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The Ten Commandments by weebies The
nine voodoo witch doctors in black robes, otherwise known as the Supreme
Court of the United States (SCOTUS), have undertaken upon themselves to
rule on the constitutional validity of representations of the Ten
Commandments on public (state) property. If past history is any guide,
we can depend on the Supremes to cut off the heads of chickens, view the
entrails, and maybe consult an Ouija board or two, as they try to discern
the meaning of Constitution, especially the First Amendment. And it’s
not like there are more pressing issues that the Supremes should be
tackling ahead of this issue – like unconstitutional wars of aggression,
torture, detentions, imprisonment, illegal searches and seizures, and the
complete shredding of the Constitution and Bill of Rights by the criminal
Bush regime. The state propaganda mainstream media are already gearing up
for the circus, and between the Ten Commandments and Michael
Jackson, will try to keep your average American completely bamboozled
about what is going on in the world. The
task of the Supremes is to divine what these words from the First
Amendment mean: “Congress
shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting
the free exercise thereof;” concerning a replica of the Ten
Commandments being on state property. As any literate 8th
grader with elementary reading comprehension skills (a problematic
occurrence itself given what passes for education in the state
indoctrination centers known as public schools) could tell you, this is
not a hard task. All that needs to be determined is if Congress has passed
a law, either to establish a national religion, or to prohibit people from
worshiping as they see fit. Since this case is about a statue of the Ten
Commandments, and not about a law Congress has passed on religion, it is
completely outside the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court. There is no need
for the Supremes to hold séances or divinations or roll dice or whatever
else passes for judicial fiat. It is an issue for the individual states
and individuals of those states to resolve. That people would think that
this is a federal constitutional issue shows how little people understand
the Constitution and the rule of law. Most
people view this issue as being part of the doctrine of the separation
of church and state. This
whole issue is ludicrous however one looks at it, and is a good example of
how the Constitution is a failure at binding the state, and instead binds
individuals to the yoke of the state. While not unconstitutional, it is
extremely hypocritical and deceptive that the state and its minions post
anything concerning not murdering, not stealing, and not lying. If there
was any justice and truth, every state agency would be required to post a
large neon sign with the following message – “We are the state, we
murder, we steal, we lie.” Also, it is ridiculous to think that SCOTUS
can render a valid legal ruling outside of its realm of authority. Unless
they return a ruling of no jurisdiction, which should have been evident
after five seconds of deliberation, all other rulings are
unconstitutional, a violation of the rule of law, and a usurpation by the
state of individual freedom and choice. This is true even if you like the
ruling, whether it turns out to be for or against, and you will only be
cheering your own further enslavement to the state. In this, as with most
things with the state, it is heads the state wins more power and
authority; tails the people lose more freedom and individual rights. There
is no possible good outcome from any ruling that will actually restore
liberty and constitutional rights. Some
people are claiming that that this represents an attempt to establish a It
is amazing that only as short as a 100 years ago that there was no Federal
Reserve, Federal Income Tax, IRS, FBI, CIA, NSA, FAA, FDA, DEA, BATF, EPA,
and about a thousand other different federal agencies that exist today.
Americans were individuals then, who prided themselves on
self-sufficiency, and cherished freedom and disdained government.
Americans then knew that neither they nor the state had the right to force
people to act against their will. Now, for the most part, Americans have
become a pathetic group of collectivists, who believe a majority of nine
voodoo witchdoctors in black robes can determine how all Americans should
live, and who place all their faith in the state. Americans now believe
that they have the right to dictate how everyone should live, and that the
state should force people to accept their whims. This
current debate by the Supreme Court is just another distraction that
doesn’t ask the right question. It is just like the endless debate over
prayer in public schools – instead of asking should prayer be allowed in
public schools, the real question should be why we need these horrible
state indoctrination centers that waste taxpayers’ money while not
educating children. So too, instead of questioning whether the Ten
Commandments belong on state property, why not discuss if the state should
exist at all. Without the state, we would have complete separation of
church and state, the perfect wall that so many claim is vital for
freedom. Without state property, there could be none of these public
displays that so many find offensive and threatening. Without the state,
we could live like individual human beings instead of like a collective
herd of animals. Without the state, we could have liberty. It seems to me
the best solution is the one most people won’t consider at all –
eliminate the state. discuss this column in the forum weebies lives on earth, third planet from the sun. The inhabitants of Earth hold superstitious beliefs concerning the gods of state, and even offer them blood sacrifice. weebies is trying to help his fellow citizens see that the state is an obsolete unnecessary evil, that the free market and freedom are all they truly need. |