Ron Paul greeted by overflow crowd first day back in Iowa | The Ticket - Yahoo! News
I bet it'd piss mainstream media off nicely if this keeps up.
I bet it'd piss mainstream media off nicely if this keeps up.
Ron Paul greeted by overflow crowd first day back in Iowa | The Ticket - Yahoo! News
I bet it'd piss mainstream media off nicely if this keeps up.
The best thing that would come out of Ron Paul being elected is Lartinos' subsequent heart attack when religion finds it's way in to public school systems.
The best thing that would come out of Ron Paul being elected is Lartinos' subsequent heart attack when religion finds it's way in to public school systems.
lol, that would be horrible! But the school systems sucks now too !
Hahahahah
lol, that would be horrible! But the school systems sucks now too !
I've been here for years and didn't realize Lart was anti-theist until the past year or so. Has he always been like this? lol
I've been here for years and didn't realize Lart was anti-theist until the past year or so. Has he always been like this? lol
It's going to happen if your homie is elected.
I'm honestly curious why you follow a man that would happen under, since you're really the first one around here to hate on the concept of God/organized religion. There's a big difference between a school giving kids a shitty education, and a school giving kids a shitty education and having a picture of Jesus and praying in the classroom, no?
Or is it just that you think it's ok that religion will infiltrate classrooms because it's a lesser evil than things that may happen under other potential presidents?
Interesting, I haven't watched or read that position from him, can you cite a reference? Generally speaking, Libertarians are against government run schools and the federal government mandates.
Having local governing is the way to go, I am not moving Texas anytime ever.
My flight to Mexico is about to leave, hopefully Ron wins. Ttyl folks..
So basically you don't care if Jesus is forced upon students as long as its not done in your backyard?
That's totally not a problem at all.![]()
So basically you don't care if Jesus is forced upon students as long as its not done in your backyard?
That's totally not a problem at all.![]()
The GOP race never fails to entertain.
I did not know that Ron Paul supported the establishment of any religion by the state, where/when did he say that? I knew about A and B, but I've never heard anything like the last two points.
romney has twice as many fb fans as paul. Ron's doing lousy at getting the young voters.
interesting watching our next president in debate action.
obama zealots are such funny creatures
I did not know that Ron Paul supported the establishment of any religion by the state, where/when did he say that? I knew about A and B, but I've never heard anything like the last two points.
I also believe Ron Paul to be the best current candidate. I especially appreciate his views on the economy and improving our financial situation by eliminating foreign aid. It is negligent to be sending money we don't have to assist foreign countries when our domestic problem have not been taken care of.
You realize Ron Paul is a Christian, right Lart? lol
Ya, he's from Texas.
I've never heard him say any loony stuff or even say "jebus" once.
I never said I thought he was a perfect either.But I do agree with him on just about everything he says.
(from reading/debates I've seen)
Do I wish he was against religion as harshly as I am?
No I don't, because he is running for president and not office here in New York.
(I want him to win)

What percentage of our national economy do you suppose foreign aid makes up?
Did I say at some point that Ron Paul was for federal government mandates?
That's exactly what he's against.
A. Ron Paul believes schooling should be a local/state government matter, not a federal one.
B. Ron Paul does not believe in a separation of church and state.
B. Ron Paul thinks local/state govt should determine whether prayer and religion be included in schools.
C. Ron Paul thinks the establishment of religion should also be a local/state matter.
What do you think those things would all result in if you put them in a big pot of Ron Paul as president soup with a dash of Protestant?
That's right, plenty of (not all) American public schools that have pictures of Jesus right up there by the flag and Bibles by their history books. It would be naive to believe differently.
I never said he wanted to federally add religion to public schooling. And in his defense, he believes no student or person should be forced to pray. And that's nice, but apparently he also believes local govt should decide whether those same students should be forced to sit in a classroom with an idolized picture of a god they don't believe in. And that would happen without a doubt in plenty of schools across the country.
It's just funny to me. What's scary to me about Ron Paul is that everybody can think of something that, if deregulated, would benefit them and forget all the things they'd be totally against that would happen in plenty of places.
"The two enemies of the people are criminals and government, so let us tie the second down with the chains of the constitution so the second will not become the legalized version of the first."
-Thomas Jefferson
heathen alert!
Christianity neither is, nor ever was a part of the common law.
-Thomas Jefferson, letter to Dr. Thomas Cooper, February 10, 1814
heathen alert!
Christianity neither is, nor ever was a part of the common law.
-Thomas Jefferson, letter to Dr. Thomas Cooper, February 10, 1814
And Ron Paul would be correct. He's also correct in the notion that the mere existence of public schools should be a state/local issue.
The constitution is designed to chain-down the government (I believe the "chain" reference came from Jefferson). And items that are not the explicit right of the federal government are deferred to the states.
FTR, I'm for a lot, maybe even most of the things Ron Paul is also for, but I'm against some major ones.
I just started asking bc I was curious if someone so pro-deregulation and so anti-religion had thought through just what making these matters local would do, and how he felt about that.
I totally agree with that. Religion has absolutely zero place in establishing common law.
If there is some strong religious principle that the majority of people in a state support, then pass a specifc law to enact it. That's perfectly legal. But the idea that laws would be derived from some underlying religious principle is explicitly what the religious freedom aspect of the constitution set-out to prevent.
Like eliminating Happy Hour in Utah? Why should the Mormons care what non-Mormons are doing?
Like eliminating Happy Hour in Utah? Why should the Mormons care what non-Mormons are doing?
Like eliminating Happy Hour in Utah? Why should the Mormons care what non-Mormons are doing?
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