Posted on 06/01/2005 9:24:53 AM PDT by Fester Chugabrew
> Why not dig a big hole and find out if it's really true?
Oh, I did. Dug all the way to China. Passed Hell along the way and saw the special niche set aside for Behe and Dembski.
Now: either use sense, facts and, or believe what I say On Faith.
Not sure; but either way, it's been a good ride, so far.
Wrong. The establishment of a religion does not mean the teachings or precepts of a religion, it means the establishment by the government of a state-supported church.
That's only the way you want it to be, joe. Give it up, and stop fighting our Constitution.
A Libertarian Constitution
Address:http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1414665/posts
"We were discussing whether people claim the constitution literally contains the words 'separation of church and state'".
No, not originally, we weren't. You were discussing that, as you "moved the goalposts". The original statement was simply this:
Yet for decades, some organizations and individuals have spread the myth that the words separation of church and state are found in the U.S. Constitution.
I've given you two examples. Both of them "spread the myth". There are many more. Every time an organization comments along the lines of the "constitutional wall of separation between church and state", they are perpetuating the myth.
You're argument will no doubt degenerate into defending the intentions of those who spread the myth. This was, in fact, your argument for the AP reporter. Though we cannot know for certain, it's a fair gamble that there are an assortment of intentions.
Some are simply not careful enough, not realizing that they are perpetuating the myth. Some are probably believers in the myth themselves. I happen to believe the AP reporter fits in here. And some would find it very helpful to their cause to promote the myth.
To deny that anyone spreads the myth is almost to deny the existence of the myth at all.
As for your newly defined request, well I found some of those, too. None of them mention merely the "principle":
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One very significant reason for the separation of church and state in the Constitution was that the Founding ummm Fathers (Brothers?) were all too aware of how religious institutions and political institutions corrupted each other.
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I suppose we must thank the founding fathers of this great nation who enshrined the separation of church and state in the constitution.
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The separation of Church and State in the Constitution of the United States does not comprehend the spiritual reality of Indigenous Nations and Peoples.
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The founders didn't put the separation of church and state in the constitution for no reason, after all.
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"It's also hard to define our state as being secular since most Americans are religious." Is it that hard to define? I thought it was defined in the Constitution under "separation of church and state."
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Yes, but the separation of Church and State in the constitution is based on the realization that the power of religion to control people by regulating what they think should not, on the one hand, be augmented by the power of the gun, or, on the other, be in any way restricted.
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The separation of church and state in the Constitution was meant to prevent the establishment of a state religion, not to erase faith from the public square entirely.
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This is the purpose behind the separation of Church and State in the Constitution.
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But the Founding Fathers couldn't have been clearer about the separation of church and state in the Constitution and elsewhere.
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Apple is equally concerned about the contradictory nature of educational policies that allows public money for creating charter schools be used by homeschoolers to teach religious viewpoints that would otherwise violate the separation of church and state in the constitution.
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It is for this reason that you see the separation of church and state in the Constitution.
That's the way the Founders wanted it too. They endorsed religion all the time and I think they knew what the Constitution they wrote meant. It's too bad you don't. You'd rather side with the tyrannical judicial oligarchy which has usurped power it should never have had and used it to subvert our republic.
"We were discussing whether people claim the constitution literally contains the words 'separation of church and state'".
And then watchin replied
No, not originally, we weren't. You were discussing that, as you "moved the goalposts". The original statement was simply this:
Yet for decades, some organizations and individuals have spread the myth that the words separation of church and state are found in the U.S. Constitution.
...which is what I said. And since watchin has been unable to find a single instance of someone claiming that the words "separation of church and state" appear in the Constitution, he has turnied this into a discussion about what the meaning of 'is' is.
I didn't like the original Clinton, and I certainly don't like the third-rate imitation. Discussion over.
Nor is "Freedom of Religion".
Now now joe, don't get nasty just because you can't refute my arguments.
You have basis for the silly claim : -- "You'd rather side with the tyrannical judicial oligarchy which has usurped power it should never have had and used it to subvert our republic."
Try to control yourself.
Your additions to the Constitution don't help your arguments. Any old tyrant can add words to the document. That does not make it true.
You subscribe to the anti-Christian ACLU interpretation of the First Amendment - the communist notion of "Freedom from Religion." You want to substitute your own communist antagonism for religion for the freedom bequeathed to us by the founders of this nation, but Conservatives are not falling for your fictional pinko version of American history any more. You can side with the tyrants who impose their unconstitutional secular theocracy, and I'll side with the Founders and the laws of Nature and Nature's God.
As for whether or not the earth is hollow, they hide that information in books. Amazing what one can learn when they read a book.
I've made no "additions" to the Constitution.
Great essay...
You say I'm an enemy of the Constitution, I say you're a subverter of the Republic. That's how this works. If you can't handle getting a dose of your own obnoxiousness dished back into your fat face, then go somewhere else, retread. You subscribe to the anti-Christian ACLU interpretation of the First Amendment - the communist notion of "Freedom from Religion." You want to substitute your own communist antagonism for religion for the freedom bequeathed to us by the founders of this nation, but Conservatives are not falling for your fictional pinko version of American history any more. You can side with the tyrants who impose their unconstitutional secular theocracy, and I'll side with the Founders and the laws of Nature and Nature's God.
I've never said you were an enemy of the Constitution, joe. - You simply don't understand it; --- and now you've totally lost control..
See ya.
I see you are in spam mode. Good night.
Is separation of church and state prescribed by the United States Consitution or not?
Yes. 'Separation' is in effect directed [prescribed] in three different places. --
States are directed to have republican forms of governments, [no theocracies allowed].
- No religious tests for office are to be allowed.
Nor are laws to be made that respect any of the establishments [teachings/precepts] of religion.
Your little bracketed additions are precisely additions to the Constitution presented so as to bolster your argument. The fact that you had to add them militates against your argument.
Something leads me to receive your report as detached from reality. Do you know what that "something" is?
Now: either use sense, facts and, or believe what I say On Faith.
Why must it be an "either or" situation? I can use sense, facts, and still disbelieve on faith you have not dug a hole to China.
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