Author Topic: House to vote on affirming ‘In God We Trust’ as national motto  (Read 9228 times)

The U.S. House of Representatives will vote Tuesday on a resolution to affirm the phrase “In God We Trust” as the nation’s official motto, according to Politico.

Rep. Randy Forbes (R-VA), the founder and chairman of the Congressional Prayer Caucus, sponsored the legislation. It would encourage the public display of the motto in all public buildings, public schools and government institutions.

Forbes said he introduced the bill in January because he was troubled by a pattern of omitting God from the nation’s heritage.

“Tomorrow, the House of Representatives will have the same opportunity to reaffirm our national motto and directly confront a disturbing trend of inaccuracies and omissions, misunderstandings of church and state, rogue court challenges, and efforts to remove God from the public domain by unelected bureaucrats,” Forbes said.

“As our nation faces challenging times, it is appropriate for Members of Congress and our nation—like our predecessors—to firmly declare our trust in God, believing that it will sustain us for generations to come.”

The resolution was approved by the House Judiciary Committee in March.

The legislation has 64 co-sponsors, including a handful of Democrats.

The phrase “In God We Trust” was made the official U.S. motto in 1956, one year after the phrase “under God” was incorporated into the Pledge of Allegiance.

Critics of the resolution said it violated the establishment clause of the Constitution, which states that “Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion.”

“The phrase ‘In God We Trust’ does not apply to the more than 16 percent of Americans who identify themselves as atheist, agnostic, nonreligious, or unaffiliated, and it does not apply to religious Americans who do not have Judeo-Christian beliefs,” said Sean Faircloth, executive director of the Secular Coalition for America. “Branding our secular country with a religious motto only creates division among its citizens and erodes the wall of separation between church and state.”

Forbes claimed the resolution addressed different religions across the country and was not “just about Christians.” He said the resolution is meant to affirm the importance of God in the heritage of the United States.

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/10/31/house-to-vote-on-affirming-%E2%80%98in-god-we-trust%E2%80%99-as-national-motto/



Well stuff.
« Last Edit: November 01, 2011, 05:34:19 AM by dkamm65 »

In a country where the governement is supposed to be seperated from religion, why the forget would this be the motto?

Is there like a petition against this?

I don't really care and I'm agnostic.

Who gives a forget what our motto is?
What annoys me about this is that they are wasting time with stuff like this instead of addressing actual problems.

I don't really care and I'm agnostic.

Who gives a forget what our motto is?

“Branding our secular country with a religious motto only creates division among its citizens and erodes the wall of separation between church and state.”

Okay, the atheists and other people complaining about this really need to stop. I mean jeez,"Oh hey theres something that relates to god, better complain about it." I mean at least other religions don't complain about other religious things as much.

And I don't hate most atheists so don't call me a hater

And my goodness, In god we trust has been used to years and years and now they want to change it?

Okay, the atheists and other people complaining about this really need to stop. I mean jeez,"Oh hey theres something that relates to god, better complain about it." I mean at least other religions don't complain about other religious things as much.

And I don't hate most atheists so don't call me a hater

And my goodness, In god we trust has been used to years and years and now they want to change it?
I think they're keeping it the same, which is good imo.

Its not likely that it would change anyways.

Oh look, American government at its stupidity.

The United States was founded on religion, loving deal with it.

I honestly would not mind this as a motto, but why the forget do we need a national motto in the first place?

Okay, the atheists and other people complaining about this really need to stop. I mean jeez,"Oh hey theres something that relates to god, better complain about it." I mean at least other religions don't complain about other religious things as much.

And I don't hate most atheists so don't call me a hater

And my goodness, In god we trust has been used to years and years and now they want to change it?
I don't mind this very so much, but it violates the separation of the church and the state. And you know once you give "This" much to government, "They take this much."

 I don't give a stuff about the motto but I think displaying it in all public buildings may be a tad bit much.

The United States was founded on religion, loving deal with it.

lol No it wasn't.