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Discussion and Debate
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Politics
American Politics
ACLU, Defending Religious Freedoms?
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<blockquote data-quote="Hank77" data-source="post: 72434711" data-attributes="member: 378311"><p>That is true, didn't say they had.</p><p></p><p>Agree.</p><p></p><p>You cannot invoke the word 'God' without establishing religion. Not 'A' religion, but religion.</p><p></p><p>Yup, the Church of England, chosen by the government of England.</p><p></p><p>When I attempt to interpret what the authors of the Constitution intended I have to think that Thomas Jefferson made it clear, in his letter to the Danbury Baptist church, that the church and the state should be kept separated. </p><p>Once the government made it a law that all children Must attend school then the public school system became a mandate of the government that cannot make any law establishing religion, therefore the public school cannot be involved in practicing any form of any religion if anyone attending that school, or the parents, have an objection.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hank77, post: 72434711, member: 378311"] That is true, didn't say they had. Agree. You cannot invoke the word 'God' without establishing religion. Not 'A' religion, but religion. Yup, the Church of England, chosen by the government of England. When I attempt to interpret what the authors of the Constitution intended I have to think that Thomas Jefferson made it clear, in his letter to the Danbury Baptist church, that the church and the state should be kept separated. Once the government made it a law that all children Must attend school then the public school system became a mandate of the government that cannot make any law establishing religion, therefore the public school cannot be involved in practicing any form of any religion if anyone attending that school, or the parents, have an objection. [/QUOTE]
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