The 2-1 decision issued on Tuesday found that the religious - TopicsExpress



          

The 2-1 decision issued on Tuesday found that the religious freedom of Keith Cressman, a Christian pastor from the Oklahoma City area, could potentially be violated by the state’s license plates that depict the “Sacred Rain Arrow” sculpture by the long-deceased Oklahoma artist Allan Houser. Cressman argued that the plates “might imply his approval of contrary beliefs, such as that God and nature are one, that other deities exist, or that ‘animals, plants, rocks, and other natural phenomena” have souls or spirits.” Didn’t St. Francis talk to animals? In the Bible, don’t animals and other inanimate objects speak intelligently? What about all the other states that have rocks, flowers, and animals on their plates? What about sports teams? Wait, wait, wait! What about Mount Rushmore?! Seems someone takes themselves too serious, and the result was that they found that religious oppression that we’ve been hearing about—this time from the genocidal, bloodthirsty red man.
Posted on: Mon, 17 Jun 2013 18:16:46 +0000

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