Quote:
Originally Posted by Daseal
Buster,
I think it's a stretch to say that there is no separation of church and state in law or founding documents. If you use that logic, there's very little in founding documents. They're very ambiguous, and were created that way for a reason. These laws are very open to interpretation which is what has made them so flexible to this day.
The correspondance you're speaking of was Jefferson to the Danbury Baptists which is said:
I think he makes his idea of what that law should stand for relatively obvious here.
Also, to say it's not in law is a fallacy as well. The Supreme Court used that exact phrase in one of their rulings.
Source: <3 Wikipedia.
Separation of church and state in the United States - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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well there are plenty of other supreme court rulings and/or mentions of it, mostly for separation but some not
either way it's hard to agree that the separation wouldn't be for the best