Friday, April 22, 2011

As Day of Prayer Nears, Group Picks Fight in Arizona to Eliminate It

You know, as you go through life you meet all kinds of people with all kinds of beliefs. Other than those Jesus freaks that show up at your door once in a while, most of the those people don't try to force what they believe on to you. The people who wish to observe a Day of Prayer are the same way. They want to be left alone to pray in the way that they choose without interference from a bunch of scum bag athiest assholes.

How is it ok for these athiest dumbasses to try and change the system to their way of thinking? They are a VERY small minority with more money than brain cells. If they don't want to participate in a prayer, more power to them, but to attempt to deny someone else the right is just wrong and stupid.

There is a whole bunch of stuff I don't like, for example, hippies. But you don't see me rushing down to file a lawsuit to ban hippies. democrats is another one, I actually have thought about getting them outlawed.

The judge that hears this case should find for the State of Arizona, make the athiest dumbasses pay the court costs and fine them for being stupid and filing a frivolous lawsuit...

From FoxNews

Gov. Jan Brewer is the latest official to try to stamp out a lawsuit filed by an atheist group suing to stop the annual Day of Prayer celebrated nationally and among the states.

The Wisconsin-based Freedom From Religion Foundation, which has made elimination of the Day of Prayer a central cause of its existence, filed the suit last month to prevent Brewer from declaring May 5 this year's "Day of Prayer" in Arizona.

Filing the suit on behalf of four Arizonans identified of nonbelievers in religion, the foundation has also questioned the constitutionality of Brewer's proclamation in 2009 and 2010 as well as her Day of Prayer proclamation for the state budget on Jan. 17, 2010.

On Thursday, the governor told a court in Phoenix that she is in compliance with federal and state constitutional provisions. She also addressed the lawsuit during a prayer breakfast in which she said proclaiming a day of prayer is an American tradition dating back to George Washington's presidency.

"The lawsuit to stop our prayer proclamations is nothing more than an attempt to drive religious expression from the public square," she said. "I intend to fight that lawsuit -- vigorously -- every step of the way."

The group tried a similar tack against President obamato prevent a national celebration of the day, but a three-judge panel on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals tossed the case last week, ruling that the Freedom From Religion Foundation lacked standing. Brewer said she's confident of a similar outcome in the Arizona case.

Read the rest at the link above...

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