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Hint: The Declaration of Independence isn't the constitution.

2006-10-07 12:28:29 · 19 answers · asked by notme 5 in Politics & Government Politics

I can't even find creator............Hmmmmm.

2006-10-07 12:36:46 · update #1

19 answers

They are not there. They were intentionally excluded, because the Founding Fathers wanted the government to be strictly secular.

2006-10-07 12:37:45 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

You won't the closest you will find is the word "religion". I also defy you to find in the constitution where it says ANYTHING about the separation of church and state. Hint, you won't. The separation of church and state statement comes from a letter from Thomas Jefferson to the Danbury Baptists in 1802. If you are honest with yourselves you will realize that the ACLU is forcing a state religion known as secularism or quite possibly atheism. Should the ACLU sue themselves for forcing a national or state religion?

2006-10-07 19:49:43 · answer #2 · answered by Jeff F 4 · 0 1

Those words were deliberately left out of the Constitution by the framers. All were of the Judeo Christian faith and beleuived in the true God however

2006-10-07 19:35:04 · answer #3 · answered by bearbait7351 3 · 1 0

Are you suggesting that patriotic Americans submit to the will of ideological authorities who claim to know the will of our founding fathers? Are you suggesting that patriotic Amercans submit to the will of ideological authorities who claim to know the will of a good one in Heaven at war with an evil one cast down to and ruling over Earth? While some may obsess over words written in sacred scrolls, I love to be free. I am the High Ideologue of the House of Ideology: I am the authority that makes up my mind about self and all that I find: I am the architect of The House of Ideology that I build in my mind to orient self towards existence and explain existence to self. I choose to build a model of self and world that produces the highest esteem of self and world that I can possibly imagine. I find a planet of death in a world of life, body and soul, and a god of pure love

2006-10-07 19:55:08 · answer #4 · answered by H.I. of the H.I. 4 · 0 0

I agree with you that the Declaration isn't the Constitution.

But what point are you trying to make? We can sense you are hinting at something. Out with it, man!

2006-10-07 19:31:07 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the founders in general were deists; they believed in a transcendant god. They were also intellectualists, and believed in a republic of land-owning, educated citizens. If they were around today, they'd be demonized as "liberal intellectuals."

2006-10-07 19:39:38 · answer #6 · answered by kent_shakespear 7 · 1 0

our forefathers wisely put in Separation of Church and State,,
two good books: by Gregory A. Boyd,,
"Letters From a Skeptic"
"Myth of a Christian Nation"

2006-10-07 19:53:12 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You won't find them on the constitution.

2006-10-07 19:35:44 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Why would they be in the Constitution? There is no need to have them in there.

2006-10-07 19:30:21 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

I am sorry to say it but, You are helpless here.

Seriously, they don't exist in the constitution.

2006-10-07 19:32:13 · answer #10 · answered by eagle1uctn 2 · 1 0

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