So this is the first part of the statement, you can follow the link to read the rest. So the first thing we notice is that they explicitly state that this is a Christian country in direct contradiction to the actual history, so not off to a good start. However to be fair his next line does say that other religions are welcome to worship freely here so that is good. I also agree with all of the bullet points he lays out save C, which seems a bit Jingoistic in my opinion. The main problem is the section in-between the two. Namely, this point:At the risk of offending anyone I am going to make the following statement. The United States of America was founded on Judeo-Christian principles and is indeed a Christian nation.This statement is not intended to imply that other religions are not welcome to worship freely in this country but when those who worship any non-Christian religion do so witha) the intent to attack those of other faiths orb) when their intent is to deprive those of other faiths their right to worship as they please orc) when they form in communities with the express intent to not assimilate andd) when they demand exceptions to state or local laws that would allow them to deny freedoms to their own community that are contrary to our Constitutional protectionswe must consider whether their place of worship should be allowed to remain.
those who worship any non-Christian religion do so withSee, when they puts these bullet points forward they specify religions that are non-Christian. This is an odd choice, it begs the question why they didn't think Christianity needed to be included. Do they believe that Christians never violate these rules, or do that think these rules don't apply to Christians? They don't specify, but I'm less concerned with their intent and more with the realty we would end up living with if this was actually the way our government ran.
The last line here asks if we should allow non-Christians to remain if they violate the previous rules, and while I agree that people who violate other peoples personal liberty should be punished to the extent the law allows, we need to make sure that:
- We don't persecute an entire group simply because the person who broke the law happens to be part of that group.
- The group that enforces those rights remains neutral on the topic of which religion is correct.
They also fail on the second point since by their initial statement they believe that the government is a Christian one, making it no longer impartial. Further, as the government is the one making the decisions about whether "their place of worship should be allowed to remain." The rights of non-Christians become nothing but a privilege we are allowed because we haven't done anything to make the Christians perceive us as a threat, because, as they said, it's a christian country, they are the ones in charge.