Posted on 09/21/2015 7:19:23 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) did not back up his fellow Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson when asked about the retired neurosurgeon's comment that Muslims should not be president of the United States.
"You know, the Constitution specifies there shall be no religious test for public office and I am a constitutionalist," Cruz said at a Sunday taping of Iowa Public Television's "Iowa Press," according to the Des Moines Register.
Carson on Sunday morning told NBC's "Meet the Press" that he would "not advocate that we put a Muslim in charge of this nation." In an interview with The Hill later on Sunday, Carson stood by his remarks.
"I do not believe Sharia is consistent with the Constitution of this country," he told The Hill. "Muslims feel that their religion is very much a part of your public life and what you do as a public official, and thats inconsistent with our principles and our Constitution."
Although Cruz weighed in on Carson's comments, he would not criticize Donald Trump for failing to correct a town hall audience member who said President Obama is a Muslim.
"My view, listen. The presidents faith is between him and God. What Im going to focus on is his public policy record," Cruz said when asked about Trump's comments on "Iowa Press," according to the Des Moines Register.
(Excerpt) Read more at talkingpointsmemo.com ...
I do not know that this is true. I know that liberal judges would have us believe this is true, because that is the meaning which they wish to twist from the words, but I argue that this does not meet the intent or spirit of the law.
This interpretation is just sophistry.
WE already HAVE A muzzzie IN THE wh...
HOW’S IT WORKIN OUT FOR you....
and as an added bonus he is a TRAITOR...
CAN YOU IMAGINE harry truman.... lets give half our atomic bombs to japan because they say they want them for peaceful purposes...and look spies gave the secrets to russia and that turned out well didnt it..??whe the people you are giving it to say they want to kill you...and mean it..??
HOW DOES A NUCLEAR WEAPON FIT INTO PEACE...
True, there’s no real conflict between what Carson and Cruz said, merely a difference of emphasis. I wish Cruz had led with “not a good idea” and then added “technically re the Constitution” - but I think it’s safe to say Cruz really thinks it’s a bad bad idea.
You are naive if you think words meant the same thing in 1787 that they mean now. Take the word "Marriage" for example. In 1787, sodomy was a capital offense, and plenty of people were executed for engaging in it.
Nowadays, sodomy is regarded as a protected right, and sodomy marriage is legally accepted.
In the context of 1787, the word "religion" meant "denomination", not "religion" in the manner in which we regard it now.
So you say, but that is not necessarily the intent of the Delegates when they wrote that clause. Just as the purpose of the 14th amendment was to grant citizenship to newly freed slaves, but has been since used to justify "anchor babies" , abortion, homosexual marriage, and a whole series of other things, it is obvious that these interpretations are far outside the intent of Congress when it created the 14th amendment.
You must interpret the meaning of that clause in the frame of reference from which it originated, and in 1787 the intent was to reassure everyone that different denominations of the Christian faith would have equal access to government offices and positions.
It was never intended to apply to people outside of a denomination of the Christian faith.
Just as the Declaration of Independence uses the phrase "All men are created equal and endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights, among them life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness..." was not intended to apply to slaves.
Modern people come along and say that clause prohibits slavery, when in fact it did nothing of the sort. The very man who wrote it, and most of his contemporaries continued owning slaves long after that clause was written, so therefore it does not mean that.
So too does that article in the Constitution likely not mean what people thinks it means.
Perhaps this has been researched more thoroughly by others. I am doing a quick, shoot from the hip, on the fly "research".
I think this wording is also quite clear:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.-
So that means slavery was abolished in 1776 right? That's what the words say don't they? The words are quite clear. All men have equal rights.
So does history demonstrate that those words mean that? No, they demonstrate quite the opposite. They don't really mean that at all.
I'm arguing that the prohibition against religious tests doesn't mean what people think either. Just because the words are plain doesn't mean that the interpretation of them is actually correct.
Very much so. Thomas Jefferson was all too familiar with the problem. Do you know how many of them were over here when the country was founded?
3. Anathema
He is correct. The Constitution makes that perfectly clear.
We will either toss out the principle that all religions are equal, or we will die.
If the founders believed that we must treat all religions equally, then they were flat wrong.
The only path to survival for the principles upon which the United States is founded, is to reject the notion that secularism or intolerant religions such as Islam should be tolerated.
Europe is going to die. The only thing which might possibly save it is to jettison the Christian based notion of equality, and start enforcing deliberate and confrontational discrimination against the Islamic religion.
And there it is in a nutshell. We will either jettison this interpretation of that clause, or we will die.
That clause is incompatible with a continuation of the character of the United States.
http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3339206/posts
The precedent that has already been set, note the date on this cover. Trump is right, Carson is right and Cruz is right.
And it explicitly states that if a child has a foreign father, he cannot be a citizen, let alone a "natural" citizen.
A Foreign father prevents American citizenship according to the Naturalization act of 1790. Are you sure you want to let that act of man define "natural" citizenship?
And the more Muslims we have, the more Muslim elected officials we will have. That's the way it works.
Federal Data: U.S. Annually Admits Quarter Of A Million Muslim Migrants
When the wording is crystal clear, there is no need to go to original intent. Islam, Judaism and dozens of other religions existed at that time it was written.
You sound like a Liberal Activist judge who reads the Constitution the way he would like it to read rather than how it read.
I am sure the founders would not want a Muslim president, but they left that responsibility up to us and we fulfill it by not voting for the goat banging savages.
I would argue that you cannot make an open ended consent. That such a thing is beyond the power of the Senate.
Suppose we argue that you can. If so, suppose the prior approved provisions of a treaty which no one has seen include paying Iran a trillion dollars. Suppose it requires sending all the guns to Iran. Suppose it requires any sort of violation of guaranteed rights, chief among them being the right to continue living, a status to which this treaty most certainly creates a threat.
No, you can't give prior consent. It is not a reasonable position to argue. If you can't create a law after the fact, it stands to reason that you can't give permission prior to the fact.
You can't consent until the conditions for which you are consenting are known.
Pretty much.
With the exception of Youngstown Sheet & Tube v. Sawyer, ever since West Coast Hotel v. Parrish the Supreme Court has abandoned any pretense of requiring any branch of the Federal government to follow the Constitution.
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