this post was submitted on 20 Jan 2025
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I meant the founders, not the "founding fathers". I guess i should have used another term. They kind of started the colony. Although they weren't very good at it.
Thankfully better people wrote down the foundation of the country later on (and were mostly ignored).
You're right that anything that isn't vaguely Christian is second class. It certainly played a huge part when scientology decided that it was a religion and picked a symbol.
And tgen there's the myriad of pseudo Christian religions.
Christianism has some basic tenets. How many of those do those numerous religions adhere to?
That's all just how "religious freedom" works ๐คท๐ปโโ๏ธ.
Otherwise, the government would have to legitimize or refuse to legitimize every religion (which means we would not have religious freedom at all). It also protects citizens from the government forcing a religion (or religious laws) on them. In theory, anyway...
The only place the government has any oversight of religion is if they apply for tax-exempt status. I'm not clear on what they look at there, but there's obviously some minimum requirements otherwise everyone would be a pastor/prophet/messiah/voice of their own religion and thus tax exempt. Some people go the full mile to avoid taxes (Scientology, for example), but for the most part, "I'm going to become a church to get out of paying taxes" is just a tired TV trope. Plus, among other requirements, religions are not allowed to get involved with politics (e.g. can't endorse or donate to candidates, etc). Unfortunately, those have to be reported to the IRS on a case-by-case basis, and I'm sure enforcement is lax.
Hell, how many of the Christian tenets do Christians actually adhere to?