YES!!!! The SC followed the constitution this time!!! Maybe they learned their lesson with the recent emminent domain issue. So keep your religion where it belongs - IN CHURCH.Supreme Court Rules on Ten Commandments
Monday, June 27, 2005
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday declared Ten Commandments displays in two Kentucky courthouses unconstitutional.
The court ruled that in McCreary County v. ACLU that the displays violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, which prohibits government from endorsing or supporting one religion above others.
The court also considered another Ten Commandments-related case, Van Orden v. Perry, involving a display on the grounds of a Texas courthouse. A ruling on that case was also expected Monday.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,160781,00.html
Supreme Court Rules on Ten Commandments
Moderator: Jesus H Christ
Supreme Court Rules on Ten Commandments
- SunCoastSooner
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Re: Supreme Court Rules on Ten Commandments
Sorry I am no Christian and I don't agree with this no where in the Constituition does it tell you there is a freedom from religion but freedom of religion. Its time for the liberals to sack up and realize that this country is by far and away a christian majority. Treading dangerous waters here in limiting the vast majority's rights in favor of a small but vocal minority. It worries me as to the future of my own religious practices as this could/may lead down a long and winding road which Christians will not always tolerate.KatMode wrote:YES!!!! The SC followed the constitution this time!!! Maybe they learned their lesson with the recent emminent domain issue. So keep your religion where it belongs - IN CHURCH.Supreme Court Rules on Ten Commandments
Monday, June 27, 2005
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday declared Ten Commandments displays in two Kentucky courthouses unconstitutional.
The court ruled that in McCreary County v. ACLU that the displays violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, which prohibits government from endorsing or supporting one religion above others.
The court also considered another Ten Commandments-related case, Van Orden v. Perry, involving a display on the grounds of a Texas courthouse. A ruling on that case was also expected Monday.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,160781,00.html
BSmack wrote:I can certainly infer from that blurb alone that you are self righteous, bible believing, likely a Baptist or Presbyterian...
Miryam wrote:but other than that, it's cool, man. you're a christer.
LTS TRN 2 wrote:Okay, Sunny, yer cards are on table as a flat-out Christer.
Exactly, SCS...a big distinction between freedom from and a freedom of.
The Constitution states that the State shall not establish a religion:
The Constitution states that the State shall not establish a religion:
The display of the Ten Commandments can hardly be considered as the establishment of a religion by the State.Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
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Re: Supreme Court Rules on Ten Commandments
Majority of this country are tit lovers but we ain't gonna see pics of racks up in the courthouse either.SunCoastSooner wrote:Its time for the liberals to sack up and realize that this country is by far and away a christian majority.
Dance with snakes all you want.It worries me as to the future of my own religious practices as this could/may lead down a long and winding road which Christians will not always tolerate.
why is my neighborhood on fire
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Exactly. What are they endorsing? Judaism? Last I checked there is more than Christianity that recognizes the Ten Commandments. Jews, Christians, Mandiens (sp?), ect.DrDetroit wrote:Exactly, SCS...a big distinction between freedom from and a freedom of.
The Constitution states that the State shall not establish a religion:The display of the Ten Commandments can hardly be considered as the establishment of a religion by the State.Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
Anyone who makes a claim that most modern legal systems and laws do not derive from the ten commandements and/or Hammurabi's code are making a foolish and ignorant argument.
BSmack wrote:I can certainly infer from that blurb alone that you are self righteous, bible believing, likely a Baptist or Presbyterian...
Miryam wrote:but other than that, it's cool, man. you're a christer.
LTS TRN 2 wrote:Okay, Sunny, yer cards are on table as a flat-out Christer.
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Re: Supreme Court Rules on Ten Commandments
Dance with the snakes? Do I look like I from northern Alabama or something?Bizzarofelice wrote:Majority of this country are tit lovers but we ain't gonna see pics of racks up in the courthouse either.SunCoastSooner wrote:Its time for the liberals to sack up and realize that this country is by far and away a christian majority.
Dance with snakes all you want.It worries me as to the future of my own religious practices as this could/may lead down a long and winding road which Christians will not always tolerate.
BSmack wrote:I can certainly infer from that blurb alone that you are self righteous, bible believing, likely a Baptist or Presbyterian...
Miryam wrote:but other than that, it's cool, man. you're a christer.
LTS TRN 2 wrote:Okay, Sunny, yer cards are on table as a flat-out Christer.
The argument has been made and confirmed by the Supreme Court, idiot.DrDetroit wrote:So what if a lot of people agree with this decision, Mikey?
A lot of people agree that the Constitution includes the words "separation of Church and State." So what?
You still cannot rightly argue that the display of the Ten Commandmants represents the establishment of religion by the State.
Answer the question I asked you, Mikey. What was confirmed and how so?
And, if the case was about whether displaying the Commandmants is the equivalent of establishing religion, well...it doesn't take a fucking lawyer/judge to see that it ain't establishment.
Oooops, I guess it does. Much like it takes a lawyer/judge to pretend that a right to privacy exists in the Constitution.
Some of the Founders had it right when casting suspicion upon judges and their position as a co-equal branch. Not only do judges now cast themselves as something above the rest of us, they now operate as an unequal branch of the federal government.
And, if the case was about whether displaying the Commandmants is the equivalent of establishing religion, well...it doesn't take a fucking lawyer/judge to see that it ain't establishment.
Oooops, I guess it does. Much like it takes a lawyer/judge to pretend that a right to privacy exists in the Constitution.
Some of the Founders had it right when casting suspicion upon judges and their position as a co-equal branch. Not only do judges now cast themselves as something above the rest of us, they now operate as an unequal branch of the federal government.
Re: Supreme Court Rules on Ten Commandments
But, of course, they did. You didn't know that the separation cluase is in the 1st amendment?mvscal wrote:No, they didn't.KatMode wrote:YES!!!! The SC followed the constitution this time!!!
Read the SCOTUS decision.DrDetroit wrote:Answer the question I asked you, Mikey. What was confirmed and how so?
And, if the case was about whether displaying the Commandmants is the equivalent of establishing religion, well...it doesn't take a fucking lawyer/judge to see that it ain't establishment.
Oooops, I guess it does. Much like it takes a lawyer/judge to pretend that a right to privacy exists in the Constitution.
Some of the Founders had it right when casting suspicion upon judges and their position as a co-equal branch. Not only do judges now cast themselves as something above the rest of us, they now operate as an unequal branch of the federal government.
Five out of nine say you're wrong.
The ten commandments are from the cristian bible.
The government cannot favor one religion over another, nor endorse a particular religion.
Therefore, it is absolutey, 100%, not-up-for-debate, no-brainer.
The only thing that should be discussed about it here is the shock that the SC followed the Constitution this time.
The matter never should have been there in the first place. A 4th grader could figure out that it was in violation. Pity the bible-thumpers have to push their bullshit down everyone throats, under the guise of "we're the vast majority in this country. This country was founded on christian principles." When you spew that crap, why do you fools always leave the last part of your ramblings, which is "so therefore, everyone else isn't allowed the Rights guaranteed you in the Bill of Rights."
NEVER should have made it to the SC. Pseudo-christians are doing their very best to fuck this country up. How fucking funny is it that the offensive, pre-emptive warmongering righties are so eager to display the words "thou shalt not kill," and "thou shalt not covet" on buildings they work in? KYOA much? Fucking tards.
Edit: to try and make sense on a monday morning.
The government cannot favor one religion over another, nor endorse a particular religion.
Therefore, it is absolutey, 100%, not-up-for-debate, no-brainer.
The only thing that should be discussed about it here is the shock that the SC followed the Constitution this time.
The matter never should have been there in the first place. A 4th grader could figure out that it was in violation. Pity the bible-thumpers have to push their bullshit down everyone throats, under the guise of "we're the vast majority in this country. This country was founded on christian principles." When you spew that crap, why do you fools always leave the last part of your ramblings, which is "so therefore, everyone else isn't allowed the Rights guaranteed you in the Bill of Rights."
NEVER should have made it to the SC. Pseudo-christians are doing their very best to fuck this country up. How fucking funny is it that the offensive, pre-emptive warmongering righties are so eager to display the words "thou shalt not kill," and "thou shalt not covet" on buildings they work in? KYOA much? Fucking tards.
Edit: to try and make sense on a monday morning.
Last edited by Dinsdale on Mon Jun 27, 2005 3:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one
I agree with this. Pretty well sums it up.DrDetroit wrote: Some of the Founders had it right when casting suspicion upon judges and their position as a co-equal branch. Not only do judges now cast themselves as something above the rest of us, they now operate as an unequal branch of the federal government.
In this case, though, they rendered a decision in contrast to that. They finally ignored wha the executive branch wanted, and did the correct thing. I'm suprised they didn't endorse christianity, saying it æffects interstate commerce. That would be their style these days.
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one
- Mister Bushice
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What is up with the Christians and their "We must have the ten commandments on display" Deal? There is no state religion, no national religion. This is not a theocracy.
Post your religious crap in your churches, and by that I mean everyone, not just Christians.
Anyone want to bet which will be the first group out side of Christianity to request to have their key documents displayed on public property?
Post your religious crap in your churches, and by that I mean everyone, not just Christians.
Anyone want to bet which will be the first group out side of Christianity to request to have their key documents displayed on public property?
If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator." —GWB Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2000
Martyred wrote: Hang in there, Whitey. Smart people are on their way with dictionaries.
War Wagon wrote:being as how I've got "stupid" draped all over, I'm not really sure.
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It's a start. :)
If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator." —GWB Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2000
Martyred wrote: Hang in there, Whitey. Smart people are on their way with dictionaries.
War Wagon wrote:being as how I've got "stupid" draped all over, I'm not really sure.
Like I said, it takes a judge to overturn common sense.Mikey wrote:Read the SCOTUS decision.DrDetroit wrote:Answer the question I asked you, Mikey. What was confirmed and how so?
And, if the case was about whether displaying the Commandmants is the equivalent of establishing religion, well...it doesn't take a fucking lawyer/judge to see that it ain't establishment.
Oooops, I guess it does. Much like it takes a lawyer/judge to pretend that a right to privacy exists in the Constitution.
Some of the Founders had it right when casting suspicion upon judges and their position as a co-equal branch. Not only do judges now cast themselves as something above the rest of us, they now operate as an unequal branch of the federal government.
Five out of nine say you're wrong.
BTW - it appears that the rulings have the effect if saying it's okay to display the Commandments on government property, just not in government property...LOL!!
Hmmm, the Ten Commandmants have been displayed in SCOTUS for how long, Bushice?
The Constitution says what it says...Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof
Says who, Dins? Certainly not the Constitution.The government cannot favor one religion over another, nor endorse a particular religion.
The Constitution says what it says...Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof
So where the fuck are these three Commandments in ANY federal or state law??DrDetroit wrote:The display of the Ten Commandments can hardly be considered as the establishment of a religion by the State.
1. No Gods before me
2. No taking the Lord's name in vain
3. No graven images
Only 3, count them 3, Commandments are anything close to laws of the U.S. (murder, stealing, lying).
So why the fuck should we post up "rules" that have hardly anything at all to do with the REAL laws of the country?
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NO actualy they are from the Torah which was carried over in a corrupted form to the Christian bible. Nice try though.Dinsdale wrote:The ten commandments are from the cristian bible.
BSmack wrote:I can certainly infer from that blurb alone that you are self righteous, bible believing, likely a Baptist or Presbyterian...
Miryam wrote:but other than that, it's cool, man. you're a christer.
LTS TRN 2 wrote:Okay, Sunny, yer cards are on table as a flat-out Christer.
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Then put them on display in a museum like all the other artifacts of our culture and heritage.mvscal wrote:Because, as a Christian nation, it is part of our cultural and legal heritage.KatMode wrote:So why the fuck should we post up "rules" that have hardly anything at all to do with the REAL laws of the country?
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Ha! Good try, but not quite. :)
You allow that and next up will be the Mormons, who will claim they are an ORIGINAL American Religion, homegrown. This will be followed by the Scientologists, another American Original, followed by the Jehovahs witnesses. Then, as soon as muslims catch up to Christians in terms of overall numbers, they'll demand they get equal time.
You allow that and next up will be the Mormons, who will claim they are an ORIGINAL American Religion, homegrown. This will be followed by the Scientologists, another American Original, followed by the Jehovahs witnesses. Then, as soon as muslims catch up to Christians in terms of overall numbers, they'll demand they get equal time.
If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator." —GWB Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2000
Martyred wrote: Hang in there, Whitey. Smart people are on their way with dictionaries.
War Wagon wrote:being as how I've got "stupid" draped all over, I'm not really sure.
What Mvscal said.KatMode wrote:So where the fuck are these three Commandments in ANY federal or state law??DrDetroit wrote:The display of the Ten Commandments can hardly be considered as the establishment of a religion by the State.
1. No Gods before me
2. No taking the Lord's name in vain
3. No graven images
Only 3, count them 3, Commandments are anything close to laws of the U.S. (murder, stealing, lying).
So why the fuck should we post up "rules" that have hardly anything at all to do with the REAL laws of the country?
And Kat, should we then display Commandments 1-5, but not 6-10? :roll:
Displaying them is not the equivalent of establishing religion.
It doesn't get much easier than this, people.
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Can we also display the basic tenets of Satanism as well? After all, displaying them is not the equivalent of establishing religion.
It doesn't get much easier than that, right?
It doesn't get much easier than that, right?
If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator." —GWB Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2000
Martyred wrote: Hang in there, Whitey. Smart people are on their way with dictionaries.
War Wagon wrote:being as how I've got "stupid" draped all over, I'm not really sure.
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- Mister Bushice
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fill in any religious group name where the "we" part is.DrDetroit wrote:Who is "we," Bushice?
Hey, Mormonism has been an American cultural institution since the 1830's. What is so bad about displaying the artifacts of our cultural and religious heritage? How about the Quakers, or the Amish? They probably won't ask, but hell, they've been around just as long.What is so bad about displaying the artifacts of our political, legal, and cultural foundations??
Well?
It ain't about being Anti Christian. I don't want ANY religious doctrine shoved in my face.It ain't about the display representing an establishment of religion. It is about being anti-Christian.
Last edited by Mister Bushice on Mon Jun 27, 2005 5:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
KatMode wrote:So where the fuck are these three Commandments in ANY federal or state law??
1. No Gods before me
2. No taking the Lord's name in vain
3. No graven images
Thanks for proving my point. 7 out of the Ten Commandments have NOTHING to do with our federal or state laws. Thanks for playing.DrDetroit wrote:...
Interesting. If displaying them is not an establishment of religion, then you do agree that Satanic tenets can be displayed along with Pagan rules, Muslim rules, and Scientology rules.
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If it wasn't for Satan, Christianity would have no focus? :twisted:mvscal wrote:Is there some reason why we should? Is there some legal legacy left to us by Satanists that would be appropriate to honor at our courthouses?Mister Bushice wrote:Can we also display the basic tenets of Satanism as well?
Seriously, I see no reason or purpose to allowing any religion face time on courthouse grounds. Justice is theoretically blind so no monuments to religions of any type should be there to cloud that concept.
Kat:
Bushice:
Who is arguing that the display is influencing the outcome of judicial proceedings?
Even if true, so what?7 out of the Ten Commandments have NOTHING to do with our federal or state laws.
No, I don't agree. None of the contributed to the founding of the nation.If displaying them is not an establishment of religion, then you do agree that Satanic tenets can be displayed along with Pagan rules, Muslim rules, and Scientology rules.
Bushice:
Political, legal, and cultural foundations...think about it. Then think about what you wrote.Hey, Mormonism has been an American cultural institution since the 1830's. What is so bad about displaying the artifacts of our cultural and religious heritage? How about the Quakers, or the Amish? They probably won't ask, but hell, they've been around just as long.
Start a new thread, dumbass.If it wasn't for Satan, Christianity would have no focus?
Okay.Seriously, I see no reason or purpose to allowing any religion face time on courthouse grounds.
Red herring, much?Justice is theoretically blind so no monuments to religions of any type should be there to cloud that concept.
Who is arguing that the display is influencing the outcome of judicial proceedings?
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It is the implication that American justice favors Christianity by posting its prime laws on the grounds of said courthouse.
Not to mention that you are opening the doors to every freak religion out there to sue for equal time
Not to mention that you are opening the doors to every freak religion out there to sue for equal time
If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator." —GWB Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2000
Martyred wrote: Hang in there, Whitey. Smart people are on their way with dictionaries.
War Wagon wrote:being as how I've got "stupid" draped all over, I'm not really sure.
Maybe Miss D had second thoughts about giving another one of Fraudo's steller web sites free pub.DrDetroit wrote:What's up, MissD? Why'd you delete the post re: godhatesfags.com??
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It was the sight for Westboro Baptist Church.RadioFan wrote:Maybe Miss D had second thoughts about giving another one of Fraudo's steller web sites free pub.DrDetroit wrote:What's up, MissD? Why'd you delete the post re: godhatesfags.com??
There is a group of people in our area that are fighting to put back a 10 commanments monument in a public park. Westboro and the "Reverand" Fred Phelps have threatened that if they do allow this to occur, they will petition to put a "God Hates Fags" monument right next to it. They'd probably win.
The reason for the deletion is I just didn't think it appropriate to this discussion at hand.
But what I find a little disturbing is that it was posted for less than 20 seconds Detroit still saw it.