To its founder
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This post was created on the previous version of the MRFF website, and may not be fully accessible to users of assistive technology. If you need help accessing this content, please reach out via email.About his view of God bless… sign in Hawaii military installation, a letter:
I read the article quoting Mr. Weinstein as having declared that the sign “sends the clear message that your installation gives preference to those who hold religious beliefs over those who do not.” Clear? No, sir, it is not clear. Can you read English, sir? If I tell you “I like apples”, will you declare to me that I like all kinds of fruits or that I eat only apples? You won’t, but you are with the sign. Did you always have personal hatred toward anything related to Christian God or father figure? But, no matter, people as close minded as you will rarely become self-critical enough to ponder if one’s own opinions are well backed up by reasons and facts. It is just annoying that your organization is deceiving naive Christians into believing as if it protects their freedom of religion. It should be honestly labelled as Club for Disrupting Christians’ Freedom of Religion (CDCFR). Thank you for reading into one ear and out to another.
(name withheld)
1. Has a significant secular (i.e., non-religious) purpose,
2. Does not have the primary effect of advancing or inhibiting religion,
3. Does not foster excessive entanglement between government and religion.
Disclaimer: I’m not an official spokesperson for Mikey or MRFF and nothing I write should be construed as official MRFF policy or as having Mikey’s specific approval.
Be advised that not only can Mikey read English sir, he can also understand it; which you evidently do not.
Your convoluted apple analogy defies understanding so let me just say that when a sign placed in contravention of one’s sworn duty to ‘protect & defend’ the U.S. Constitution, by one who should clearly know better, it is a defiant negation of all our nation is supposed to stand for – one of those things being freedom of, and from, state religion, which the posting of the ‘Dog Bless’ sign at MCB Hawaii clearly is.
As for hating Christians; that’s a really juvenile accusation since the majority of those whom Mikey defends (>95%) are Christians; just not the kind you’d approve of… so I guess that, in your book (and that of the Hawaii base C.O’s book), they don’t count. And, there’s the rub. What you advocate is that those whom you approve of get the benefits offered by society, but those whom you disapprove of get hind teat, if that.
While you chide Mikey as ‘deceiving naive Christians’ it is you who subscribe to a christofascist theocratic theology in which respect for the individual is allocated only to those individuals you approve of; not to all.
Thanks you for reading into one year and out the other.
Marshalldoc.
Dear Joan,
The laws you mention below, don’t they apply to the group of people that make up military and/or government? The individual or group of individuals who put the sign do NOT make up either government or military, and therefore the laws don’t apply to them. Also, the speech prohibited on military members has to give some sort of problem in ability to command, and the sign’s presence does not go against it, so that particular law does not apply to this case….
(name withheld)
It doesn’t matter who put it up. It’s on government property and it must adhere to the laws.
Joan Slish
How is it that you and other apparently thin-skinned Christians find such a simple observation about an obvious violation to be an attack on Christianity? You’re quick to criticize Mr. Weinstein as being “close minded” while the blinders you sport insist a dark conspiracy exists because of a simple desire to protect the religious freedom of the women and men in the military.
Your message reeks of the fear that someone is trying to take something away from you. It’s a rather pathetic demonstration of a lack of the very faith you attempt to proclaim.
Mike Farrell
(MRFF Board of Advisors)
Dear (name withheld) –
I am writing in response to your October 12, 2015 email to the Military Religious Freedom Foundation (“MRFF”). As upset as you appear to be with MRFF, I assure you it is nothing to how upset I am about the time I lost attempting to decipher your rambling, ignorant, stream-of-consciousness email.
You attempt to express some vague political opinions about Planned Parenthood and nuclear weapons, yet you fail to mention a single act by MRFF with which you disagree. The closest you come to even almost referencing the work of MRFF is the statement, “Like it or not the [C]onstitution is full of our Christian God.” This is simply not a fact – there is absolutely no mention of God anywhere in the Constitution.
To the contrary, the Founders very specifically decided to create a government based on democratic principles, rather than religious principles. The First Amendment protects the freedom to practice any religion (or no religion) – not just Christianity. It further prohibits the establishment of any particular religion. Additionally, Article 6 provides, “No religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust.”
These are the constitutional protections we fight to ensure for all brave men and women in uniform. You say you will fight to defend your rights, yet we are the ones fighting to defend rights. From what I can tell, you don’t do anything other than steal valuable oxygen from those around you.
Blessed be,
Tobanna Barker
MRFF Legal Affairs Coordinator
It’s not ‘my’ implication, as you imply.
Allowing “God bless” sign on a government property is enough to be recognized as pushing for “state religion”, so you imply.
It’s U.S. law upheld repeatedly in our legal system based on our Constitution. Why do you imply otherwise? The unrelenting pressure by those who desire a ‘Christian’ theocracy despite clear & repeated legal precedent rejecting that pressure suggests a motive other than that of exercising the ‘will of the people’; rather exercising the will of a few whose beliefs allow them to think their theology overrules the peoples’ will.
Your reference to the odious Saudi theocracy, non-sequitur though it is, is relevant in that it personifies the very religious excesses engendered by an overarching governmental religion. Our founders recognized that risk (having fled a Christian theocracy in England) and specifically wrote it out of our governmental structure. Saying that the un-Constitutional sign on government property (although property specifically designated for such signs exists on the base’s chapel grounds) is ‘nothing compared to SA’ is to suggest that the Saudi theocracy is an appropriate yardstick for American governance and that anything less odious than their oppressive regulations is therefore okay… did you think that through before you wrote it?
Lastly, the non-religious use of ‘’Dog’’ by non-believers & others has nothing to do with either belief in the divine (upon which the sign is based, otherwise why call on Dog for ‘blessings’?) or any belief that such supplications are anything more than breaking wind. Does my expletive ‘Dogdammit’ when I stub my toe on a chair suggest a belief that Dog will actually damn the offending piece of furniture to the flaming pits of hell for all eternity? Please, use logic. Your argument suggests that any ‘Dog’ equivalent; ‘Allah’, ‘Buddha’, ‘Shiva’, ‘Odin’, or any other ‘Dog’ figure’s name would be equally non-offensive and non-coercive, although I doubt you’d stand for it… and neither would MRFF although MRFF demands equal billing for those entities absent compliance with the letter of the Constitution.
Marshalldoc.
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