CFLarsen said:
One should always look at the realities behind such claims. The fact of the matter is, that the Presidential candidate for the Libertarian Party will jail people for doing their legal job, as well as for merely disagreeing with him.
Claus, several people have pointed out why this evaluation of yours is incorrect. Stop lying.
You have not been terribly tolerant of other people here yourself, especially those who disagrees with you, or merely show you wrong.
Really? Earthborn, Valmorian, and Thanz haven't been complaining...
Do you have any data for that claim?
Just my own personal experience. But with the exception of the JREF, the Libertarians are the only group I'm in where I actually know several atheists.
Lincoln knew the Bible intimately, and could quote from it in extenso. He wasn't outspoken about his own religion, but frequently used religious themes and references in his speeches. Hardly a "most vocal non-Christian".
"My earlier views of the unsoundness of the Christian scheme of salvation and the human origin of the scriptures, have become clearer and stronger with advancing years and I see no reason for thinking I shall ever change them."
—Abraham Lincoln to Judge J. S. Wakefield
"What is to be, will be, and no prayers of ours can arrest the decree."
—Abraham Lincoln, quoted by Mary Todd Lincoln in William Herndon's Religion of Lincoln, quoted from Franklin Steiner, The Religious Beleifs of Our Presidents, p. 118
"The Bible is not my book nor Christianity my profession."
—Abraham Lincoln, quoted by Joseph Lewis in "Lincoln the Freethinker"
"Mr. Lincoln had no hope, and no faith, in the usual acceptation of those words."
—Mary Todd Lincoln, to Colonel Ward H. Lamon, as documented in his Life of Abraham Lincoln, p. 459
"No one of Lincoln's old acquaintances in this city ever heard of his conversion to Christianity by Dr. Smith or anyone else. It was never suggested nor thought of here until after his death...I never saw him read a second of time in Dr. Smith's book on Infidelity. He threw at down upon our table—spit upon it as it were—and never opened it to my knowledge."
—William Herndon, quoted in Franklin Steiner, The Religious Beleifs of Our Presidents, p. 124