Poll

Did you sign the petition? (Reread the first post)

Yes because it is a violation of the constitution
41 (50%)
Yes(other reason) [State below]
1 (1.2%)
No because while it is a violation, this petition won't do anything
20 (24.4%)
No (other reason) [State below]
20 (24.4%)

Total Members Voted: 82

Author Topic: "Remove "In God we trust" from legal tender" Petition on Whitehouse.gov  (Read 27275 times)

This is disghusting. Now the government just wants to destroy the country and everything the founding fathers stood for.

seems like american butchery to me
it probably is
we break everything
This is disghusting. Now the government just wants to destroy the country and everything the founding fathers stood for.
the country was not founded on our currency saying "in god we trust"

This is disghusting. Now the government just wants to destroy the country and everything the founding fathers stood for.

the founding fathers wanted separation of church and state.
the words on the currency followed much much later

in fact it was the MAIN thing they wanted over all, was freedom of and FROM religion.
this petition seems to support just that.


tard

This is disghusting. Now the government just wants to destroy the country and everything the founding fathers stood for.
Unfortunately, they were deist.
Meaning they believed there was a God, they just didn't believe in miracles.

the founding fathers wanted separation of church and state.
the words on the currency followed much much later

in fact it was the MAIN thing they wanted over all.
this petition seems to support just that.


tard
They didn't want foreign affairs, debt, or political parties, and look at where we are now.

They didn't want foreign affairs, debt, or political parties, and look at where we are now.

well duh. but whats that got to do with founding fathers and the words on the money?
you are going into many many off topics here

i think the latin motto also sounds a bit more sophisticated for our country, as in if a person from another country saw it they would say that sounds nice

not like africa, where i'm pretty sure the majority of their countries' mottos are "starving black children with ak-47s"
« Last Edit: March 23, 2012, 08:39:05 PM by Sami2ss »

i think the latin motto also sounds a bit more sophisticated for our country, as in if a person from another country saw it they would say that sounds nice

not like africa, where i'm pretty sure their motto is "starving black children with ak-47s"

Obviously this happens in all of Africa

i think the latin motto also sounds a bit more sophisticated for our country, as in if a person from another country saw it they would say that sounds nice

not like africa, where i'm pretty sure their motto is "starving black children with ak-47s"
I laughed

i think the latin motto also sounds a bit more sophisticated for our country, as in if a person from another country saw it they would say that sounds nice

not like africa, where i'm pretty sure their motto is "starving black children with ak-47s"

lol

Obviously this happens in all of Africa

happy, i changed it to be more politically correct



well duh. but whats that got to do with founding fathers and the words on the money?
you are going into many many off topics here
I went a little to far on that one, but it's stuff like this when politicians sometimes take advantage of these situations to gather more mindless followers for their respective parties.

The new motto should be, "Sine certamine non conveniunt."

Removing it is just going to cause more problems than it already has. It's just a few words that don't even mean anything. Athiests shouldn't care and neither should Christians but it will matter to the Christians a lot more. I say just leave it as it is because so far there haven't been any problems with it.