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#1
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On 1/4/2015 10:22 AM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 1/4/15 1:37 AM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 21:39:05 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Harry, after reading the article and your responses to various posts, I jist have to ask- are you shoving anti-religion down people's throats? Just curious... Harry is against religion everywhere except Israel where he thinks a direct connection between church and state is acceptable and it is OK to impose their religious beliefs on the people living there. Specious. Israel was established as a Jewish nation. The United States was not established as a Christian nation. I am not against religion. I am against religion/religious beliefs dictating laws, regulations, what is taught in public schools, et cetera. "One nation under God" -- I don't need anger management. I just need people to stop ****ing me off! Respectfully submitted by Justan |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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Califbill wrote:
Justan Olphart wrote: On 1/4/2015 10:22 AM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 1/4/15 1:37 AM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 21:39:05 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Harry, after reading the article and your responses to various posts, I jist have to ask- are you shoving anti-religion down people's throats? Just curious... Harry is against religion everywhere except Israel where he thinks a direct connection between church and state is acceptable and it is OK to impose their religious beliefs on the people living there. Specious. Israel was established as a Jewish nation. The United States was not established as a Christian nation. I am not against religion. I am against religion/religious beliefs dictating laws, regulations, what is taught in public schools, et cetera. "One nation under God" But did not say a Christian God. Actually the founders stated there would not be a State Religion, ala Church of England. Not that there would be no religious expression. The phrase "one nation..." had nothing to do with the founding fathers, the Declaration, or the Constitution. It was shoved into the "pledge" during the middle of the last century because of right-wing pressure. -- Sent from my iPhone 6+ |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On 4 Jan 2015 20:14:11 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote:
Califbill wrote: Justan Olphart wrote: On 1/4/2015 10:22 AM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 1/4/15 1:37 AM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 21:39:05 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Harry, after reading the article and your responses to various posts, I jist have to ask- are you shoving anti-religion down people's throats? Just curious... Harry is against religion everywhere except Israel where he thinks a direct connection between church and state is acceptable and it is OK to impose their religious beliefs on the people living there. Specious. Israel was established as a Jewish nation. The United States was not established as a Christian nation. I am not against religion. I am against religion/religious beliefs dictating laws, regulations, what is taught in public schools, et cetera. "One nation under God" But did not say a Christian God. Actually the founders stated there would not be a State Religion, ala Church of England. Not that there would be no religious expression. The phrase "one nation..." had nothing to do with the founding fathers, the Declaration, or the Constitution. It was shoved into the "pledge" during the middle of the last century because of right-wing pressure. Harry, are you just *trying* to promote friction? |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sunday, January 4, 2015 1:42:43 PM UTC-8, John H. wrote:
On 4 Jan 2015 20:14:11 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Califbill wrote: Justan Olphart wrote: On 1/4/2015 10:22 AM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 1/4/15 1:37 AM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 21:39:05 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Harry, after reading the article and your responses to various posts, I jist have to ask- are you shoving anti-religion down people's throats? Just curious... Harry is against religion everywhere except Israel where he thinks a direct connection between church and state is acceptable and it is OK to impose their religious beliefs on the people living there. Specious. Israel was established as a Jewish nation. The United States was not established as a Christian nation. I am not against religion. I am against religion/religious beliefs dictating laws, regulations, what is taught in public schools, et cetera. "One nation under God" But did not say a Christian God. Actually the founders stated there would not be a State Religion, ala Church of England. Not that there would be no religious expression. The phrase "one nation..." had nothing to do with the founding fathers, the Declaration, or the Constitution. It was shoved into the "pledge" during the middle of the last century because of right-wing pressure. Harry, are you just *trying* to promote friction? On what ever issue Krause may promote or discount, the more I tend to follow or at lease agree with the opposite. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On 1/4/15 4:42 PM, Poquito Loco wrote:
On 4 Jan 2015 20:14:11 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Califbill wrote: Justan Olphart wrote: On 1/4/2015 10:22 AM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 1/4/15 1:37 AM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 21:39:05 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Harry, after reading the article and your responses to various posts, I jist have to ask- are you shoving anti-religion down people's throats? Just curious... Harry is against religion everywhere except Israel where he thinks a direct connection between church and state is acceptable and it is OK to impose their religious beliefs on the people living there. Specious. Israel was established as a Jewish nation. The United States was not established as a Christian nation. I am not against religion. I am against religion/religious beliefs dictating laws, regulations, what is taught in public schools, et cetera. "One nation under God" But did not say a Christian God. Actually the founders stated there would not be a State Religion, ala Church of England. Not that there would be no religious expression. The phrase "one nation..." had nothing to do with the founding fathers, the Declaration, or the Constitution. It was shoved into the "pledge" during the middle of the last century because of right-wing pressure. Harry, are you just *trying* to promote friction? Just stating a bit of history. The phrase in question is a perfect example of how religious conservatives force their view on those who believe differently. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On 1/4/2015 7:09 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 1/4/15 4:42 PM, Poquito Loco wrote: On 4 Jan 2015 20:14:11 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Califbill wrote: Justan Olphart wrote: On 1/4/2015 10:22 AM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 1/4/15 1:37 AM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 21:39:05 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Harry, after reading the article and your responses to various posts, I jist have to ask- are you shoving anti-religion down people's throats? Just curious... Harry is against religion everywhere except Israel where he thinks a direct connection between church and state is acceptable and it is OK to impose their religious beliefs on the people living there. Specious. Israel was established as a Jewish nation. The United States was not established as a Christian nation. I am not against religion. I am against religion/religious beliefs dictating laws, regulations, what is taught in public schools, et cetera. "One nation under God" But did not say a Christian God. Actually the founders stated there would not be a State Religion, ala Church of England. Not that there would be no religious expression. The phrase "one nation..." had nothing to do with the founding fathers, the Declaration, or the Constitution. It was shoved into the "pledge" during the middle of the last century because of right-wing pressure. Harry, are you just *trying* to promote friction? Just stating a bit of history. The phrase in question is a perfect example of how religious conservatives force their view on those who believe differently. Wimp. -- I don't need anger management. I just need people to stop ****ing me off! Respectfully submitted by Justan |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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Keyser Söze wrote:
On 1/4/15 4:42 PM, Poquito Loco wrote: On 4 Jan 2015 20:14:11 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Califbill wrote: Justan Olphart wrote: On 1/4/2015 10:22 AM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 1/4/15 1:37 AM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 21:39:05 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Harry, after reading the article and your responses to various posts, I jist have to ask- are you shoving anti-religion down people's throats? Just curious... Harry is against religion everywhere except Israel where he thinks a direct connection between church and state is acceptable and it is OK to impose their religious beliefs on the people living there. Specious. Israel was established as a Jewish nation. The United States was not established as a Christian nation. I am not against religion. I am against religion/religious beliefs dictating laws, regulations, what is taught in public schools, et cetera. "One nation under God" But did not say a Christian God. Actually the founders stated there would not be a State Religion, ala Church of England. Not that there would be no religious expression. The phrase "one nation..." had nothing to do with the founding fathers, the Declaration, or the Constitution. It was shoved into the "pledge" during the middle of the last century because of right-wing pressure. Harry, are you just *trying* to promote friction? Just stating a bit of history. The phrase in question is a perfect example of how religious conservatives force their view on those who believe differently. It does not say one nation under Jesus. One national under Allahu Akbar neither. What ever God floats your boat. Including the Prince of Atheism. Is inclusive of all deities. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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On 1/4/15 10:06 PM, Califbill wrote:
Keyser Söze wrote: On 1/4/15 4:42 PM, Poquito Loco wrote: On 4 Jan 2015 20:14:11 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Califbill wrote: Justan Olphart wrote: On 1/4/2015 10:22 AM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 1/4/15 1:37 AM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 21:39:05 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Harry, after reading the article and your responses to various posts, I jist have to ask- are you shoving anti-religion down people's throats? Just curious... Harry is against religion everywhere except Israel where he thinks a direct connection between church and state is acceptable and it is OK to impose their religious beliefs on the people living there. Specious. Israel was established as a Jewish nation. The United States was not established as a Christian nation. I am not against religion. I am against religion/religious beliefs dictating laws, regulations, what is taught in public schools, et cetera. "One nation under God" But did not say a Christian God. Actually the founders stated there would not be a State Religion, ala Church of England. Not that there would be no religious expression. The phrase "one nation..." had nothing to do with the founding fathers, the Declaration, or the Constitution. It was shoved into the "pledge" during the middle of the last century because of right-wing pressure. Harry, are you just *trying* to promote friction? Just stating a bit of history. The phrase in question is a perfect example of how religious conservatives force their view on those who believe differently. It does not say one nation under Jesus. One national under Allahu Akbar neither. What ever God floats your boat. Including the Prince of Atheism. Is inclusive of all deities. Not relevant or accurate. Those who pushed for the inclusion of the phrase were christians. Fortunately a growing number of public schools have recognized the religious *******ization of "the pledge" and have dropped it from morning student activities. Religious expressionism has no place in the public schools. |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 04 Jan 2015 19:09:04 -0500, Keyser Söze
wrote: On 1/4/15 4:42 PM, Poquito Loco wrote: On 4 Jan 2015 20:14:11 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Califbill wrote: Justan Olphart wrote: On 1/4/2015 10:22 AM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 1/4/15 1:37 AM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 21:39:05 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Harry, after reading the article and your responses to various posts, I jist have to ask- are you shoving anti-religion down people's throats? Just curious... Harry is against religion everywhere except Israel where he thinks a direct connection between church and state is acceptable and it is OK to impose their religious beliefs on the people living there. Specious. Israel was established as a Jewish nation. The United States was not established as a Christian nation. I am not against religion. I am against religion/religious beliefs dictating laws, regulations, what is taught in public schools, et cetera. "One nation under God" But did not say a Christian God. Actually the founders stated there would not be a State Religion, ala Church of England. Not that there would be no religious expression. The phrase "one nation..." had nothing to do with the founding fathers, the Declaration, or the Constitution. It was shoved into the "pledge" during the middle of the last century because of right-wing pressure. Harry, are you just *trying* to promote friction? Just stating a bit of history. The phrase in question is a perfect example of how religious conservatives force their view on those who believe differently. Again, how many of the religious conservatives here have forced their view on you? That's about the dozenth time I've asked you that question, for which you seem not to have sufficient balls to provide an answer. Yet you persist with the same excuses for your bull****. It's not your politics, Krause, it's your behavior. |
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