I will respect your religion as long as you respect my right not to have one. Leave it out of schools. You want to thank God for everything you have up to this point? Thats fine. The whole audience and school staff doesn't need to be involved with your personal thank yous.Char-Nobyl said:You added two new letters there. It's freedom 'of' religion, not freedom 'from.' The kids aren't being forced to go to church the day of graduation.Lone Skankster said:This man is a hero.
Not because he got prayer taken out of a ceremony, but because he stood up for his constitutional right to be free from Religion.
When my family says Grace at a meal or Thanksgiving, or something of the sort, I let them. Its their homes and their choice. I will respect their rituals, but I will not take part in them.
Again, A system of education has no need to include religious ceremonies.
This:
Bags159 said:Actually, it's more along the lines of "The government of the United States shall not make any law endorsing a particular religion..." Christian prayer in a government institution? Sounds like an endorsement to me.
Also,
I Didn't say this. it was a response to my statement. But on that note, WBC does have the right to free speech. They also have the right to make themselves look uneducated and push people away from religion as much as they like.Lone Skankster said:So he's a hero to you, even if he's hated by his community? And all because he was unreasonably demanding that his constitutional rights be followed to the letter rather than the spirit of the law? I can only imagine how ecstatic you get when WBC pickets military funerals. After all, they're reviled by the community, but they're celebrating freedom of speech. They must be heroes!