Hundreds and thousands of words, in trying to argue 10 words mean something else than what they say. Reams of text attempting to establish the Founders could not have the intellect nor integrity to choose their words wisely, for proper understanding and use by the generations to follow.
Your argument Optional 777, supporting law which violates the First Amendment appears thus ...
"The words of the Founders do not mean what they mean. Any meaning they do have is what I, Optional 777 say they mean and what other religious cronies say they mean, just as long as they too mean what I mean
Anyone arguing against this is not an American and I declare them not to be an American citizen, whether I know them to be so or not.
American history is there for the religious to do with what they want, so long as they do with it what I mean they want"
The Founders were against government passing law which would endorse religion, as they wrote into the Constitution , the words which describe an act of doing so, as something they say Congress shall not make happen.
A most basic understanding of the reasons that it was so important to them not to allow law itself to recognize or appear to support formation of religion, or of any established religion, is to realize for one thing, laws which frame themselves into an endorsement of religion, are against the interests of religion itself.
There's the problem the Baptists saw early on. Endorsement in law of religious phrase or statements, compromises religion (and the law) by privileging it - in the case of the Pledge - as something which even the law itself cannot offer to protect freedom of and from.
It must be, in a free and democratic country, that nothing and no one, according to the law, is above the law and everyone and everything is under it. The law being subject to the democratic will of the people, ensures freedom.
When government starts to involve the law in religion, either for or against it, then a believer's liberty will be threatened, just as a non believer's liberty is threatened by inclusion of it.
When Americans now say the Pledge "under God", they provide for the Muslim, a proclamation that they live under the Muslim religion, as there can only be one true God and that is Allah according to their belief. Americans are endorsing Allah for the Muslim by default, whether they think so or not, say so or not. Endorsement in law of religious phrase or statements, is against the interests of religion itself. It soon sets one American against another.
Optional 777 tries to argue God has a kind of generic meaning of religion. If one says God then God is whatever one wants it to be. The Muslim may think that Americans are endorsing Allah, but others don't. The significant others being his majority of Americans who follow a Christian God on which it is said this nation was built.
So for what purpose the words then if not to recognize in law, by making legal the endorsement of a Christian God over Allah?.
Optional 777 says "Allah is to the word God what sturgeon is to fish". A sturgeon can be nothing else but a fish. God can be nothing else but religious. (Optional.. for your information 'the gods' or 'a God' does not mean the same as the word God, said or written without the definite or indefinite article put before it)
Not according to Oprional 777. God is the nation's people's personal feelings for whatever God is..unless it is not... and it is more a recognition that America was built on religion, or more specifically (the christian) God.
The law is now locked in circular argument by which its best values cannot be brought to resolve. God is religion and it isn't.
According to Optional 777 the inclusion into law of the words "one nation under man" is acceptable, when the majority think it's ok, as people can say to themselves well... man is a generic word for humankind, so that includes women and children.
So if man is generic then USE the generic description for the word man. If God is generic then USE the generic word for God. Is it Anything or Allah or Religion?
The law is left compromised. Religion is left compromised. The multi-various personal understanding of God and religions are left compromised. The law should never have been used that way in the first place.
The words were made law because politicians purposely tried to differentiate a religious nation of God, from what they described as a Godless nation, (USSSR) in 1954. It turns out the politicians in communist Russia may well have been Godless, but the people were not. However, they were successful only in their frenzied panic as politicians, assuming themselves to be representing 'one nation under McArthy', of violating the Constitution.
No laws which respect the establishment of religion can allow for , free exercise of religion, freedom from religion, or a free country.
Your argument Optional 777, supporting law which violates the First Amendment appears thus ...
"The words of the Founders do not mean what they mean. Any meaning they do have is what I, Optional 777 say they mean and what other religious cronies say they mean, just as long as they too mean what I mean
Anyone arguing against this is not an American and I declare them not to be an American citizen, whether I know them to be so or not.
American history is there for the religious to do with what they want, so long as they do with it what I mean they want"
The Founders were against government passing law which would endorse religion, as they wrote into the Constitution , the words which describe an act of doing so, as something they say Congress shall not make happen.
A most basic understanding of the reasons that it was so important to them not to allow law itself to recognize or appear to support formation of religion, or of any established religion, is to realize for one thing, laws which frame themselves into an endorsement of religion, are against the interests of religion itself.
There's the problem the Baptists saw early on. Endorsement in law of religious phrase or statements, compromises religion (and the law) by privileging it - in the case of the Pledge - as something which even the law itself cannot offer to protect freedom of and from.
It must be, in a free and democratic country, that nothing and no one, according to the law, is above the law and everyone and everything is under it. The law being subject to the democratic will of the people, ensures freedom.
When government starts to involve the law in religion, either for or against it, then a believer's liberty will be threatened, just as a non believer's liberty is threatened by inclusion of it.
When Americans now say the Pledge "under God", they provide for the Muslim, a proclamation that they live under the Muslim religion, as there can only be one true God and that is Allah according to their belief. Americans are endorsing Allah for the Muslim by default, whether they think so or not, say so or not. Endorsement in law of religious phrase or statements, is against the interests of religion itself. It soon sets one American against another.
Optional 777 tries to argue God has a kind of generic meaning of religion. If one says God then God is whatever one wants it to be. The Muslim may think that Americans are endorsing Allah, but others don't. The significant others being his majority of Americans who follow a Christian God on which it is said this nation was built.
So for what purpose the words then if not to recognize in law, by making legal the endorsement of a Christian God over Allah?.
Optional 777 says "Allah is to the word God what sturgeon is to fish". A sturgeon can be nothing else but a fish. God can be nothing else but religious. (Optional.. for your information 'the gods' or 'a God' does not mean the same as the word God, said or written without the definite or indefinite article put before it)
Not according to Oprional 777. God is the nation's people's personal feelings for whatever God is..unless it is not... and it is more a recognition that America was built on religion, or more specifically (the christian) God.
The law is now locked in circular argument by which its best values cannot be brought to resolve. God is religion and it isn't.
According to Optional 777 the inclusion into law of the words "one nation under man" is acceptable, when the majority think it's ok, as people can say to themselves well... man is a generic word for humankind, so that includes women and children.
So if man is generic then USE the generic description for the word man. If God is generic then USE the generic word for God. Is it Anything or Allah or Religion?
The law is left compromised. Religion is left compromised. The multi-various personal understanding of God and religions are left compromised. The law should never have been used that way in the first place.
The words were made law because politicians purposely tried to differentiate a religious nation of God, from what they described as a Godless nation, (USSSR) in 1954. It turns out the politicians in communist Russia may well have been Godless, but the people were not. However, they were successful only in their frenzied panic as politicians, assuming themselves to be representing 'one nation under McArthy', of violating the Constitution.
No laws which respect the establishment of religion can allow for , free exercise of religion, freedom from religion, or a free country.