Church & State

Megyn Kelly schools O’Reilly

by Karen on December 18, 2008

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Las Vegas to be sued by Humanists?

by Karen on December 14, 2008

Here’s a bit of interesting news, the American Humanist Association may be suing the City of Sin due to state laws that forbid atheists from officiating weddings:

In a city launched by shotgun weddings and quickie divorces, and which offers the chance to be wed by faux Liberaces, King Tuts and Grim Reapers, there remains at least one nuptial taboo: You can’t be married by an atheist.

Michael Jacobson, a 64-year-old retiree who calls himself a lifelong atheist, tried this year to get a license to perform weddings. Clark County rejected his application because he had no ties to a congregation, as state law requires.

So Jacobson and attorneys from two national secular groups — the American Humanist Assn. and the Center for Inquiry — are trying to change things. If they can’t persuade the state Legislature to rework the law, they plan to sue.

Am I the only one that finds it hilarious that a city that markets itself as being a decadent place (video) that’ll take the sins you commit within it’s borders to it’s grave has a problem with the ultimate sinner (see Psalms 14:1, any version) getting in on the game?

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Christian plates shelved in South Carolina

December 11, 2008

American’s United has won a small victory in the war against theocracy. A federal judge today ruled that the state of South Carolina may not issue a special “Christian” license plate featuring a cross, a stained-glass window and the words “I Believe.” Americans United for Separation of Church and State, which sponsored the litigation to [...]

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Why [some] atheists care about religion

October 28, 2008

I found the following video a couple of weeks ago and have been meaning to put it up.  It’s a ’5 minute Reader’s Digest version’ of why some of us atheists care about religion. The fact of the matter is that ‘religion’ isn’t a private matter between the religious adherent and the object of their [...]

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What the state asks for, the state gets

October 3, 2008

Six chaplains in Virginia have resigned, dozens more have signed a protest letter and there’s talk of having a rally outside the governor’s pad on November 1, just a few days before the election.  All allege that they’re the victims of religious persecution. In this case it’s persecution because the state enacted a policy forbidding [...]

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Can you get a refund for a gift god gave you?

August 20, 2008

Seriously! A confident Barack Obama raised an extraordinary $7.8 million Sunday at three California fundraisers, most of it in large checks to a Democratic Party committee. “I will win. Don’t worry about that,” he said to the crowd of about 1,300 at his third event of the evening, according to the pool report. He was [...]

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First patriotism, now God soaked patriotism?

February 12, 2008

Our daughter just started school this year and it’s been wonderful to see her slowly get past her bashfulness. Getting her to talk, even to say if something hurt was like pulling teeth with pliers made out of play dough. Getting her talk to even family members was about impossible and strangers speaking to her [...]

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Damned if we do, damned if we don’t

December 13, 2007

Someone at the Economist has a problem with atheists. According to the anonymous author of this piece we pick the wrong fights and keep using that “A-Word” which frightens the poor little Christians. How do we know when we’ve picked the wrong fight? A wrong fight is anything the liberal Christians don’t agree with us [...]

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Teacher fired for not taking Bible seriously?

September 24, 2007

Need a reason why the Bible and all other religious texts should be kept at home/church and out of schools? Here’s one for you. A professor has apparently been fired for using the Bible academically in his western civilization class after being threatened with a lawsuit for telling a student outside of class that he [...]

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"We are not the crazy ones"

September 24, 2007

Here’s a video clip of Bill Maher stating that it’s about time for us “rationalists” to start taking the religious views of politicians into consideration before casting our votes: If candidates make their personal beliefs a part of their campaign, should they not be judged for the nature of those beliefs? I say they should.

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