EAllusion wrote:Religious people make up 80ish % of the population depending on how you define them.
I would like to see reliable statistics for this (not that I think it's particularly relevant).
The have near total control over the government and its military.
Is this your own idea, or can you cite the relevant scholarly literature? I see no evidence for this whatever, and considerable evidence to the contrary. I see many religious people protesting strongly against US involvement in Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan, and yet the US continues to be involved in all these conflicts. I see Creationists utterly unable to have their religious views incorporated into national curriculum material.
I would be very interested to see any relevant peer reviewed scholarly literature that argues and demonstrates that the religious people in the US 'have near total control over the government and its military'.
They have a long-established right to participate in the political process.
Yes, I'm aware of that.
I'm not sure what scenario you imagine in which their rights are stripped from them that has any basis in reality.
The scenario in which the government is prepared to make an unpopular decision. You're confusing 'unpopular' with 'unrealistic', and 'implausible' with 'impractical'.
How are they going to lose control of the government in the first place?
You assume that they have control of the government in the first place. You have not demonstrated this.
Not only will they have to lose control, but those sympathetic to their basic rights would also have to.
How many people usually vote in a US presidential election? About 55% isn't it? Hardly an overwhelming majority. So it's clear from this statistic alone that the alleged '80%' of the population who are religious aren't even regularly exercising their political franchise. So much for them having control of the government. What we see is that a very large number of people in the US don't even bother to exercise their political franchise. If voter turnout is around 55%, how many of those are religious? It can't be 100%, and would you claim that it's even the majority?
When addressing the practicality of this occurring with or without violence, you first have to propose a remotely plausible scenario to understand if that will lead to violence. (And you couldn't just "pass legislation" even if you forget that no legislature in the US would do such a thing.
I certainly agree. I have not commented on the plausibility of the suggestion, I have simply presented it as a possibility. The proposal is not impossible.
What you are proposing is explicitly unconstitutional. You'd have to amend the constitution prior to passing a law or stack the Supreme Court with those willing to ignore sound interpretation of the constitution.)
Amending the constitution is not impossible, nor is reinterpreting the Amendments.
Lazy research debunked: bcspace x 4 | maklelan x 3 | Coggins7 x 5 (by Mr. Coffee x5) | grampa75 x 1 | whyme x 2 | rcrocket x 2 | Kerry Shirts x 1 | Enuma Elish x 1|