Infiniteloop said:
Hopefully the U.S. won't go completely secular. Whether you all like it or not, the country was founded on the belief in God. We are a tolerant country--come and practice whatever you want. Just because you are offended by "In God we Trust" on our money or mentioning God in an oath or in the courtroom...
No other nation has rose to power so quickly. To get to where the US currently is in status, it took the Roman Empire 500+ years.
This is mindboggling. All religious laws have a "ten commandants", all modern law is based off of that document. So why can't we have a sculpture of the Ten Commandants outside of a courthouse??
Wow, what a totally narrow-minded and ignorant view.
Last time I checked, this country was founded on the notion of democracy and freedoms, one of which includes freedom of religion. In order to better safeguard these freedoms, the founders declared that the government should not take sides in the religious debate. This was done to not only to protect the government from religious influence, but also to protect religion from government influence.
Also, your idea that all modern law is based off of the ten commandments is ridiculous. Where was that law that says I can't take the Lord's name in vain? Oh wait, I can, because
I have the freedom of speech. Imagine that, one of our most sacred laws,
goes in direct conflict with one of the ten commandments. I know it might be hard for you to understand, but there were religions with rules and "commandments" far before the ten commandments. Or how about that whole "Worship only the one God". That sure falls in line with the freedom of religion.
And don't pull the whole, "Well, it says to not murder and that's in the laws...", because there are many cultures outside of Jewish/Christian faith that condemn murder/violence/stealing. These laws come out of a desire for human order and society, not the Ten Commandments.