+1 to the first person to identify the source of the phrase "the government of the United States is not in any sense founded upon the Christian religion."
That phrase is, by the way, the supreme law of our land.
"Wade" wrote:
IIRC it was used in a treaty made in either Washington's or Jefferson's administration, but I can't be sure. and I'm too lazy to check.
For me, this "founded on the Christian religion" is one of the reasons I'm not a conservative, but a libertarian/anarchist.
Governments are founded upon ideologies. And since a religion is a kind of ideology (you can't define your religion except by differentiating it from other religions, just as you can't define "conservative" without pointing out how it is "not liberal").
But, IMO, belief in Jesus is not a religion, but a relationship. I can have a relationship with Jesus regardless of whether other people do or not have such a relationship, for the same reason Rourke (or anyone else) can have relationships with more than one person regardless of whether I have a relationship with them. That's the way relationships work.
But government is not just a relationship. It's an agreement that doesn't just say "yes" to something, it's an agreement that says "no" to something else. We went with federalism in the Consitution because a certain group (the ones who prevailed) believed not-Confederation preferable to Confederation. European nations chose parliamentary government rather than US style republicanism in part because of what it was not. Same for the Bolsheviks or the Maoists or Gen Y voiting for Obamaism. They were't the Tzar. They weren't the empire. They weren't Bush.
But Christian belief doesn't work that way. The notion that Jesus's teaching's can or should be reduced to an ideological stance, either in 1787 or in 2010, strikes me as repugnant.
Because while the Consitution may be the supreme law of the political entity named the United States, that only makes it the supreme holder of second place.
And the notion that some yahoo from the Trinity network or some nabob from the state department can make it otherwise....well, at best its a silly idea.
IMO, the phrasing of the supremacy clause is unfortunate. To quote:
"This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding."
The way I was long ago taught this emphasized that it was all about the essential principle of federal superiority over state, and legislative superiority over judicial, when it comes to "making law." And I think that is what the founders probably intended.
But that is not what the clause says. The clause puts Constitution and legislation and treaties on the same level as "supreme law". And that, IMO, is pernicious. It forces a choice between the "supremacy" clause and the notion of "enumerated powers" (see amendments 9-10).
And "supreme" trumps everything else, by definition.
People like me like to complain about the emasculation of Amendments 9 and 10, but given the way the supremacy clause reads, we shouldn't be surprised.
"Nonstopdrivel" wrote: