Darth Wong wrote:Totally irrelevant. Private corporations do not have power to regulate individual behaviour. The state does.
Sure they do, within the workplace and in compliance with federal law. And I'm didn't say corporations were trying regulating personal behavior, but that individuals and associations can leverage private sector power to promote religious agendas (i.e., Trinity Broadcasting Network). So what's so inherently corrupting about state power?
Sunday closing laws, anti-pornography laws, anti-prostitution laws, tax exemptions for churches even when they are so wealthy that they would otherwise be on the Fortune 500 list, anti-sodomy laws, religious exemptions from child-abuse laws, etc.
And how is this "undue corruption?"
All of these are impositions upon personal liberties or exemptions from rules that apply to everyone else which are caused by church influence, despite the constitutional guarantees against it.
There are secular impositions on liberty as well, so what's your point?
Without those guarantees, it would be even worse.
Yet you have to prove damages. You just can't say "I don't like this law because it has a religious undertone to it" and expected to be taken seriously.
Please look up "slippery slope" argument. The only one using it here is you, by implying that removal of the church from government somehow implies imminent removal of the church from all private activities as well.
Is it necessary to make up arguments for me? Please, when did I say that complete and utter separation of church and state would do undue harm to the church in the private sector? It's inconvenient, but it doesn't rise to the level of "harm."
The use of an old historical precedent is perfectly reasonable if it applies. Has the Bible changed since the Inquisition? No.
So you're arguing that Christianity subverted all these medieval, peace-loving European democracies and turned them into far more brutal theocratic societies?
Rev Prez