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- #41
I notice you only mention Sharia Law, clearly you have no problem with Christians implementing their belief system into our laws.
I would respond to the rest of your list but it would be a giant waste of time since you have no intention of actually reading what I have to say.
Well I didnt come up with the list, but there is no implementation of "Christian Law" in the Constitution or in any of our Federal laws or State laws for that matter. The fact that Christianity has had a profound influence on our U.S. Constitution and many of our laws as well as our culture in general should put to rest any fears that a theocracy might develop. If it did not develop in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries when Christianity was pretty much the only visible religion represented, there is certainly no danger that a theocracy will develop now that many difference religions are visible and represented.
Christianity and the U.S. Constitution are quite compatible and have co-existed for well over 200 years now, however, while much of Sharia Law is opposite many Constitutional principles and to allow it would be in clear violation of our respect for unalienable, civil, and legal rights.
Refresh my memory here did you in your list ONCE refer to any religious law of any sort?
One item on the list was to prohibit any legal implementaton of Sharia Law. That's the cloest thing to anything 'religious' on the list.