Put another way, why did the founders as intellectuals, first not include any of those words as they wrote the Declaration documents, but then later, not use the word God, but choose the words "their creator" and "nature's god" instead? Incidentally nature's god is a Deist's god, which is basically not considered a God at all. Then eventually they became "their Creator" and "Nature's God. Which then magically morphs in the mind of the religiously ridiculous into "God"
Exactly and totally consistent with the Establishment Clause.Doesn't it all really mean the same thing? The founders acknowledged a supreme intelligence that acted as architect. Understanding that freedom of religion was to be allowed and that government had no place in declaring which version of this creator was the true one, they tried to make it as generic as possible and still allow for the undeniable belief that there was, indeed, a creator of some sort.
Of course, this is just a guess, as I cannot say with 100% surety what the founders meant - as I was not one of them.
Methinks you project too much.when a troll moron like Stu has no arguments left...
a troll pastes a few sentences out of context and pretends then has something something to laugh at.
no substance in the critiques... just out of context partial sentences.
That weak strategy is one of the last chapters of the troll playbook.
(its one of the strategies preferred by low content trolls)

Yes, but as you say, what creator? Not God, I agree. The wording being so ambiguous it can mean anything to anybody.Doesn't it all really mean the same thing? The founders acknowledged a supreme intelligence that acted as architect. Understanding that freedom of religion was to be allowed and that government had no place in declaring which version of this creator was the true one, they tried to make it as generic as possible and still allow for the undeniable belief that there was, indeed, a creator of some sort.
Of course, this is just a guess, as I cannot say with 100% surety what the founders meant - as I was not one of them.
Wrong, STUpid. The founders specifically used the word "God" as much as you'd like to pretend they didn't.Yes, but as you say, what creator? Not God, I agree. The wording being so ambiguous it can mean anything to anybody.
You need to read up on the Establishment Clause, which you're also clueless about.Your emphasis toward religion is not in line with the Establishment Clause where it is made abundantly clear that in the first instance, it is religion that has no place in government. Not the other way round.
Except the founders thought and wrote otherwise.All of this only reinforces the rather logical position that inalienable rights cannot be a God-given concept on any practical or rational grounds.
Methinks you project too much.
Don't you know why you posted that natural rights can't be contingent upon beliefs of any particular culture - when all the time you're determined to delude yourself they can?
Don't bother. It's just another of your incoherent unthinking rambling ignorant religious ideas.