When I read this article, I could literally feel the blood draining away from my face.
Read it. NOW. And then try and tell me we're still living in the land of the free.
ETA: In my shock, I forgot to credit the original link to Atrios.
Fear, fire, foes! AWAKE!
Read it. NOW. And then try and tell me we're still living in the land of the free.
ETA: In my shock, I forgot to credit the original link to Atrios.
Fear, fire, foes! AWAKE!
no subject
Date: 2006-03-03 06:15 pm (UTC)(Not to mention that they conveniently ignore those Founding Fathers who didn't happen to be Christians.)
One religion is being set above others, and being given preference - even while lip service is being paid to dissent, this resolution is a clear step towards laws respecting an establishment of religion.
The Founding Fathers were very worried about laws respecting an establishment of religion. Which is why it's the first thing covered in the Bill of Rights.
Prayer in public schools, for example. What of those who don't pray in an approved way? Or those who don't pray at all? The moment a particular religion, however widely the term "religion" is cast, receives preferential treatment by a government body, the very factors that led to the need for the Pilgrims to escape England, with its state-approved, state-mandated Church, take root here, in a land which the disenfranchised came to as a refuge.
I'm an agnostic. (Not an atheist; there's a difference.) Which makes me a minority. And legislation such as this terrifies me out of my skull.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-03 08:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-03 09:00 pm (UTC)What scares me is not the incident; what scares me is the pattern.