Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Quote:
in parts of the country where it's practiced unanimously
Please find me a place with zero non-Christians to include agnostics and atheists. We are not a theocracy. We are not a Christian nation. Never have been. The only mention of religion in the entire Constitution is to forbid religious tests and forbid the establishment of a state religion.
I have no idea where that would be. I'm saying that's true in principle. I don't advocate for a state religion, but as a matter of fact there were established state religions post-Constitutional convention.
I don't know what you mean by Christian Nation.
Is posting the commandments in TX classrooms enough to establish a state religion?
There were. They were already on the way out as largely dead laws that were gone by the 1830s and unconstitutional under the 14th amendment. And yes, posting a creed important to one or two faith traditions by law on state property is the state promoting those faiths over others. Using the numbering and translation of Protestant Bibles further narrows the promotion.
This is the sort of thing that led Catholic parents to sue in the 1850s on over the use of Protestant Bibles and theology in schools. Those lawsuits helped establish the extent of the separation of church and state.
Unconstitutional by your interpretation. I can just appeal to a different interpretation of the constitution. The question is why should we not do it? Will you be satisfied if after it works its way through the courts, it's declared constitutional?