On Dec 26, 2003, at 11:05 AM, Craig White wrote: > The guarantee is that no > function of government was to engage in any religion whatsoever. This > makes certain that government doesn't take any side, whether it is > Christian, Judaism, or even the non-practice of any religion. > Government > - nor any agency is not to have any place in any of the religions. This is actually untrue. The Constitution specifies that *Congress* should not make a law respecting the establishment of religion and does not limit the states in this regard. The aim was to make sure that the Federal government did not overwhelm the states with an establishment of religion. It was not intended to make all branches of government subject to this limitation and in effect adversarial toward theism. To remove the stone with the Ten Commandments from a state Supreme Court building that was put in place by and *elected* judge is not in accord with the Federal Constitution anti-establishment clause. The removal of the stone is an imposition by the Federal Government on the state (which ironically violates the very principle it appears to defend). The Anti-Federalists are rolling over in their graves about that descision. Don Fitzsimmons Software Engineer Tornado Design www.tornadodesign.com (480) 282-1899 cell (480) 945-5653 office