Christian Principles

United States
December 12, 2006 11:17pm CST
Samuel Thopmson wrote: " I don't believe in Sant Claus, but I am not going to sue someone for singing a Ho-Ho-Ho- song in December. I don't agree with Darwin, But I didn't go out and hire a lawyer when my high school teacher taught his theory of evolution. Life, Liberty or your pusuit of happinesws will not be endangered becouse someone says a 30 second prayer before a football game. So whats the big deal? Its not like someboby is up there reading the intire book of acts. There just talking to a god they believe in and asking him to grant saftey to the players on the field and the fans going home from the game. " But its a Christian prayer some will argue. Yes and this is the United States of America, a country founded on christian princibles. And we are in the bible belt, according to our very own phone book. Christian churches outnumber all others 200-to-1. So what would you expect-somebody chanting Hare Krishna?
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1 response
• United States
22 Apr 07
I cannot believe that no one responded to this. Had I seen it, I would have responded much sooner. Here in the so-called land of the free, we are only as free as they say we are. Next they'll be taking Christians to jail for not denying their maker. There's a family down south (wish I could remember the details) that held Christain values and chose not to have a TV in their home. They got their kids taken away from them for that--over 2 years ago. The story is on www.prisonplanet.com, probably in the archives by now, but that is where I read this story. The ADFC will not give these people their children back. I'm sorry, but having TV is an option, not a law. Those people read to their kids, played games & pretty much did the normal family things that people did for centuries before the sick worshipping of the almighty boob-tube came about. It is also rumored that people who teach their kids Christianity will be running the risk of being labeled mentally impaired in the future. I'm not a church-goer by any means, but I do believe in God and damn the bastiges who tell me or anyone else that our beliefs are no longer our own. In short, if people don't want to bow their head during a ballgame prayer, that's their right. They go stepping on my rights and I'm liable to start bellowing out The Battle Hymn of the Republic--trust me, NO ONE wants me to sing.