The Dark wrote:Congress has had non-Christian prayer before meetings before. Personally, I feel both sides are over-reacting here. The Congress should allow for religious blessings before meetings for those who choose to attend, and not require members to be there. This would settle the minds of those who are religious without insulting those who are not.
Except for when one non-religious congressman is singled out as the guy who doesn't attend prayer, thus impacting the election in his state. Or, when his opponent
does let it slip that he doesn't attend prayer meetings. You know as well as I do that the punishment for leaking that kind of information would be a slap on the wrist and a fine, at best. The 99% Christian congress won't give a shit if the non-religious guy isn't back for another term.
Can't you see the problem with this scenario yet?
Records of who attends should necessarily be kept confidential so such things cannot be used against a Senator in a campaign.
Don't be so naive. Congressmen seeking to discredit their opponents could easily arrange for those documents to be leaked. It's best for both parties to simply
not have the stupid fucking prayer meeting. It serves no purpose. Show me evidence that prayer before a session of Congress has given the dolts in there any more wisdom than what they started with.
As to posting religious documents in classrooms, ONLY if they are for a historical reason, and ONLY if multiple religions are being studied. We used the TC ONCE, and that was along with other OT laws, contrasting with Hammurabi's code (how the OT placed more value on human life, while Hammurabi placed more value on property, stuff like that).
Are you serious? Since when do public schools post
historical documents on a regular basis in their hallways? And what history do the Ten Commandments tell us? They're from a
bias source with no collaborative evidence. They can give us information on the religious beliefs of a large, delusional segment of the population, but certainly not anything historically useful. The Bible doesn't even come close to meeting the standards that published history books do, therefore it is utterly useless as a historical document. Even if you're studying different religions in a classroom, I really don't see a reason for the things to be posted because
other classes will invariably use the same room. You can discuss them, study them, analyze them or whatever, but they should stay off the walls of schools (exemptions made for student-made presentations that a teacher may want to leave up on a wall for show or something).
Care to think of another lame-ass reason why the Ten Commandments should be posted in public schools? This last one was just gold.