Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Alan Keyes on the Sean Hannity Show 8/19/03 (Transcript: Israel, Judge Moore & the 10 Commandments)
Renew America ^ | 8/19/2003 | Sean Hannity & Alan Keyes

Posted on 08/19/2003 5:33:06 PM PDT by SunStar

Alan Keyes on the Sean Hannity Show

~~~

August 19, 2003



HANNITY: It's an honor, a privilege, and a pleasure to invite back to our microphones--it's been a while--former Ambassador to the United Nations Alan Keyes.

You were U.N. Ambassador, correct?

KEYES: I was Ambassador to the United Nations Economic and Social Council. I worked with Jeane Kirkpatrick.

HANNITY: How are you doing? It's been forever now. How are you doing? It's been a while.

KEYES: Oh, I'm doing pretty well.

HANNITY: I understand you're out doing a lot of speaking around the country--or?

KEYES: I've been doing a lot of speaking, yes. I've been trying to get some writing done. Trying to bolster support and take an interest in a lot of the things I believe in and care about.

HANNITY: We're going to get to this Judge Moore issue in just a second. I want to get your take on it. We have two acts of terror that have taken place today. We now can confirm 20 dead in Israel. This attack just, oh, an hour and a half ago--including children and women. And then we had the attack earlier today, U.N. headquarters in Baghdad. What are your thoughts?

KEYES: Well, I think with respect to the attack on Israel, it simply punctuates the truth of the matter--which is that this whole process which has envisaged some kind of, I don't know, truce and so forth and so on, is actually, I think, ill-fated and a bad idea.

We are engaged in a war against terror. We aren't going to be able to achieve progress and peace until the terrorist infrastructure is utterly destroyed. That's the case in the Middle East, and it's the case for us, as we face the threat of global terrorism.

The notion that you can somehow find negotiations in the midst of this means that you're negotiating with the terrorists. And that simply emboldens them to do more terror, and to do worse terror--which is exactly what we're seeing.

HANNITY: Hasn't that been the reaction, though, historically--even from this administration? Haven't we sent mixed signals that, you know, "Oh, I know you've been attacked, but please try and go back to the negotiating table?" I mean, right now, as we come on the air, Hamas and Islamic Jihad are actually fighting to get credit for the murder of these children, that took place today.

KEYES: Well, see, I have been a long-standing critic of this whole approach. I think that Secretary Powell is an incompetent, that he has continually led this country down the wrong path in his policies, that his willingness to try to put together a structure that actually rewards terrorists for their terrorism--with so-called "reciprocal steps"--as if they and their victims are on equal standing. It's dangerous. And it is now costing lives.

We should not have embarked upon this path. We should have made it clear to everyone involved, on every side, that the first order of business is to stop the terrorists, to make war (as Abbas has said he is not willing to do) on the terrorist elements--whether they be among the Palestinians, or elsewhere in the world.

HANNITY: Does that mean the United States should join military forces with Israel in the fight against terror? Against Islamic Jihad, Hamas, and Hezbollah?

KEYES: Frankly, I don't think the Israelis have shown any particular need of our help in dealing with that element of the terrorist infrastructure that they face. I think the only thing that what I am saying implies is, that we would stop brow-beating them into a position where we're actually getting them to lay off of the terrorist infrastructure, to release prisoners, give it a chance to recruit its strength once again.

In a case like this, I think it's like dealing with an infection in the body. You have to keep administrating the desired remedy until the infection has been eliminated. If you stop too soon, it reemerges.

HANNITY: Dr. Alan Keyes is with us. Are you watching the on-going attacks by the Democratic leadership--and more specifically, those that are running for president--against just about everything this president does in the battle in the war on terror? And how should he respond to it?

KEYES: Well, I think that, in the first instance, we need to keep our focus on the fact that we are fighting for the security of this county, that we were heinously attacked, that we are continually under threat--and that in terms of our security, we have to take the steps that are necessary to attack the terrorists where they live, where they develop their strength, where they get their support. We shouldn't be sitting on our hands waiting for them to kill Americans, and then responding.

And I think that proactive approach, in which we make it clear that we take the war to the enemy to prevent harm, if we can, to the American people, is the right approach, in spite of all criticism we need to contend with.

HANNITY: Now, you were at this big rally for Judge Moore in Alabama over the weekend, as I understand it. I was going to and make it myself--I had other obligations with my family. Here, I guess tomorrow is D-Day on this decision, and he is not going to remove the Ten Commandments, as he has been so ordered. What is the next process?

KEYES: I think that first we have to understand what's really going, though. Because Judge Moore, the Chief Judge of the state of Alabama, has put a monument out with the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Ten Commandments, and a federal judge has ordered him to take it down.

The first question that we need to be asking ourselves is, on what basis does he issue this order? People are somehow saying that if Judge Moore doesn't listen to this judge, he's breaking the law. What law?

If a judge issues an order that has no foundation in the law or in the Constitution, on what basis is he to be obeyed? Just because he's a judge?

The truth of the matter is, if we take that approach, then judges are tyrants in America who can do whatever they please without any justification in law, constitution, or a fact. And that is not where we live, I hope, under some kind of judicial tyranny--which is what Jefferson feared would happen of you allow judges to get away with what this judge is doing. There's no basis in the Constitution for what he is demanding. None whatsoever.

And there never has been.

HANNITY: I agree with you, and I agree with Judge Moore--Chief Justice Moore. Do you think he's going to be put in jail?

KEYES: Well, if he's going to be put in jail, I'll be there with him. Because many of us--and this is what I would like, especially, to say to people out there today. Many people all over the country, everywhere I travel, everywhere I go, I give speeches, folks come up and say, "That's it. That's what I believe. The moral foundations." They're trying to rip the Ten Commandments from the heart of this country. It is the final stage in decades of assault on the moral foundations of America.

And if they get away with it in Alabama--the buckle of the Bible-belt--they will be emboldened to do it everywhere in this country.

It is time that we looked them in the eye and told them we won't stand for it. And there's only one way to do it. We should all of us be going to Montgomery, Alabama. I will be there. Supposedly, this comes to a head in the course of the next 24-48 hours, if there's not a stay. And I've already made arrangements to be there, to join with folks who will be putting our bodies in the way of this unlawful action.

It should not be tolerated. At some point, the people of this country have to get on their hind legs and say "no" to those who are attempting to destroy our constitutional religious liberty.

HANNITY: Now, we're going to have you on TV tomorrow night. Are you going to be in Montgomery? Or are you going to be in Washington? Or, you don't know yet?

KEYES: I don't know yet. I was just on the phone with Rick Scarborough of Vision America. There are folks there on the spot. And I think a deadline comes tomorrow. There may be a stay in it. If not, I am placing things in readiness to go back, because I think that this is it.

I encounter so many people, Sean, who say, "How did we get here? How did we let this happen?" and so forth and so on. And I'll tell you how we let it happen. We let it happen because we laid down and took it! Because these individuals, with no basis in the Constitution--and here's where I think we need to discuss this thoroughly and carefully. This judge's order, and any order like it, past or future, has no Constitutional basis whatsoever. They are acting in a lawless fashion. They are fabricating a doctrine that is nowhere to be found in the Constitution of the United States.

And a matter of fact, it runs clean contrary to what is to be found in the document: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion." You know what they always say about that, Sean? They say, "Well, that means Congress can't establish a religion." No. It means Congress can't deal with the issue at all, in any way. Not to establish, and not to interfere with what the state governments do with respect to this question.

And that was the plain intention, clear on the historical record, of the people who put that amendment in place--that the federal government would have no lawful basis whatsoever for interfering with the judgments and decisions of the people in their state governments on this matter.

That being the case, where does this judge get his basis for taking this action? There isn't one.


HANNITY: What do you want people to do? When should they go down there to be with you?

KEYES: Right now. They could go down, starting--there are folks right now who will be launching a prayer vigil starting at 7:00 tomorrow night. And I think anybody within the sound of my voice who cares, who really cares, who isn't just paying lip service to the moral future of this country. If they could possibly get there--in Alabama, in the neighboring states--they need to come to the capitol of Alabama, and join with those who are launching the prayer vigil at the Supreme Court here.

HANNITY: I'll tell you what we're going to do here to help support you, Dr. Keyes, if you'd like. Well, first of all, you're going to be on TV with us tomorrow. If you're going to go down there, while you're down there, why don't you check in with us every day, and you can update us and tell us what's going on, and give people more information? How's that?

KEYES: I will do my best. I surely will.

HANNITY: OK.

KEYES: And I hope that folks realize the significance of this. Americans--especially people who understand the importance of the moral basis of this country--we've been taking things for granted for too long. We have reached the final stage here. There is nothing further they can do, once they have, as this judge says, told the state governments that the people of the United States, through their state governments, have no right to show reverence for God. That's what he said.

Hannity: Well, I'll tell you what. We'll have you on both TV and radio tomorrow, if we can work it out. Definitely on TV. And we're going to continue to monitor your involvement in this, and we'll have Judge Moore on, probably sometime tomorrow, too. So we'll continue to follow this situation. But listen, it's been a long time since we've had you on. We've missed having you on. Dr.--Ambassador--Alan Keyes on the program. And we'll see you on TV, either from Washington or from Alabama tomorrow night.

KEYES: OK.

HANNITY: Thank you, Dr. Keyes.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; US: Alabama
KEYWORDS: 10commandments; alankeyes; judgemoore; seanhannity; transcript

1 posted on 08/19/2003 5:33:06 PM PDT by SunStar
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: SunStar

Ten Commandments rally in Alabama

~~~

Alan Keyes

~~~

August 16, 2003



I have to start out today making a bit of a confession. That's, by the way, appropriate for a catholic, I guess--making confession. But I have to say that very often I stand before crowds, and I believe that I speak from some knowledge that I've gained over the years, or some meditative thought. But today, I come to you befuddled a little bit because, here we stand, in the midst of a crisis--a federal judge has threatened the Chief Justice of the state of Alabama. We're all gathering together in defense of his action. And the judge has told him he's got to take the Ten Commandments out of the courthouse.

And all of these people are out running about, telling us that if we stand here against those pronouncements of this judge that we're somehow breaking the law, that we are somehow showing contempt for the Constitution.

Now, I gotta tell y'all. All of my life, I have done my best to stand for a few things. Chief of all is respect for Almighty God, [audience: amen!] and all that He enjoins upon us with His will. But among them has been respect for the Constitution of the United States. And I want to tell you: I would not stand anywhere where my standing there could be construed in a way that undercut or damaged the Constitution of this country, on which I believe our liberties depend.

But there's something I don't understand. This is my ignorance. Because I've thought about it, I've read a fair amount about the Constitution and laws, and so forth and so on. Would somebody point out to me the law that this judge is basing his decision on? Because if I'm breaking the law, or if Judge Moore's breaking the law, I'd like to know which law it is. I'd like to know who passed it, I'd like to know where it's written! [cheering, applause]

They tell me that if, somehow or another, I don't respect this doctrine of the "separation of church and state," I am disrespecting the Constitution. I sat down again the other day. I scoured the document--it's not very long, by the way. You could get through it in a fairly short time. That was the brilliance of our Founders. It didn't take them a hundred thousand pages. It's not like the treaty that established the World Trade Organization, which ten thousand people couldn't get through in ten thousand years. No. You could sit down and read the Constitution in a short session. I scoured it. I looked through it once, I looked through it twice. I looked through it a dozen times. I didn't find a single mention of this "separation!" [cheering, applause]

Where?! Where, I ask them, is the law that is being broken? Where is the Constitutional provision that is being defied?

I'll tell you where it is. It's right there in front of our eyes. We were reminded of it again today. We ought to look at it and think it through, word by careful word, as our Founders did: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion." Now hold on, hold on. Before we jump to conclusions here, I want to point out that those words don't, by the way, simply forbid Congress to establish a religion. That's not what they say. And the liberals, all these people always act like "establishment is forbidden." No. That's not what's forbidden. It is forbidden for Congress to touch this question! It is forbidden for Congress to address it! It is forbidden for Congress to deal with it! [cheering, applause]

And I'll stand here right now. I'll ask with Howie Philips. I'll ask with every constitutionist of conscience. If Congress is forbidden to make a law, how can this judge be enforcing a law they cannot make?

But we need to continue, though: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise . . . " Now, I want to stop there because, you know, I'm middle-aged now, and I gotta tell you. When you're young, it's bad enough. As you get a little older, this business of exercise becomes a real challenge. It has been for me. I still have a son young enough that I've got to be encouraging him to get his body ready for high school, and get out there and run and work. And you've got to lead by example, so exercise has been much on my mind.

One thing I've noticed about it: as much as I wish it were not so, simply sitting back in my Lazy Boy thinking about it doesn't help. Having a firm opinion about it, believing deeply in exercise with all my being, that doesn't make my body stronger. No. Last time I looked, exercise means that you've got to get up out of the chair and act on what's in your heart. You've got to live it out in what you do, in what you say, in how you act, in how you govern your life!

All those liberals in this country have tried to put us in a box, where freedom of religion means the freedom to believe as you chose. No! The free exercise of religion means that we have the right in our families, and in our schools, and in our communities, and in our governments, and in our states to live according to the word of God! [cheering, applause]

Now, again, see. There are going to be those folks--they would like to accuse of me: "Well, that's Alan. You don't get to impose your views on it. That's your view," and such. No, it's not. This is what I don't understand also, because for most of our country's history, it not only never occurred to judges and courts that folks didn't have the right to read the Bible at the workplace, teach it in the schools, respect the law of God in their lives. It was so far from occurring to them that they acknowledged it as one of the foundations of our life and freedom. And in many decisions, including decisions by the Supreme Court on polygamy and so forth, it was explicitly cited as one of the bases for our understanding of law.

It's also true that this free exercise of religion was very deeply important to the people who founded the country. Why do you think a lot of the first colonies were founded--Massachusetts and other places like this? People who were fleeing from war and tyranny and persecution came here.

Now, what kind of persecution was it? It wasn't just the persecution, "I'm going to throw you to the lions if you don't believe what I believe." No. What they were doing in Europe in those days, on one side and the other, was looking at folks and saying, "I'm the sovereign. I'm the national power. And in your cities and in your provinces, you must act according to my religious beliefs." And there were cities, and there were towns, and there were provinces, and there were states that stood up and said no--and they fought, and the blood ran red for their right to live in communities that were governed by laws that reflected their faith! [cheering, applause]

If nothing else today, I think all of us who are here, and all of those of Christian faith and belief and conscience, and all of those who stand on a ground of biblical tradition, all of those who believe that we cannot live without the law and rule of that God we invoked when we claimed our rights--all of us must stand and make clear, to the courts, and to the Congress, and to the president, and to every power that be, that we remember now what our freedom of religion is supposed to be! [cheering, applause] And that we shall demand against every coercion that we be granted again what the tyranny of the courts have sought to wrest from us: the freedom to live in communities that are governed by laws that reflect our beliefs. [applause]

Now, see, our Founders were wise, though. They looked at the terrible wars that had taken place in Europe, and they didn't want it to happen here. And they realized, at the root of those conflicts had been the effort of national sovereigns and overall sovereigns to impose their religious belief and practices on people and states and provinces and localities beneath their civil administration. So what did they do? They put an amendment in the Constitution with the wording we've talked about. Wording intended to tell the Congress and thereby the national government that the whole business of religious belief, that whole business of any regime, any attitude to be imparted through law, that it was none of the federal government's business.

Now, that still gives rise to the possibility. Some folks don't want to see it. There might be states in which they require a religious test or oath of office. There might be states in which they have established churches, where subventions are given to schools and so forth to teach the Bible. There might be places where you and I might disagree with the religion some folks wanted to put in place over their communities. But guess what the Founders believed? They believed that people in their states and localities had the right to live under institutions they would put together to govern themselves according to their faith. [applause]

There is, I believe, going on right now a violation of the Constitution. There is, I believe, a lawless act against which we must stand. But it is the lawless act of the federal judges who seek now to wrest from us that liberty which is ours--not by right of the Constitution, but by grant and right of the Creator, God. [cheering, applause]

We have the right to live in communities--and that means the people in Alabama can live in this state. And you know how come I know that this is so, that the First Amendment didn't intend to destroy this right, that in fact such communities could exist, such states could exist? Because at the time the First Amendment was passed, at the time they put it on the books in the first place, there were a majority of states in the United States--at the time, the former colonies--where there were religious tests and oaths of office, where there were, in fact, established churches.

How do they mean to tell us that the people who wrote the amendment then went back on to live in contradiction of its terms? This is a lie! And it's time we threw this lie back into their teeth! [applause]

And I want to answer right now. No, I want to answer one objection from them: "Well, Alan, that means you believe in religious persecution," and all this. No, I don't. Quite the contrary. But I think that what we are faced with now is an effort to set the stage for religious persecution. See? These folks claim that they are acting in order to oppose, somehow, the imposition of religious views--but no. What they are doing in the courts, what these judges are doing when they toss out the Ten Commandments, toss out and against the will of people in the states and in communities their desire to show their reverence for Almighty God, what they are doing is imposing a uniform national regime of disbelief and atheism on the people of this country! They are doing exactly what the Constitution of the United States forbids. [applause]

It could be, now--and here, again, this is where I am overcome by my apparent lack of knowledge. [laughter] Because, folks want to tell me, as well, that if the judge violates the Constitution, and then in the decision wrests my rights away, then I have no recourse--Moore has no recourse, the people of Alabama have no recourse. We've just gotta sit back and take it. [audience: no!]

And I'm hard-pressed. See, I look at the history of the country, and I'm scouring the pages to see where it says that that's so--and what do I stumble across but a Declaration of Independence that says, when, by along train abuses, they evince the pattern that is going to destroy our rights, the Founders said that it is not only our right, it is our duty to oppose them! That's what I see. [applause]

And I couldn't stand here today. I couldn't stand here today in this spot which is so important to the history of our country, where, indeed, as I was reminded earlier today, the very dissolution of America over the issue of slavery took place. This city, where so many hearts dedicated to the liberty of people, joined together in order to begin that civil rights movement that would result in the end of a regime of oppression for people of my racial background. [applause]

I couldn't stand here today, except I remembered that there was a time when the majority and the law enslaved my people, and there were people of conscience who stood against that slavery, though it meant that they defy those laws!

There was a time when law segregated Americans into black and white and forced some into a situation of oppression--and it would be the same today, if some had not had the courage to stand against those unjust laws! [applause]

We stand here today in a great tradition. Not as our lying critics would have it--in the tradition of those who defied the courts in order to oppress and destroy the rights of their fellow human beings--but in the tradition of those who stood against unjust laws in order to stand for the rights of all our people! This is where we stand! [applause]

But even as it was the case, that those who stood against slavery and for civil rights had stood in fact on the solid ground of American truth and constitutional freedom, so it is today. And I think we have to be clear. The fact that some people were wrong when they invoked the rights of the people in their states in the name of institutions that trampled on the rights of individuals does not mean that it is right today to stand silent while the rights of the people of this state of Alabama are trampled by a tyrannical and arbitrary judge.

If we can act aright, if we can act with knowledge and precision, if we can act with care and courage as we defend our liberty in this place, then it could be here today that finally we draw the line against those who seek to abuse the color of law in order to destroy the substance of liberty! [applause]

I'm glad that I see all of you here today. I know that you represent many, many millions more around this country. And I do want to address the work. Because some people say, "Well, what if this happens? What if that happens? What if they come and try to take down the Ten Commandments? What if it goes to the Supreme Court, and they decide differently--what then?" And everybody seems to think we've just got to sit back.

First of all, there is a person in this country who could solve this problem. Fairly easily. I remembered that when I was running for president a long time ago. [laughter] People used to ask me questions about this. Some people think that the pardoning power in the Constitution is a--well, just imagine we wake up tomorrow, and George Bush, having read about this as President of the United States, says, "OK. The judge says, Judge Moore, that you have been breaking the law. I'm sending you this, and let it be known to everybody in the country that I pardon you now for this offense, and I pardon all people in their states of all such offenses, because I believe that they are acting according to their Constitutional right." [cheering, applause]

The president could solve this problem with a word, in the proper exercise of his Constitutional authority, in defense of our Constitutional rights. So might the Congress, by cutting off the funds to enforce it, as some have introduced into the Congress. By, as Howard said, disestablishing the courts that dare to assault the rights of the people in their most fundamental guise.

All these are possible courses of action, but what they should remind us of is that we live in a constitution in which no branch was supposed to be the absolute tyrant over the others. Not the courts over the Congress and the presidency. Not the president over the others. If the president decides that the courts are wrong, it is up to the Congress to stand against it, and if they stand with him, then the Constitution has been served. [applause]

We have three branches of government. And I stand here today in hope that all Americans will stand to call on the president and call on the Congress to take courageous action finally to put the bridle on these unruly courts! [cheering, applause]

We can! We can make the difference, for we know that what is at stake is not just the symbolic display of the Ten Commandments. It is the reverence that we must hold for them in our hearts if we are to fulfill this nation's promise of true self-government. For, self-government in the end cannot come from the external impositions of law and police forces and military forces. True self-government begins where our Founders knew it began, where our Lord knew it began. True self-government begins in the heart. And it is the heart of a people governed by respect for the Ten Commandments and the word of God writ upon their hearts--it is the heart of such a people that fits them for a freedom that will endure.

God bless you.
2 posted on 08/19/2003 5:34:58 PM PDT by SunStar (Democrats piss me off!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SunStar
Its time for the Christians to stand up for GOD in America
3 posted on 08/19/2003 5:46:36 PM PDT by comnet
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SunStar
Thanks for this post. I've wondered often about Dr. Keyes. I am glad he's coming back into the public eye. He's a powerful messenger.
4 posted on 08/19/2003 5:48:50 PM PDT by Recovering_Democrat (I'm so glad to no longer be associated with the Party of Dependence on Government!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: comnet
I agree 100%, If we turn our backs to God, He will turn his back to us. This anti-God movement needs to be derailed
5 posted on 08/19/2003 6:07:27 PM PDT by MJY1288 (The Enemies of America can Count on the Democrats for Aid and Comfort)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: SunStar
Thanks for posting the transcript, I listened to Hannity's show today, but Alan Keyes gets wound up at times and gets talking so fast I can't keep up with him. So the transcript comes in real handy :-)
6 posted on 08/19/2003 6:11:01 PM PDT by MJY1288 (The Enemies of America can Count on the Democrats for Aid and Comfort)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: comnet
Many Thanks!

I heard the meat of Dr. Keys interview today but I missed the first part. I was driving down the road yelling, "YES! Yes! YES!

Christians in government, like Bill Pryor, need to stop enforcing these immoral and unconstitutional laws. Christians get into power and then say that whatever the supreme government says they will enforce. Ashcroft is another example.

The Christians in power need to remember that God is supreme not the government.
7 posted on 08/19/2003 6:22:03 PM PDT by rebel
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: SunStar
This needs repeating, LOUDLY! So I will:
I encounter so many people, Sean, who say, "How did we get here? How did we let this happen?" and so forth and so on. And I'll tell you how we let it happen. We let it happen because we laid down and took it! Because these individuals, with no basis in the Constitution--and here's where I think we need to discuss this thoroughly and carefully. This judge's order, and any order like it, past or future, has no Constitutional basis whatsoever. They are acting in a lawless fashion. They are fabricating a doctrine that is nowhere to be found in the Constitution of the United States.

And a matter of fact, it runs clean contrary to what is to be found in the document: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion." You know what they always say about that, Sean? They say, "Well, that means Congress can't establish a religion." No. It means Congress can't deal with the issue at all, in any way. Not to establish, and not to interfere with what the state governments do with respect to this question.

And that was the plain intention, clear on the historical record, of the people who put that amendment in place--that the federal government would have no lawful basis whatsoever for interfering with the judgments and decisions of the people in their state governments on this matter.

That being the case, where does this judge get his basis for taking this action? There isn't one.

Well said Alan, well said.
8 posted on 08/19/2003 6:47:18 PM PDT by mc5cents
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SunStar
As a nonbeliever it is apparent to me that the judiciary and the government as a whole is very aggressively attempting to impose an atheistic secular humanism as a de facto state enforced religion.
9 posted on 08/19/2003 7:18:16 PM PDT by RLK
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SunStar
Major ping for Alan Keyes. You're the man, and have been for a long time!
10 posted on 08/19/2003 7:25:38 PM PDT by veracious
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: rebel
The Christians in power need to remember that God is supreme not the government.
11 posted on 08/19/2003 7:33:45 PM PDT by comnet
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: rebel
Chief Justice Moore's Poem at Rally
Monday, August 18, 2003

By Sam Kastensmidt

With thousands in attendance, Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore delivered the following poem:

Our American Birthright

One nation under God was their cry and declaration,
Upon the law of Nature's God they built a mighty Nation.
For unlike mankind before them who had walked this earthen sod,
These men would never question the Sovereignty of God.
That all men were "created" was a truth "self-evident,"
To secure the rights God gave us was the role of government.
And if any form of government became destructive of this end,
It was their right, their duty, a new one to begin.

So with a firm reliance on Divine Providence for protection,
They pledged their sacred honor and sought His wise direction.
They lifted an appeal to God for all the world to see,
And declared their independence forever to be free.
I'm glad they're not here with us to see the mess we're in,
How we've given up our righteousness for a life of indulgent sin.
For when abortion isn't murder and sodomy is deemed a right,
Then evil is now called good and darkness is now called light.

While truth and law were founded on the God of all Creation,
Man now, through law, denies the truth and calls it "separation."
No longer does man see a need for God when he's in full control,
For the only truth self-evident is in the latest poll.
But with man as his own master we fail to count the cost,
Our precious freedoms vanish and our liberty is lost.
Children are told they can't pray and they teach them evolution,
When will they learn the fear of God is the only true solution?
Our schools have become the battleground while all across the land,
Christians shrug their shoulders—afraid to take a stand.

And from the grave their voices cry the victory has been won.
Just glorify the Father as did His only Son.
When your work on earth is done, and you've traveled where we've trod,
You'll leave the land we left to you, ONE NATION UNDER GOD!


12 posted on 08/19/2003 7:39:37 PM PDT by comnet
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: Recovering_Democrat
I think he's found his real calling, getting involved in these culture war issues. Christians love him and he has a lot of respect.
13 posted on 08/19/2003 7:45:38 PM PDT by bethelgrad (for God, country, and the Corps OOH RAH!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

Comment #14 Removed by Moderator

To: SunStar
Bump
15 posted on 08/19/2003 8:47:51 PM PDT by Captain Beyond (The Hammer of the gods! (Just a cool line from a Led Zep song))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Captain Beyond
bump
16 posted on 08/19/2003 9:48:29 PM PDT by Keyes2000mt
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: comnet
Agreed!!
17 posted on 08/19/2003 9:52:11 PM PDT by potlatch (If you want breakfast in bed - - - sleep in the kitchen!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: SunStar
Israel is so far the only issue that I find myself getting angry with the Bush administration over. I realize he knows so much more than I on the dynamics of Israel, but I wish he would keep silent on Israel and allow them to fight their terrorism as Sharon sees fit.

It does appear there's a double standard for Israel and how America fights terrorism. We will go around the globe whereever terrorism is hiding to defeat them, yet Israel is told in public be careful how you retaliate.

Maybe I'm just angry now for the senseless killing of babies and can't see the big picture. A few strategic bombs in the nest of these terrorists will do and remove Arafat from the region.
18 posted on 08/19/2003 10:05:13 PM PDT by swheats
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: RLK
As a nonbeliever it is apparent to me that the judiciary and the government as a whole is very aggressively attempting to impose an atheistic secular humanism as a de facto state enforced religion.

As a nonbeliever, I also believe this and agree 100% with Alan Keyes' position. Our government is not allowed to set up a state religion, nor can they set up state-mandated Atheism!

19 posted on 08/20/2003 8:53:20 AM PDT by SunStar (Democrats piss me off!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: SunStar
Alan Keyes was on fire yesterday! Or as Artie Shaw would
say "Fie Yah! "
20 posted on 08/20/2003 8:57:25 AM PDT by sean_og
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson