2022-06-28 at 2:11 PM UTC
The conservative-majority U.S. Supreme Court has chipped away at the wall separating church and state in a series of new rulings, eroding American legal traditions intended to prevent government officials from promoting any particular faith.
The founders of our nation recognized the importance of religious freedom and protected that with the First Amendment. Their goal was to prevent one religion from imposing its religious beliefs on all citizens. Their goal was to ensure that everyone in our nation was allowed to exercise their religious or moral beliefs freely. They were ensuring that one religion’s perspective would not limit others’ rights and freedoms.
Kiss your freedom of choice goodbye thanks to the SCOTUS Religion will be dictating public policy.
2022-06-28 at 2:13 PM UTC
Great news, it's way passed the time when the sky fairies should continue to be legitimized by law.
2022-06-28 at 2:32 PM UTC
The Court has taken on new religion-related cases at a breakneck pace. In the eight years of the Obama presidency, the Court decided just seven religious liberty cases, or fewer than one per year. By contrast, by the second anniversary of Barrett’s confirmation as a justice, the Court will have decided at least seven and arguably as many as 10 religious liberty cases with Barrett on the Court. The Court’s current majority, in other words, is itching for a fight over religion. And it holds little regard for established law. That means that a whole lot is likely to change, and very quickly. The bottom line is that the federal judiciary is fast transforming into a forum to hear the grievances of religious conservatives. And the Supreme Court is rapidly changing the rules of the game to benefit those conservatives.
2022-06-28 at 2:47 PM UTC
Burn the church
Burn the state
2022-06-28 at 2:51 PM UTC
gas the kikeses,
star race wars now.
2022-06-28 at 2:52 PM UTC
The founders of your nation were all Christians.
2022-06-28 at 4:27 PM UTC
nice thread
do you actually believe the fecal matter you post