The Court plainly countered the actions of the founders.
Surely you understand the slippery slope that represents.
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The Court plainly countered the actions of the founders.
Who better to interpret a document than the men who wrote it?Surely you understand the slippery slope that represents.
Who better to interpret a document than the men who wrote it?
No, that is what the 1st Amendment says. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;That is the garbage the modernists want you to believe.
Yes.When the drafters and ratifiers of The COTUS governed, was their prayer and Bible reading in public schools?
It is not all that hard to understand. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;Guess you understand The document they wrote and ratified better than they did.
Nope. Not even mentioned in the 1st amendment. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;They plainly gave Christianity a unique position of prominence.
No, they wrote a document that prohibited it.They wrote the document that a Court 200 years later said prohibited it.
I'm not. You are. The document of 1791 reads, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;"Don't buy into the revisionist nonsense.
History says it was prohibited in 1791. The law says it is still prohibited.You are a much better student of history than that.
He never said "I don't know." The least he said was "I would be struggling to remember." An honest answer.Sure, if "I don't know" is an answer.
I have not.
I have not.
I was involved in taking depositions when I was an associate at Wiley Rein when I first came out of law school. But that was --
I’d be struggling to remember.
Yes.
Probably somewhere in that range.
The actions of the men who wrote it.People that are still alive?
The actions of the men who wrote it.
Why was prayer in Public schools when the men who wrote and ratified The Constitution ruled?No, that is what the 1st Amendment says. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
Yes.
It is not all that hard to understand. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
Nope. Not even mentioned in the 1st amendment. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
No, they wrote a document that prohibited it.
I'm not. You are. The document of 1791 reads, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;"
History says it was prohibited in 1791. The law says it is still prohibited.
How I am reading it does not matter. I simply look at their actions. When they ruled, prayer and Bible reading in schools.I don’t think they wrote it the way you are reading it.
How I am reading it does not matter. I simply look at their actions. When they ruled, prayer and Bible reading in schools.
Because Christianity was the only religion represented in the 13 original colonies.Why was prayer in Public schools when the men who wrote and ratified The Constitution ruled?
Let's see. 114th Congress, 12/14/2017. Reverend Patrick J. Conroy, S.J., Roman Catholic Priest.The houses of Congress open in prayer.
Most other religions were present. What does your point you are trying to make matter? If its Unconstitutional, its Unconstitutional. It obviously was not Unconstitutional then and its likewise not now.Because Christianity was the only religion represented in the 13 original colonies.
I think Some Catholics are Christian. Nothing to chew on.Let's see. 114th Congress, 12/14/2017. Reverend Patrick J. Conroy, S.J., Roman Catholic Priest.
113th Congress, 1/21/2015. The Most Reverend Richard E. Pates Bishop of Des Moines. Roman Catholic Bishop.
To quote you, "Chew on that a bit."
Are these two?I think Some Catholics are Christian. Nothing to chew on.
Of course it is. That's why it is forbidden.It obviously was not Unconstitutional then and its likewise not now.
Don't have any idea.Are these two?
So, the men who wrote and ratified The Constitution did not know what it meant? Judges 200 years later understood it better than the men who wrote it, debated it, and ratified it? You are not making much sense with your one liners.Of course it is. That's why it is forbidden.
It is forbidden because the justices failed to see and honor orig. intent of the founders.Of course it is. That's why it is forbidden.