@Thistledowne:"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion".. That's in your first amendment. Couple that with the federalist papers and various accounts of the Constitutional delegation @ Philadelphia, the founders did not want a state sponsored religion; so the people who say "America is a christian nation", while that's culturally true and the constitution protects their speech, it does not mean CONSTITUTIONALLY America is christian.
If Roe V. Wade were suddenly overturned abortion would still continue, except women would perform it on themselves or get someone to do it for them. Heroin used to be injected by doctors, now people just Google how to if they're new at it. The same thing would apply to abortion. Blast you, Google!
I literally have a tear in my eye, watching that young girl declare that the founding fathers intended America to be a Christian nation and wrote it into the constitution the declaration of independence. I am not an American but I deeply admire and have read on several occasions the Dec of Ind.. So sad to see such profound ignorance by an American, who doesn't realize that Mr. Jefferson was essentially agnostic & successfully instated the separation of church and state in the constitution
@royaltetley Curious. Where in the constitution would that be? I'm an ignorant American. I always thought the phrase and concept of "Separation of Church and State" was written in a letter from Jefferson to the Danbury Baptists essentially trying to ease their fears that the new powerful federal government will try to interfere with the free practice of their religion. One might argue that the First Amendment states something similar, but that is just that, an amendment. Not written into it
@Thistledowne:"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion".. That's in your first amendment. Couple that with the federalist papers and various accounts of the Constitutional delegation @ Philadelphia, the founders did not want a state sponsored religion; so the people who say "America is a christian nation", while that's culturally true and the constitution protects their speech, it does not mean CONSTITUTIONALLY America is christian.
It seems nuance is lost on Americans
royaltetley 1 year ago 3
U mad, liberals?
khattamshud 1 year ago
I am not a fan of Democrats, but I am even less of a fan of Republicans.
cochranexyz 1 year ago 2
If Roe V. Wade were suddenly overturned abortion would still continue, except women would perform it on themselves or get someone to do it for them. Heroin used to be injected by doctors, now people just Google how to if they're new at it. The same thing would apply to abortion. Blast you, Google!
Theblizzardking 1 year ago
They are pro-life, but they are most likely pro-war and pro-death penalty.
CoolScoobydoo 1 year ago 7
@CoolScoobydoo And only the life that can afford to live
Bellantoni 1 year ago
@CoolScoobydoo And pro anyone else to fight the war.
cochranexyz 1 year ago
I literally have a tear in my eye, watching that young girl declare that the founding fathers intended America to be a Christian nation and wrote it into the constitution the declaration of independence. I am not an American but I deeply admire and have read on several occasions the Dec of Ind.. So sad to see such profound ignorance by an American, who doesn't realize that Mr. Jefferson was essentially agnostic & successfully instated the separation of church and state in the constitution
royaltetley 1 year ago 10
@royaltetley It doesn't say anything directly about the separation
between church and state, but it is implied by the 1st amendment.
Many people who wrote the constitution were deist and not
very religious. Conservatives in Texas have made textbooks
that state that separation between church and state are not in the
constitution. The girl says the U.S. is a Christian nation, sorry
but if Jesus were to walk through the U.S. he wouldn't claim this nation
as Christian.
CoolScoobydoo 1 year ago
@royaltetley Curious. Where in the constitution would that be? I'm an ignorant American. I always thought the phrase and concept of "Separation of Church and State" was written in a letter from Jefferson to the Danbury Baptists essentially trying to ease their fears that the new powerful federal government will try to interfere with the free practice of their religion. One might argue that the First Amendment states something similar, but that is just that, an amendment. Not written into it
Thistledowne 1 year ago
Big bucket of horse come.
incrediblehulkmovies 1 year ago