The Free Hornet
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- Joined
- Aug 15, 2011
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No offense intended. Just i would think somebody who claims to be a god-believer and spouts off about it all the time would hold god's approval higher than governments. But santorum is clearly putting govt authority above that.
Statistically, you are wrong.

http://www.atheistroundtable.com/forum/index.php?topic=1442.0
It is the secular group that supports Ron Paul stronger than any other subgroup supports any other candidate. The seculars are saying they don't need the approval of any "G" - god or government.
Besides, governement and culture is the only vessel by which their god manifests itself, allegedly. This is why there is constant nonsense about ours being a "Christian" nation. They hold opinions that can't stand independant scrutiny and must be buttressed by society.
One of the many attacks on our country from the Religious Right is the claim that our country is a Christian Nation...not just that the majority of people are Christians, but that the country itself was founded by Christians, for Christians. However, a little research into American history will show that this statement is a lie. Those people who spread this lie are known as Christian Revisionists. They are attempting to rewrite history, in much the same way as holocaust deniers are. The men responsible for building the foundation of the United States were men of The Enlightenment, not men of Christianity. They were Deists who did not believe the bible was true. They were Freethinkers who relied on their reason, not their faith.
http://freethought.mbdojo.com/foundingfathers.html
The Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense founded on the Christian religion
by Jim Walker
Originated: 11 Apr. 1997
Additions: 26 Dec. 2004
Many Religious Right activists have attempted to rewrite history by asserting that the United States government derived from Christian foundations, that our Founding Fathers originally aimed for a Christian nation. This idea simply does not hold to the historical evidence.
Of course many Americans did practice Christianity, but so also did many believe in deistic philosophy. Indeed, most of our influential Founding Fathers, although they respected the rights of other religionists, held to deism and Freemasonry tenets rather than to Christianity.
http://nobeliefs.com/Tripoli.htm