The people who made this petition are a bunch of slack-jawed buffoons. Our nation has bigger problems than words on paper, so I'm a little perturbed by people wasting time and resources on something this trivial. We can worry about this when everyone actually has ENOUGH of the paper they so despise to actually live comfortably.
You know, one would have thought this would be true - but nope! Its apparently a big enough deal that the devout Christians managed to pretty much destroy our national slogan in their eagerness to distance us from our history and cast us as a theological state, over such a "trivial" issue as what our money says.
I wonder, do you hold the same opinion of the people who forced it onto the money, who not only pushed it through the legislature but ended up sending quite a few separation of church and state cases through our system over it? Were they slack jawed buffoons as well?
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Yes.The entire issue is almost as dumb as the two sides that think it's worth fighting over. It seems by your wording you were hoping to catch me in some moment of hypocrisy or something, but frankly I think everyone involved has the collective attention span of a mayfly. Our slogan was fine as it was, if a little pretentious, so Christians didn't need to change it. It's also, at this moment, not something that should be at the top of our lists. Because as much as you all
say these things are trivial issues, you know damn well the idiots in the GOP are going to fight it to the end and make it a years-spanning struggle. All the time that will be spent trying to force that through could be spent bettering our education system, improving life for kids that have to grow up in slums, and other things that actually mean anything beyond words on paper.
The people who made this petition are a bunch of slack-jawed buffoons. Our nation has bigger problems than words on paper, so I'm a little perturbed by people wasting time and resources on something this trivial. We can worry about this when everyone actually has ENOUGH of the paper they so despise to actually live comfortably.
This is something that costs little to fix, and is a big enough deal that fox news complained about it when it was first taken off some bills. And as far as time and resources go, the resources is that we switch a few things in the federal mint, and the time to take this is pretty trivial. I'd also like to point out this is one of the reasons many claim the US is a Christian nation, so the gain is more symbolic, and more cultural than anything. Change needs to start somewhere, and this is a good place to start.
Listen, I'm all for change for the better, but I'm just so disappointed people think the words on money are more important than the people on the streets. I spent twenty minutes in Dayton, Ohio the other day, and I ran into six homeless people. Just walking down the street, and they were there. Even in my suburban town, where the average income is something like $80,000 a year, I see men in ratty clothes and shopping carts huddling in the alleyways on some nights. All I can ask is, how in the hell is their well-being less important than the feelings of non-Christians? Not their livelihoods, not their families, just their
feelings? It's nothing short of irresponsible to put the needs of the suffering behind the wants of people groups who feel oppressed by a, in spirit, harmless phrase on some money.