Rick Santorum : Refusing to enforce DOMA is an attack on the Continental Army, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison
In the heat of the American Revolution in 1777, the Continental Army was struggling to muster shoes and victory. What were two of our most heroic founding fathers, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, doing? They were arguing in favor of religious liberty, giving us the precursor to what we now know as the Religion Clause of our Constitution’s First Amendment - the heartbeat of our Constitution.
A question. What is the “Religion Clause?” Did I miss something in the American Government class I took last month? Does this twit mean the Establishment Clause found in the First Amendment? Or did Jeebus, Moses, and Joseph Smith put in some secret Amendment that only dominionists and theodemocrats can decode?
Fast forward to recently when President Barack Obama claimed the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), defining marriage for federal law as one man and one woman, was “legally indefensible.”
Intellectually, morally, and constitutionally President Obama’s claim is absurd. And it is a dagger aimed at the heart of a core constitutional value: the free exercise of religion.
Schools, the media, and even some politicians often like to remind us of the first part of our First Amendment - that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion” - but tend to omit the remainder: “or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
Last week, ignored it was…
Make no mistake about it: with this decision, traditional Christian and Jewish beliefs about sex and marriage now make those religions “unfit” to work in the fields of foster children and adoption. And that is only the beginning.
I wonder why this doesn’t affect Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Pagans, and Jedis. Oh because they aren’t real Americans.