| REVIEWER | RATING & REVIEW |
 | DynaSword11252 (27) 04/05/2008 | Viewers wrote on this in 2005, It is an issue that is old news, look, displaying the 10 will not change no one, If I was going to display anything of my faith to the public, it would be Romans 3, the whole chapter, that's right- Romans chapter 3.
(1 voted this helpful, 2 funny and 0 agree) |
 | numbah16tdhaha (147) 04/05/2008 | Blah, blah, blah. I doubt it hurts to display them and its actually allowed in certain spaces. I think the various rulings say no to in a courtroom or other areas where a person might be required to be, but allows for their display in the lobby and such. I also doubt we will tear the fabric of society by removing a bunch of displays that were underwritten by the classic Hollywood movie about these commandments, so for me its a bit more ho hum than the alarm bells that the polar opposites on this matter incessantly sound. Oh yeah, they have historical basis as a law code, kids. That's why they are allowed at the courthouse.
(4 voted this helpful, 1 funny and 0 agree) |
 | CanadaSucks (45) 04/05/2008 | Put them in a church. . .where they belong. The Taliban also wants to publicly proclaim what they know God thinks as well. Those who claim to know what's right morally and theologically ought to take another look at what has made America such a noble and grand experiment- a Constitution with no god.
(3 voted this helpful, 3 funny and 3 agree) |
 | lmorovan (12) 04/05/2008 | The removal of the Ten Commandments from any public place or building is a violation of the First Amendment of the Constitution. Incidentally, if the Ten Commandments are removed, the all signs, notifications, names, portraits, pictures, symbols, etc. should likewise be removed because someone could always imply that they promote certain religions, systems, rules, guides, etc. Can you see the hipocrisy in it all?
(4 voted this helpful, 5 funny and 0 agree) |
 | luridlloyd (9) 11/25/2006 | I don't care.
(1 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | TJGypsy2 (7) 08/23/2005 | Not an issue. The ten commandments are good guidelines to live by, regardless of your religion, and I fail to see the harm in having them displayed.
(3 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | jaywilton (26) 04/27/2005 | The Ten Commandments make a statement about our society-not a statement on behalf of a particular religion.Obviously there are different
translations and interpretations;as a Jew,I try to explain that in the original Hebrew,'the Ten Commandments' are actually closer to the 10 Statements-and that the prohibition against killing is against murder the .The numbers are different-the probibition against murder
is number six in Hebrew,for example.But,in any case,we are surrounded by all kinds of slogans and bs.So,I gotta wonder about people/organizations who spend all this effort to remove this moral symbol from our society.
(6 voted this helpful, 1 funny and 0 agree) |
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