Jose Fly
New member
Even atheists are compelled to obey the Ten Commandments.
Atheists are compelled to have no other Gods except the Christian God?
Even atheists are compelled to obey the Ten Commandments.
Atheists are compelled to have no other Gods except the Christian God?
Atheists are compelled to have no other Gods except the Christian God?
Really? So, you think God just copied them from somewhere? Or that when he gave them to Moses, it was just as a reminder?
You are being a twit!
From your point of view, everything is under God. It doesn't then follow that secularism cannot exist.
"Under God" doesn't mean "owing Christians special favours". "Under God" doesn't specify whose God. Even the founders didn't agree as to the nature of God, which is rather the point, isn't it? No-one can agree, and it isn't the government's role to decide for them.
You didn't answer the question.
Could you provide the date when the government changed from being a government under God to a secular government?
You didn't answer the question.
Could you provide the date when the government changed from being a government under God to a secular government?
The words "In God We Trust" has been on our coins since 1864.It went from a secular government to a government under God in 1954. What do I win?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pledge_of_Allegiance
No, so people of your ilk trying to take the words "Under God" out of the pledge of allegiance doesn't change it.Changing the words of the pledge of allegiance doesn't change the nature of the government, does it?
No, so people of your ilk trying to take the words "Under God" out of the pledge of allegiance doesn't change it.
The words "In God We Trust" has been on our coins since 1864.
History of 'In God We Trust'
So, the United States was not a secular government before 1954.
Yes, you are trying to take out "under God" from both the pledge and from the United States.I haven't tried to take it out
[...] the 'under God' part is optional.
No, the type of government we have is what dictated the motto on the coins.So a motto on a coin...not the actual Constitution...is what dictates the type of government we have?
No, the type of government we have is what dictated the motto on the coins.
Where does it dictate that the government is not "under God"?So where does the Constitution (the document that provides the framework for the federal government) dictate that the government be "under God"?
No, the type of government we have is what dictated the motto on the coins.
(Jose Fly really is a moron)
Where does it dictate that the government is not "under God"?
The phrase "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance and "In God We Trust" on U.S. money do not violate the Constitution's separation of church and state, a federal appeals court panel has ruled in San Francisco.
Got news for ya....pledges and mottoes are not mandates.