Government Secularism a Must!
On September 12, 1960  Senator John F. Kennedy
addressed the Greater Houston Ministerial Association and spoke to the
attendees about a matter which had taken over the course of his campaign to
become the 35th President of the United
  States America 
It is with this same mindset that we should
analyze the effects of religious doctrine on our past and view our current
political situation. We are not a nation of Catholics or Protestants, nor are we
a Muslim country, which have existed in the past and currently exist elsewhere
in the world.  America 
There is no doubt that at one time in human
history slavery was commonplace.  Owning,
punishing, even killing a slave was not considered immoral behavior.  Today, I very much doubt that you could find
a single person who would publicly state that slavery of any form should be
tolerated.  Have you ever stopped and
wondered why that is? How does something go from being tolerated and accepted
to abhorred within a relatively short amount of time.  In America BCE ,
almost 4000 years ago. Which means for the majority of our recorded history,
and likely all history, slavery was normal. 
Today though, in America 
In the last fifty years America America 
Customs, morality, and traditions are not
static.  They ebb and flow from one
society to the next as they change, grow, and we learn more about each other.
We must have, and indeed do have, in place a system that takes into account all
religious perspective while being itself none. 
At their most basic levels, religions cannot compromise.  There can be no middle ground between whether
or not Jesus was a prophet or the son of a god, it is this very polarized idea
which keeps religions apart.  You are
either with them or against them and this is why politicians must be objective,
should be able to compromise.  Recently,
in a win for continued separation, a district court judge ruled in favor of
Jessica Ahlquist in Ahlquist vs. Cranston. 
The judge ruled that a public school prayer banner was in violation of
the establishment clause.  The ruling
does not restrict any individual from practicing whatever faith they choose,
but it does restrict a public school that uses public funds from endorsing or
promoting a specific religious belief.
Many who do not support the separation of church
and state will claim that removing God from the equation has had disastrous
effects on the rate of crime, teenage pregnancy and test scores.  They claim religion, and its morality, is a
necessity to fight these rising statistics. 
The claim here is that when religious teachings are absent bad things
happen, but according to a 2008 American Religious Identification Survey
greater than 75% of Americans self-identify as Christian. Further it implies
religion and God is the sole source for morality, which contradicts a Federal
Bureau of Prisons survey in which inmates were asked about their religious
affiliation.  The overwhelming majority
was Catholic and Protestant (together totaling roughly 75%), while only 0.21%
claimed they were atheists.  So from
those statistics we can infer that when morality is derived from a wish to not
be punished for eternity as opposed to more humanist and secular reasons it is
not as effective after all.
I propose all our laws should be reevaluated
based on a secularist attitude and the separation of church and state, a term
coined in Thomas Jefferson’s letter to the Danburry Baptist Association in
1802.  I see no justifiable reason two
consenting adults cannot be married to whomever they choose, no logical
argument for skin color being a basis for segregation, gender being a limiting
factor for rights, or ancestry any foundation for slavery.  I see no justifiable purpose for the laws
which restrict the sale of alcohol on Sunday before noon!
 
