First of all, lobbying for government to honer its existing commitment to separating church and state is not "anti-religious". And even if there were anti-religious organizations it would only be a fair balance against groups like Campus Crusade for Christ, which are already all over the public universities. The only way your complaint could be more cynical, ironic and hollow is if you typed it on a computer housed in some state school's campus chapel.
First of all, lobbying for government to honer its existing commitment to separating church and state is not "anti-religious". And even if there were anti-religious organizations it would only be a fair balance against groups like Campus Crusade for Christ, which are already all over the public universities. The only way your complaint could be more cynical, ironic and hollow is if you typed it on a computer housed in some state school's campus chapel.
AutodidacticPhd 2 years ago
That's not the point. The point is using a public university --- paid for with taxpayer dollars from all people. To teach anti-religion lobbying.
dclobbyist 2 years ago
You think the seperation of church and state is partisan?
Is getting to vote partisan too?
Gordonisgreat 2 years ago
Hmmm, using a public university for partisan lobbying. Sounds unconstitutional to me.
dclobbyist 2 years ago