cafeterias and school stores to warn our confusable young ones "The God this nation claims to trust probably does not exist."
We certainly would not want these impressionable children to be misguided into a religion that claims the existance of a God.
Any questions regarding the signage or disclaimers could then be referred to the science department as they obviously have the facts to prove that God does not exist.
15 posted on
09/28/2005 5:40:47 AM PDT by
kpp_kpp
To: kpp_kpp
16 posted on
09/28/2005 5:55:31 AM PDT by
NVD
To: kpp_kpp
Actually the God this nation was founded under is a Deist God, not the Christian God, and as such he is considered to be a god of noninterference who has no need or desire to be worshiped or adored by us. Nor does he insist that we blindly follow the demands of others who allegedly speak for him.
But more to the point of your witty post, none of those situations you mention are not trying to wedge their way into science through deceit. They are at least honest about what they say.
To: kpp_kpp
Any questions regarding the signage or disclaimers could then be referred to the science department as they obviously have the facts to prove that God does not exist.
To what "God", out of the thousands worshipped and acknowledged throughout human history, do you refer and why do you think that the issue has anything to do with that particular deity?
42 posted on
09/28/2005 8:58:21 AM PDT by
Dimensio
(http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson