That would be one massive civil holy war if they pushed any religion on usNd4Spdr wrote:
This nation was founded by Christians with Christian beliefs. By saying one nation under God in no way hurts anyone anywhere. Christian beliefs are nothing but good. If you are an atheist so be it, but Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow. Being one nation under God is a good and moral way to live and has nothing to do with church and state working together. The United States in no wawy forces anyone to worship God (yet).
Poll
Should the Pledge of Allegiance Say "One Nation Under God"?
Yes | 58% | 58% - 72 | ||||
No | 41% | 41% - 52 | ||||
Total: 124 |
"Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow" ?Nd4Spdr wrote:
This nation was founded by Christians with Christian beliefs. By saying one nation under God in no way hurts anyone anywhere. Christian beliefs are nothing but good. If you are an atheist so be it, but Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow. Being one nation under God is a good and moral way to live and has nothing to do with church and state working together. The United States in no wawy forces anyone to worship God (yet).
tell that to an muslim, you will see what he will tell you ...
Quite ironic that the money isn't offensive, but the pledge is.Locoloki wrote:
God is a synonym for "Uncle Sam", every dollar you have in your wallet says "In God we trust", i recommend if you want to change the pledge, you have to change everysingle piece of currency we have in existence
There is far too little separation of church and state in the US. In the UK I think they've got the balance just about right. Any nations where the government shows any signs of religion are a bit backwards and stuck in the past, it's just a step backwards, like the Taliban in Afghanistan or the administration in Iran, just not as extreme.
Should be one nation, under Canada if you ask me...
Ok, let's. The muslim will disagree on specific theology, but regarding general morals I'm sure he/she would be quite content to agree on.Mogura wrote:
"Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow" ?Nd4Spdr wrote:
This nation was founded by Christians with Christian beliefs. By saying one nation under God in no way hurts anyone anywhere. Christian beliefs are nothing but good. If you are an atheist so be it, but Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow. Being one nation under God is a good and moral way to live and has nothing to do with church and state working together. The United States in no wawy forces anyone to worship God (yet).
tell that to an muslim, you will see what he will tell you ...
religion is flawed, arent priests supposed to be holy and have good morals? than why are so many being charged with having sex with little boys. I am not religious and i think sleeping with boys is very bad for god, and very bad for moralsStingray24 wrote:
Ok, let's. The muslim will disagree on specific theology, but regarding general morals I'm sure he/she would be quite content to agree on.Mogura wrote:
"Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow" ?Nd4Spdr wrote:
This nation was founded by Christians with Christian beliefs. By saying one nation under God in no way hurts anyone anywhere. Christian beliefs are nothing but good. If you are an atheist so be it, but Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow. Being one nation under God is a good and moral way to live and has nothing to do with church and state working together. The United States in no wawy forces anyone to worship God (yet).
tell that to an muslim, you will see what he will tell you ...
lolghettoperson wrote:
Should be one nation, under Canada if you ask me...
Malloy must go
Islamic beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow (except the jihad part).Mogura wrote:
"Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow" ?Nd4Spdr wrote:
This nation was founded by Christians with Christian beliefs. By saying one nation under God in no way hurts anyone anywhere. Christian beliefs are nothing but good. If you are an atheist so be it, but Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow. Being one nation under God is a good and moral way to live and has nothing to do with church and state working together. The United States in no wawy forces anyone to worship God (yet).
tell that to an muslim, you will see what he will tell you ...
great im gonna have 4 wifes, and if i catch a pick pocket i cut his hand off, ....Nd4Spdr wrote:
Islamic beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow (except the jihad part).Mogura wrote:
"Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow" ?Nd4Spdr wrote:
This nation was founded by Christians with Christian beliefs. By saying one nation under God in no way hurts anyone anywhere. Christian beliefs are nothing but good. If you are an atheist so be it, but Christian beliefs are mostly common sense morals that everyone should follow. Being one nation under God is a good and moral way to live and has nothing to do with church and state working together. The United States in no wawy forces anyone to worship God (yet).
tell that to an muslim, you will see what he will tell you ...
*sighing* sorry Mr PC. I meant to say place of worship. Dont sick the ACLU on me.Mogura wrote:
why you always talk about church ? dont build only a church, buil a mosque too and a jewish temple, and the hindu one, and budhist one and shinto, and satanic cult whatever,.... so just throw all aircrafts from the carrierdeeznutz1245 wrote:
I KNOW!!!! OMG!!!! Imagine the thought of your tax dollars paying for soldiers to have priests. These are the guys that die for your right to be Athiest by the way. I'll tell you what, you keep your few cents a year in tax dollars, I'll tell the military to pack it up cuz we are done here, and then in a year you will be forced to worship Buddah. By the way, it is the soldiers right to have that provided for them seeing how there are not very many churches in the middle of the fucking ocean which is where most of them are.Mogura wrote:
lets say im an civilian, im an atheist or any other religion than christian, i pay taxes, state use those taxes to pay soldiers AND those priests !!! WAIT !? im paying for an priest ! i dont want ! i vote to have an atheist state and give taxes to that atheist state , i dont do it so they can give that money to a church.
/ religions i names are exemple, you can put im catholic and army pay an muslim imam, or other ...
PS religion is a personal thing, state should not have any link with that
and build religius buildings on them.
(priests and other dont fight, they just watch other fighting and dieing )
Malloy must go
Awesome, you are quite witty. +1 to you my friendghettoperson wrote:
Should be one nation, under Canada if you ask me...
I'd like to see the various Christian churches of America start to pay taxes...then you may have a right to dictate policy on government and politicians...
We dictate policy? Wow, I thought we just voted.HornyToady wrote:
I'd like to see the various Christian churches of America start to pay taxes...then you may have a right to dictate policy on government and politicians...
Quite ironic that they added "In God we trust" in 1956, replacing E pluribus unum which was one of the first national mottos of the United States of America. Translated from Latin, it means "From many, one" or "Out of many, one" (e = out of, from; pluribus= many; unum = one). In 1952 they added "under God" to the pledge and in 1956 they added "In God we Trust". The founding fathers were smarter than that.Stingray24 wrote:
Quite ironic that the money isn't offensive, but the pledge is.Locoloki wrote:
God is a synonym for "Uncle Sam", every dollar you have in your wallet says "In God we trust", i recommend if you want to change the pledge, you have to change everysingle piece of currency we have in existence
Down with political correctness! Don't worry, the ACLJ will defend you and send the ACLU running back to the DNC offices.deeznutz1245 wrote:
*sighing* sorry Mr PC. I meant to say place of worship. Dont sick the ACLU on me.
But the majority of the people are religious. Most of them Christians. This is bound to influence ANY democratic government with such populations. To keep 100% of religion off the government would be undemocratic. For a good example of this, see China.Mogura wrote:
thats the problem, it can, and it should notURE_DED wrote:
The founding fathers wanted to protect religion from being affected by an oppressive government - that does not mean at all that religion can't have any affect on government/lawmaking/etc.sergeriver wrote:
The words "under God" were added in 1954. Despite that, it's a violation to the First Amedment which prohibits the establishment of a national religion by Congress or the preference of one religion over another, or religion over nonreligion.
Last edited by EVieira (2006-12-28 08:14:56)
"All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered; the point is to discover them."
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)
look afghanistan, look iran, look .....EVieira wrote:
But the majority of the people are religious. Most of them Christians. This is bound to influence ANY democratic government with such populations. To keep 100% of religion off the government would be undemocratic. For a good example of this, see China.Mogura wrote:
thats the problem, it can, and it should notURE_DED wrote:
The founding fathers wanted to protect religion from being affected by an oppressive government - that does not mean at all that religion can't have any affect on government/lawmaking/etc.
So religion is flawed because of some priests touching little boys? Come on. The religion would be flawed if it promoted touching little boys as part of its value system, but that is not the case. These priests are being charged because they chose to give in to their human nature instead of following the teaching of their religion. The reality is that all human beings are capable of failing morally and not all priests/ministers/pastors are touching little boys. That generalization is a bit much.Locoloki wrote:
religion is flawed, arent priests supposed to be holy and have good morals? than why are so many being charged with having sex with little boys. I am not religious and i think sleeping with boys is very bad for god, and very bad for morals
I don't believe in it, but it shouldn't be changed. We have waaaaaaaaay to many other problems to deal with than screwing with two words that no matter what you do would make one group happy and piss off the other. No one is holding a gun to your head and forcing you to say it, either don't say that part or even better just get over it.
If you are an atheist and really don't believe in God then saying "under God" shouldn't hurt in the least. If you think that all men should submit to the idea of a higher power such as Rule of Law then Under God fits fine. "God" is/was the Law Bringer in all previous civilizations and it is Law that defines civilization and separates it from human nature which is the animal instinct that hasn't evolved out of us yet.
If you are an anti-theist then "under God" must really get under your skin because the mere mention of any possible power above man ruins your gig. To take the opposing view God and Law are constructs of the human mind therefore either idea can be used by anyone without fear or remorse nor pain except to the lawless.
The pledge is not a government telling you how to believe which was the intent of the Separation clause. And the pledge is not forcing religion on anyone. It is an affirmation of loyalty to the USA and acknowledgment that the US hopefully has a moral compass helping it to navigate strange and complex waters. lol (I know thats a stretch, corrupt politicians and all, but I can hope can't I?)
So if you have a problem using the words "Under God" in your pledge then substitute it for "Under Rule of Law" so we know you are not bent on de-civilizing the US.
There is a higher power over you, get over it.
If you are an anti-theist then "under God" must really get under your skin because the mere mention of any possible power above man ruins your gig. To take the opposing view God and Law are constructs of the human mind therefore either idea can be used by anyone without fear or remorse nor pain except to the lawless.
The pledge is not a government telling you how to believe which was the intent of the Separation clause. And the pledge is not forcing religion on anyone. It is an affirmation of loyalty to the USA and acknowledgment that the US hopefully has a moral compass helping it to navigate strange and complex waters. lol (I know thats a stretch, corrupt politicians and all, but I can hope can't I?)
So if you have a problem using the words "Under God" in your pledge then substitute it for "Under Rule of Law" so we know you are not bent on de-civilizing the US.
There is a higher power over you, get over it.
Last edited by OpsChief (2006-12-28 09:17:08)
Stingray, respectfully...I encourage everyone to vote regardless of their views...and it is quite true that if Christians have the majority then it will reflect on their vote....I am completly with you about all of the PC BS issues out there about replacing Christmas with holidays...and examples like that...and if you dont want to say the pledge, more power to ya...Now I was raised Christian, but no longer am...I reverted back to the old Norse gods due to my heritage...I still have my two bibles and read it from time to time for reference...like any mythology....but my question for you is what do you have to fear with all this PC BS revolution? Does it jeopardize your faith? I'm not being a smartass...just wondering...
Last edited by HornyToady (2006-12-28 08:30:19)
See you're buying the "separation of church and state" bs again. I've read the Constitution, it's not in there. The historical fact is that the founders of our country left a country where a state religion was established. They wanted to express their religion as they chose, not as the state chose for them. Hence, the 1st amendment - preventing the government from establishing one state religion and excluding all others. And also to keeping the government from "preventing the free exercise thereof".Mogura wrote:
thats the problem, it can, and it should notURE_DED wrote:
The founding fathers wanted to protect religion from being affected by an oppressive government - that does not mean at all that religion can't have any affect on government/lawmaking/etc.
Yes, it happens also in my native country (El Salvador), and it should stay that way, if some people don't like it then they should get the hell out of the U.S. since they came here to live not to change the way people think, thats why I voted "Yes" on the poll. I hate it when people get 'offended' by something thats on their home country that isn't theirs, take Christmas for example, some idiots found it offensive and now stores and other places must say "Happy holidays" instead of "Merry Christmas", so screw them, if they don't like it then get the hell out!sergeriver wrote:
The Pledge of Allegiance is a promise or oath of allegiance to the United States as represented by its national flag. It says these words: I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands: one Nation under God, indivisible, With Liberty and Justice for all.
I'm asking this about the US Pledge of Allegiance just because this is an American forum, but f.i. the same happens in my country, where the majority is Christian and they force you to say similar crap. If you happen to be from another country please tell us if this also happens in your country.
Isn't this a violation to the First Amendment?
Is it right to mix a patriotic thing and religion?
Where is the separation of Church and State?
What about the atheists or those who aren't monotheistic, aren't those Americans?
This may have already been said but - "Separation of Church and State" means Churches don't run the country. Pledging allegiance or using cash with in God we trust doesn't mean the Church has been given ANY power to run the country.
Frankly, the whole idea is reaching and is a blunt attempt at political correctness.
Frankly, the whole idea is reaching and is a blunt attempt at political correctness.
Last edited by Pug (2006-12-28 08:40:53)