If you have visited the "cases" page on CourtZero.org, you have read about cases involving marriage, the Boy Scouts, the Catholic Church, the Pledge of Allegiance, the Ten Commandments, the right to life, and so on.
What do each of these cases have in common?
If you have tuned in to news anytime in the last year (roughly since the United States invaded Iraq), you may have noticed a festering and passionate hatred of the United States being reported by certain peoples and nations.
What do each of the hating parties have in common?
If you have tuned in to the news of the campaign for the U.S. Presidency this year, you may have noticed a festering and passionate hatred of the current President reported by certain peoples, political parties, and news anchors.
What do each of the hating parties have in common?
If you haven't been under a rock for the last several months, you might have noticed that a certain motion picture, produced by Mel Gibson, has been described as "controversial", and received a hysterical response before it was even released.
What do the critics of the Gibson movie have in common?
I humbly suggest that the answer to all four questions is this: Jesus Christ. Rather, a dislike, distrust, or fear of Jesus Christ, Christians, Christianity, Christian beliefs, and Christian nations.
As I analyze court opinions for the CourtZero site, and as I attempt to persuade others to assume a citizen's responsibility for deciding what limits there ought to be on the courts' power, I try to keep it "secular", and to adhere to the rules of interpreting law. This is proper, since America is a Nation of Laws, a fact that I both respect and like.
But America is also a Christian Nation. That is not arguable, and I am getting tired of hiding it, or being embarrassed to just come out and say it. I value our national identity, and believe it worth protecting.
If America were predominantly Muslim, in population and tradition, there is no doubt that September 11th would not have happened.
If President Bush and Attorney General Ashcroft were not open about their Christian faith, and sincere about it, they would not be hated to the degree that many hate them.
If the Boy Scouts and the Catholic Church would only turn their backs on Christianity, they would no longer be sued right and left.
Christianity is the common thread. That is why the hatred is boiling over as a Christian Nation fights back against its enemies.
But I do not believe that foreign terrorist groups will ever actually conquer and control America. I do not see that happening, even if they continue to inflict pain and casualties upon us.
Our own courts, on the other hand, have the power to change everything. They are by and large hostile to Christian beliefs, and are busily changing our culture right now. The courts may succeed where others cannot: in identifying and destroying the Common Thread.
What do each of these cases have in common?
If you have tuned in to news anytime in the last year (roughly since the United States invaded Iraq), you may have noticed a festering and passionate hatred of the United States being reported by certain peoples and nations.
What do each of the hating parties have in common?
If you have tuned in to the news of the campaign for the U.S. Presidency this year, you may have noticed a festering and passionate hatred of the current President reported by certain peoples, political parties, and news anchors.
What do each of the hating parties have in common?
If you haven't been under a rock for the last several months, you might have noticed that a certain motion picture, produced by Mel Gibson, has been described as "controversial", and received a hysterical response before it was even released.
What do the critics of the Gibson movie have in common?
I humbly suggest that the answer to all four questions is this: Jesus Christ. Rather, a dislike, distrust, or fear of Jesus Christ, Christians, Christianity, Christian beliefs, and Christian nations.
As I analyze court opinions for the CourtZero site, and as I attempt to persuade others to assume a citizen's responsibility for deciding what limits there ought to be on the courts' power, I try to keep it "secular", and to adhere to the rules of interpreting law. This is proper, since America is a Nation of Laws, a fact that I both respect and like.
But America is also a Christian Nation. That is not arguable, and I am getting tired of hiding it, or being embarrassed to just come out and say it. I value our national identity, and believe it worth protecting.
If America were predominantly Muslim, in population and tradition, there is no doubt that September 11th would not have happened.
If President Bush and Attorney General Ashcroft were not open about their Christian faith, and sincere about it, they would not be hated to the degree that many hate them.
If the Boy Scouts and the Catholic Church would only turn their backs on Christianity, they would no longer be sued right and left.
Christianity is the common thread. That is why the hatred is boiling over as a Christian Nation fights back against its enemies.
But I do not believe that foreign terrorist groups will ever actually conquer and control America. I do not see that happening, even if they continue to inflict pain and casualties upon us.
Our own courts, on the other hand, have the power to change everything. They are by and large hostile to Christian beliefs, and are busily changing our culture right now. The courts may succeed where others cannot: in identifying and destroying the Common Thread.
