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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: BEEF JERKEY who wrote (706330)10/7/2005 2:21:46 PM
From: BEEF JERKEY  Respond to of 769669
 
Supreme Court interpretation of the Establishment Clause does not begin until 1947 in Everson v Board of Education. Voting 5 to 4, the Court upheld a state law that reimbursed parents for the cost of busing their children to parochial schools. (It was clear from the various opinions in Everson that if the state had reimbursed the parochial schools for the cost of providing the transportation, that it would have been found to violate the Establishment Clause.) Although in his majority opinion Justice Black wrote of the "wall of separation" that the Constitution maintains between church and state, Black viewed the aid in question of serving the state's secular interest in getting kids "safely and expeditiously" to schools. The case is noteworthy for its extensive discussion of the purposes of the Establishment Clause, and for the fact that all nine justices agree that the clause was intended to do far more than merely prohibit the establishment of a state religion.



To: BEEF JERKEY who wrote (706330)10/7/2005 2:36:07 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769669
 
fundamentally Christian is not a religion and a religious symbol is not a religion.
This isn't complex logic or reading comprehension.

The Ten Commandments are fundamentally Jewish. The Ten Commandments were given to a Jew as the laws of God for Jews.