Call Me Stormy

Finding righteous currents in turbulent times

Archive for the tag “separation of church and state”

When America Divorced God

Joe Dan Gorman returns to the pivotal year of 1947 — when America turned its back on God. Ever since then, we have been spiraling ever-downward, watching as a once profitable and vibrant society has changed into more of a hollow and worked-over shell.

It’s time to lift the disastrous 1947 U.S. Supreme Court decision, written by former Ku Klux Klan member Hugo Black, that removed The Bible and God from deliberations within the federal government.  This was the opinion in Emerson Vs. Board of Education, a case involving the state of New Jersey. It essentially set up a “wall of separation” between church and state.

The result? Joe Dan Gorman says we now have a federal government that not just divorced from the church, but has become a cesspool of depravity. It’s time a better solution occurs and we can get back on a track that encourages, rather than discourages, morality.

Rino Season

What better way to close out a year than a brand new episode of Intellectual Froglegs with Joe Dan Gorman? Here, Joe Dan takes aim at those pesky Republican RINOs who sell out and screw over the voters by canceling every wish of their constituents. Remember, the next time the Republican National Committee disregards the Republican rank ‘n file, call the RINO in chief, Ronna McDaniel, at 202-863-8500.

Besides RINOs, there are chimps and galloping horses, plus a healthy bundle of whiplash comedy.

Separation Of Church And State

With the recent COVID-19 lockdown dust-up over relaxing restrictions when it comes to places of worship, Americans are reminded of the doctrine of separation of church and state. Most Americans believe it is a vital part of the Constitution. But there is no such phrase in the Constitution and there never was.

Why? Because our founding fathers never intended church and state to be completely separate. They saw religions, specifically based on the Bible, as indispensable to the moral foundation of the nation they were creating. In the following episode of PragerU, John Eastman, senior fellow at the Claremont Institute, guides us through the genesis of the doctrine and its value to society.

 

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