dartagnan wrote:Maybe you should pay closer attention. I am referring to the Acts of Congress that passed in 1864 and 1865, which resulted in the inscription on our currency. I am saying that if these Acts were illegal (i.e. unconstituational), they probably would not have passed.
Do you know what probably means?
Yes, I know what probably means. When repeating your argument, I used the word probably. You are arguing, seriously it would seem, that one should not say a given law is illegal (i.e. unconstitional), because it is unlikely a given that Congress has passed is unconstitutional. Nevermind that Congress has a lengthy history of unconstitutional actions.
This is your exactly quote, "And it is wrong to say it was illegal, because if it were, it probably would have never been passed."
The fun thing about this inane argument is we can easily plug in just about any law and use this argument.
Do you agree with this ruling? If not, then why not? Do you you know the constitution better than our current Supreme Court Justices?
Well, some of our current Supreme Court Justices. I'm sure Ginsburg agrees with me, for instance. If Democrats won the presidency in 2000/2004, I'm pretty sure my side on this issue would have a slim majority. We can discuss the current reasoning if you like, after we get done discussing yours. After all, it's not like the Supreme Court would dare use your approach.
I didn't say it was wrong to call it illegal because the public never passes unconstitutional laws.
No, you said it was wrong to call it illegal because the public isn't likely to pass an unlawful law.
I'm saying it isn't illegal because it isn't. Who knows the constitution better, those who wrote it or modern secularists?
James Madison wrote the establishment clause. There is virtually no doubt he would've opposed those two phrases as violates of the establishment clause. He was a very strict separationist. There's some historical ignorance here that makes this question odd. I think my understanding of the clause fits in nicely with the views of framers like Madison and Jefferson.
Now you're using your lack of comprehension to further a race-bait red herring. There's definately an idiot behind that straw man.
I can't help it if you use such shoddy arguments that they can be used to defend all manner of bad things. The latter argument is especially rich. Yes, in a democracy the majority ultimately decides things. That has nothing to do with discussing what it is right for the majority to decide and/or if majority decisions were proper.