Anything you want, just make 'nice'!

Friday, December 22, 2006

Congressman Virgil Goode is not Good for America

Rep. Virgil Goode, a Republican who represents the 5th District, triggered angry responses from an Islamic civil rights group and some of his colleagues by his letter to constituents who e-mailed him about a new Minnesota congressman's decision to use the Quran at his private swearing-in ceremony.
I will not be putting my hand on the Quran,"

The Muslim representative from Minnesota was elected by the voters of that district and if American citizens don't wake up and adopt the Virgil Goode position on immigration there will likely be many more Muslims elected to office and demanding the use of the Quran.
He is talking about Rep.-elect Keith Ellison (D-Minn.), who ruffled feathers when he decided to swear his oath on the Koran during a private swearing-in ceremony. Ellison said Thursday that Goode and others had nothing to fear about Muslims.
They are our nurses, doctors, husbands, wives, kids, who just want to live and prosper in the American way.
All of us are steadfastly opposed to the same people he's opposed to, which is terrorists, and so there's nothing for him to be afraid of.
Goode is not up on the Constitution which he will have to swear to defend. Article 6 Clause 3 states:
The Senators and Representatives…, and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial officers, both of the United States and of several States, shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution; but no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.
An Israeli-American posted this greeting on Goode's website:
As an Israeli-American, who grew up in Israel I’ve seen my share of what hostilities between Islam and the West consist of. In fact, I’ve had a cousin severely wounded by Hezbollah Militants. However, I am greatly disconcerted by your desire to discriminate against another Congressman because he doesn’t share the same beliefs you do. You cannot take all the world’s Muslims (about 1/6 of the planet mind you) and roll them up with a handful of extremists. It would be similar to making the assumption that all Christians are bigots because one idiotic Congressman from the 5th District of Virginia professes to be both.
I am personally in favor of greater controls on immigration, but raising the educational standards for Congressfolk appears to be a more urgent matter.

2 Comments:

Blogger J.C. said...

Good luck with educational standards for Politicians.
Why are they swearing on Bibles or other Voodoo/belief system texts anyway.? For the cameras.?

Most religious people are bigots of one stripe or another. That would include both of these gentlemen. It just goes with the territory, in the sense that they are embracing some form of Alice in Wonderland thinking, and using that lens of looking, at the larger world.
Moving away from a Political system into a functional governance system that does not rely on belief system theory is a must for a good system of governance for North America.

10:27 AM

 
Blogger Utah Savage said...

Get religion out of politics and back in the damn church. Do you ever notice that whenever you hear the word "sanctity" it usually used in the service of denying a group of people their civil rights. Like "the sanctity of life," "The sanctity of marriage." I agree, lets take the voodoo out of our government.

6:54 PM

 

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