True, but IIRC, one of the authors of the document (I believe it was Jefferson) has stated in those exact words that it was the intent behind the 1st amendment.Metatron wrote:OK lets clear a few things up....
First of all the term "Separation of church and state" is not a part of any US Document. So many cling to this statement as their basis of argument, when in fact it is not even a factor.
Being public schools, there should neither be a sanctioned prayer time nor school policy against prayer. The school should remain completely neutral in the matter. Religious expression in school isn't against any instituted policy, like some of the chain emails I've received seem to imply, it simply isn't addressed in policy at all. In other words, it's neutral to religion.This entire discussion about the US is based off of the First Amendment.
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;"
<snip the bit dealt with above>
First of all THis amendment declares that the state is to show no predjudice or favor to any religious belief. This amendment has been cited to remove the act of prayer in public schools. Now I can understand, there are those that would take offense (those of non-christian ideology) if forced to pray as part of a daily school routine. Ok but what about those that feel that prayer is an intregral part of Daily routine? Isn't that prohibiting free excersize there-of? Considering that School time is regulated and structured, by not providing time to freely excersize a religious act that is as equally a violation of the first amendment as forcing prayer.
If a student's praying happens to be disruptive to a class, I think a teacher has every right to ask them to save it for, say, lunch period, but that doesn't mean he/she is enforcing some anti-religion school policy.
Again, you seem to be under the impression that the 1st amendment sets up some sort of conflict between Church and State, when its intent was for government to be fair to all its citizens and be neutral towards religion.This amendment is not meant to protect the state from religion. It is meant to protect religion from the state.
Nope, sorry, atheism fails the test as a religion because of the lack of any supernatural elements, the lack of any "spiritual leader", and it isn't a cause in the usual sense of the word. It simply is the lack of belief in any governing supernatural being. With your definition, "collection of beliefs", so many things fit that category as to make the term meaningless.If you can consider that aethism is a religion, as a "collection of beliefs", by allowing my religious beliefs as a christian to be supressed in a public forum to respect the beliefs of another group of beliefs. Well then How is this constitutional?
The rest of your point is moot, as there is no public policy supporting atheism.
Yes, but the specific context is Jefferson's belief in an impersonal god that leaves us to our own devices. A far cry from religions like Christianity and Judaism. How this helps your case is unclear.Next is Cromag's mention of the Declaration of Indepance.
Mention of Nature's God is Still a mention of religious context.
Endowed by their creator.-Religious context.
It's actually very specific, it has to do with Deism. The Bill of Rights makes no mention of any god. Only the first amendment has anything to do with religion and, as stated above, it establishes that the government shall remain neutral on the matter, making no policy that supports one above any other nor prevents the free practice thereof.The Declaration is a document of religious context and NON-Specific religious context is not viable means to negate it's involvement. The bill of rights included that statement to declare that the US Goverment would not declare and allegiance to support a specific religion nor deny ones right to practice that religion.
Doesn't mean that the decision would be the best one. Propping up any single religious figure over others is just a bad idea, period.As far as the EU constitution is concerned. The beliefs of the majority will govern it's path.
Nor were any of us naive enough to think so, but when it comes to something as sensitive as religion, no government should take up a position that excludes a significant portion of its constituency.Remember, Democracies nor Republics, make EVERYONE happy, just the majority of them, or those that voice their opinion the loudest (voting)
If you're actually interested in continuing this discussion, I'd suggest another thread, as this one is supposed to be about the EU's inclusion of the Christian God into their Constitution.