I used to live in the US, plus I deal with US dollars a lot.
Maybe I should refrain from using Canadian dollars because the words 'in God we trust' are not there, and I believe in God.
That would do wonders, eh?
Hey, I could just have money distributed where you live that all says, "God Does Not Exist". No problem. It seems to be what you think that atheists really want, given the above post... which, coupled with your suggestion that there are more atheists than Christians in jail, just serves to further demonstrate your ignorance.
Which is ironic, as you were the one that were claiming a while back, on another thread, that everyone else was ignorant as to what religion actually was. Funny that.
Marriage....still being looked at as a religious institution, stuff like that.
You can be married by a judge, using a legal institution.
Even the motto, "In God we trust" is a violation if the seperation is real.
Indeed. Too bad it came around at a time of religious fervor against those godless communists...
Personally, I'd prefer that we remove the motto.
Swearing, 'so help me God' would also be a violation.
Being forced to swear, under threat of law? Definitely.
Stuff like that doesn't matter to me, even if there is a clear seperation of church and state....but many people are up in arms over it.
Indeed they are.
It's the "NIMN" principle. "Not In My Name". America was crafted to be a secular country with a seperation between church and state, where the church does not run things like they did in good ol' Europe. There was supposed to be a free exchange of ideas, religion being one of them. And, most of all, the government should not unduly represent any one religion. Those were ideals that I feel were great to be upheld, personally.
Religion has changed, and so has America. But most of the "God" mentions that you talk about did not come until only recently, in the Cold War era. They were deliberately implemented for a specific socio-political
and religious cause. The politics was to be anti-communist.
But if the federal government speaks for the people, or forces the people through law to exclaim any amount of religious beliefs (such as swearing, or a forced pledge of allegiance that states "under god"), then the idea of a free exchange is kaput. The state is favoring one religion, and is even putting pressure on individuals to swear fealty to it. I do not hold that that is an ideal situation.
And, judging from the fact that you like to remind us that you're religious every two posts or so (as if it wasn't glaringly, painfully obvious that you were incredibly biased), I suggest that the main reason you have no problem with this is because you happen to agree with that religion.