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O'Donnell Questions Separation of Church, State in Senate Debate
Fox News / AP ^ | 10/19/10

Posted on 10/19/2010 8:25:06 AM PDT by truthfreedom

Republican Senate nominee Christine O'Donnell of Delaware on Tuesday questioned whether the U.S. Constitution calls for a separation of church and state, appearing to disagree or not know that the First Amendment bars the government from establishing religion.

The exchange came in a debate before an audience of legal scholars and law students at Widener University Law School, as O'Donnell criticized Democratic nominee Chris Coons' position that teaching creationism in public school would violate the First Amendment by promoting religious doctrine.

(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Delaware
KEYWORDS: chriscoons; christineodonnell; coons; enemedia; odonnell
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To: jwalsh07

And Coons was wrong when he quoted the Constitution and said
“Government” not “Congress”


101 posted on 10/19/2010 12:26:16 PM PDT by truthfreedom
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To: truthfreedom

Coons war wrong several times. But unfortunately Christine is not conversant enough with the document to keel haul him with it.


102 posted on 10/19/2010 12:30:19 PM PDT by jwalsh07
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To: TitansAFC
Surprise. I don't believe in a 5000 year old Earth either.

My concern is the teaching of subjects that are based on belief & faith, rather than fact, by an instructor who may have neither the belief nor faith. My concern is also that children will be force to learn beliefs that are completely opposed to those of the parents & family.

Given the diverse nature of American students, it is unreasonable to teach one belief system to the exclusion of all others, in gov't run schools. It is equally unreasonalbe to teach multiple belief systems re. creation & expect students to be anything other than confused.

“nobody is talking about having Creation class...”. It was certainly what O'Donnell & Coons were talking about.

As for way back when: This country was overwhelmingly Christian, school was not a function of gov’t, & there was no legal requirement for attendance. Our demographics are very different from 200+ years ago.

Forcing a Jewish child to memorize & be tested on the muslim version of creation in Dearborn, MI is just plain wrong, even if that is what the locals there prefer. That is indoctrination, not education.

103 posted on 10/19/2010 12:36:20 PM PDT by Mister Da (The mark of a wise man is not what he knows, but what he knows he doesn't know!)
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To: jwalsh07

I only have select quotes.

And perhaps it would’ve been better if she wailed on him on the spot.

But the fact is that she’s right. And if she wants to make a tv commercial proving it, she can.

She can talk about the real, important difference between Government and Congress. The 1A says Congress. Coons says Government.

Listen, Coons, people are fed up with the Government ignoring what the Constitution says. There is nothing in the Constitution that allows the Federal Government to force you to buy anything, including health insurance.


104 posted on 10/19/2010 12:39:34 PM PDT by truthfreedom
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To: truthfreedom
I do not argue whether O'Donnell was legally right or wrong.

It is the idea of religious instruction in gov’t run schools. Bad idea, legal or not.

105 posted on 10/19/2010 12:43:14 PM PDT by Mister Da (The mark of a wise man is not what he knows, but what he knows he doesn't know!)
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To: Mister Da

In most places it won’t happen. In others, who knows? Very few.

But you’re talking school board policy.


106 posted on 10/19/2010 12:54:48 PM PDT by truthfreedom
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To: truthfreedom

It appears that the most recent articles are stepping back from all out lying and presenting a more accurate approach.

here’s a recent NYT
http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/19/odonnell-questions-church-state-separation/?partner=rss&emc=rss

does include the accurate Coons 1A.


107 posted on 10/19/2010 12:59:08 PM PDT by truthfreedom
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To: truthfreedom

http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/19/odonnell-questions-church-state-separation/?partner=rss&emc=rss

this link has the short 30 second audio of the relevant part.

Coons clearly says “Government” and not “Congress”


108 posted on 10/19/2010 1:03:16 PM PDT by truthfreedom
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To: truthfreedom

Beow is comment 190 in the NYTimes article to which you linked. It took 190 comments for someone finally to state clearly the point she had in mind but failed to make. There were a handful of people defending her up to this point, but 95 % of the comments ridicule her.

This is what we are up against. Most people do not understand the distinction between separation and non-establishment or that federal non-establishment did not affect state establishments.

Comment 190 makes these points well. What O’Donnell needed to do was to make these points concisely and clearly instead of asking rhetorically, “Are you saying that’s in the Constitution?”

If she had actually positively stated her underlying, real point, she would have come away as having taken him to the woodshed constitutionally. Instead, she opened the way to being portrayed in these and other comboxes as ignorant of the Constitution. She actually knows the Constitution better than Coons and better than the law students in the audience. But she missed her chance to demonstrate that.

It’s sad. I know it’s hard to think tactically on your feet but she had three chances to “teach” him and three times she resorted to rhetorical questions to which she knew the obvious rhetorical answer but to which neither Coons nor her audience nor 95% of Americans know the answer.

RHETORICAL QUESTIONS DON’T WORK IF THE TO-THE-QUESTIONER OBVIOUS ANSWER IS NOT OBVIOUS TO THE LISTENERS.

Here’s comment 190. Comments are now close. Read the other comments and weep for our Republic. And for Christine O’Donnell. I hope she wins despite this. But it was a huge lost opportunity.

xton1
San Francisco
October 19th, 2010
3:14 pm
I cannot believe the historical illiterates and Christian bashers on this site. Most states in early America had established churches in their constitutions, many survived till the end of the 20th Century. The First Amendment originally limited only federal government, not state governments, and contains two clauses on religion: Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause. For over 200 years the New England Primer was used in schools through out America to teach them to read, be good American citizens, and taught Catholicism. This was, and I believe still is, Constitutional.
It is a bad analogy to use the term “a wall of separation” in discussing the First Amendment, for it is used like a sledge hammer to attack religious freedoms and Christianity. When Jefferson used it in his letter to a Baptist minister, he meant it as a one way obstacle, meaning that Government should never influence religion, but religion should be allowed to influence government.
It is un-Constitutional and against the Free Exercise Clause to stop prayer in schools, preventing Nativity scenes on public property, or stopping Christians from using rooms in schools after hours for religious practices.
The whole attack on Christianity is Socialist, because Christians put God above all and believe in the sovereignty of the individual; whereas, socialist believe is that the State is all powerful and that people are mere cattle that need to be controlled.


109 posted on 10/19/2010 2:18:41 PM PDT by Houghton M.
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To: Houghton M.

she can take the video of Coons missing the point, saying the constitution wrong in 2 respects.

1) It should be Congress, not Government

2) “establishment of religion” is not the same at all as “law respecting an establishment of religion”

in the latter (the Constitution), “an establishment of religion” is presumed to be lawful. Why else prohibit Federal laws “respecting” it.

Hopefully Fox will teach people these finer details of Constitutional Law.


110 posted on 10/19/2010 2:25:46 PM PDT by truthfreedom
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To: truthfreedom

If that’s the quote she’s correct and not just technically. The term separation of church and state isn’t in the constitution it’s in a SCOTUS decision.


111 posted on 10/19/2010 2:46:36 PM PDT by airedale
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To: truthfreedom

Congress and the Government can be as Christian as it wants, and we’d all be better off for it since that’s the way it started out, but:

Congress can’t create a “Church of the United States”


112 posted on 10/19/2010 2:53:42 PM PDT by ROCKLOBSTER (Celebrate: Republicans freed the slaves Month.)
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To: Mister Da
My concern is the teaching of subjects that are based on belief & faith, rather than fact, by an instructor who may have neither the belief nor faith. My concern is also that children will be force to learn beliefs that are completely opposed to those of the parents & family.

This should be the concern every Freeper and Conservative. Anything that gets too deeply into religious issues and beliefs needs to be taught by parents and by religious organizations approved by the parents, such as a Sunday School. That includes Creation and it includes quite a few other things.

Unfortunately we have a lot of parents who shirk their responsibility and would rather the government or schools raise their kids. They don't have a problem with the government getting mixed up with religion because they've never spent 30 seconds thinking about it or because they hold no serious religious beliefs.

The day we start thinking it's okay for the government to get heavily involved with religion is the day we're finished and are nothing more than a Christian version of Islamic countries.
113 posted on 10/19/2010 3:04:36 PM PDT by af_vet_rr
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To: ROCKLOBSTER

Right. We’re talking about things like school prayer, the teaching of creationism by local school districts.


114 posted on 10/19/2010 3:30:58 PM PDT by truthfreedom
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To: Mister Da

I’m curious to know which version of Genesis you read that made you believe Cain’s murder was anywhere close to being ‘right’.

God makes it extremely clear that Cain must master his anger, and rule over the desire that sin will tempt him with. (Gen 4:5-7)


115 posted on 10/19/2010 5:21:23 PM PDT by readthebibledaily
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To: af_vet_rr
Finally, someone who understands what I am saying.

I've had several replies to my original comment, & they all leap to defend O'D as being correct on the 1st A. No thought to the possible consequences of teaching creationism in public schools. The one reply I did have wrote it off as not likely to be a problem. Duh!

Right now, there are numerous school districts in the USA that are not predominately Christian children. Those schools will not be teaching Genesis during creation studies. The minority students are screwed.

Most other schools have a student body that is very diverse. Jews, muslims, Hindus, Atheists, & Christians in the same classroom. How the Christine O’Donnells are gonna manage creation studies in this environment, I want to know?
I also want to know how the very PC education system is gonna handle a minority group of muslim students who refuse to hear any scripture but that of the koran.

I don't know about you, but “Jesus loves me” was probably the first song I learned. I imagine I knew about creation long before I attended public school. Wouldn't I & my parents have been surprised & horrified to find that my school was full of “Aztecs” & the creationism story starts with a human sacrifice? (I'm being facetious here about the Aztecs, but anybody that doesn't get my point need not reply).

As for the election, I have no use for the Marxist Spendocrat Coons. I wouldn't vote for him over Godzilla.

But I am just not impressed with O'D. She seems naive & inexperienced. She has had little success in life. Not married. No Children. That seems odd for such an attractive woman. Not the strongest person to send to the shark pool that is WDC, though I will reluctantly support her over Coons.

116 posted on 10/19/2010 6:12:38 PM PDT by Mister Da (The mark of a wise man is not what he knows, but what he knows he doesn't know!)
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To: readthebibledaily
You misunderstand me.

I asked “Will the story of Cain & Able DEGENERATE into victim-hood for Cain, who was abused, neglected, & disrespected to the point of being right to kill Abel?”

I certainly do NOT agree with this statement. I was making an example of how the Scriptures can be twisted by wrongheaded teachers, school boards, & textbook publishers.

Anyone that believes that our gov’t & union controlled, PC education system is gonna properly teach the Scriptures must also believe that OJ was innocent.

117 posted on 10/19/2010 6:19:26 PM PDT by Mister Da (The mark of a wise man is not what he knows, but what he knows he doesn't know!)
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To: truthfreedom
We’re talking about things like school prayer, the teaching of creationism by local school districts.

I know what you're talking about, and I know Coons doesn't know what he's talking about.

The schools should be totally controlled locally, and none of the fed-gov's damn business. The "Intelligent design theory" is no more far fetched nor less provable than evolution.

118 posted on 10/20/2010 3:27:38 PM PDT by ROCKLOBSTER (Celebrate: Republicans freed the slaves Month.)
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To: ROCKLOBSTER

Creationism and whatnot should be a local decision. Most places won’t teach creationism or intelligent design.


119 posted on 10/20/2010 4:00:45 PM PDT by truthfreedom
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To: Mister Da

You’re right, I missed that. I think such episodes would be extremely unlikely, but still I agree that religious teaching should be left to parents and the religious organizations.


120 posted on 10/21/2010 4:00:34 PM PDT by readthebibledaily
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