Pennyroyal Tea wrote:
Protip: gays were executed during the holocaust as well. Also, in the United States there is a separation of church and state. Two marriage is not a christian institution. The Christians adopted it from the Jews who adopted it from the Pagans.
Secondly, I wasn't generalizing, I was speaking generally. Learn the difference.
Perhaps there may be a separation of "church and state" however, as Jefferson wrote, he never said how high or low the "wall of separation between Church & State" should be, and it is still something we are fighting with today.
See:
Reynolds v. U.S (98 U.S. 145): the Court carved out right to believe, but not right to practice.
Salazar v. Buono (S. Docket 08-472): the Court left a "religious symbol" on a public landmark.
Everson v. Board of Education of Ewing (330 U.S. 1): Court decided Churches unable to use public-school facilities for religious instruction of school children.
Illinois ex rel McCollum v. Board of Education (333 U.S. 203): Churches unable to use public-school facilities for religious instruction of school children.
Zorach v. Clauson (343 U.S. 306): the Court held that releasing students from school for religious instruction is allowed if religious instruction takes place away from the school campus, for 1 hour per week, and with no public funding.
Engle v. Vitale (370 U.S. 421): the Court struck down public prayers in school.
School Dist. of Abington Township v. Schempp (374 U.S. 203): the Court stuck down sanctioned bible reading in public schools.
Epperson v.Arkansas (393 US 97): States may not require curricula to align with the views of any particular religion.
Lemon v. Kurtzman (403 U.S. 602): Court created a test to see if public-funding of certain programs for religion violates the Establishment Clause.
Those are just some to use as an example. But there are at least 21 other cases used to explore this "wall." Perhaps while one may not control the other, we cannot deny that there is a nexus between the two. Until a balance is struck, the two will continue to clash.