Quaran to be used to swear in congressman

Quaran to be used to swear in congressman

Why are some people so stupid? After reading this article, I realized that all the jokes about stupid lawmakers have some validity.

To summarize, Republican Rep. Virgil Goode made comments condemning the use of the Quran to swear in a newly elected Muslim congressman. He later refused to apologize, saying:

I fear that in the next century we will have many more Muslims in the United States if we do not adopt the strict immigration policies that I believe are necessary to preserve the values and beliefs traditional to the United States of America and to prevent our resources from being swamped.

What an idiot! Does he realize how racist he is? Does he realize that making an individual swear on a book they don’t hold sacred does absolutely no good. I would rather have someone swear an oath on something they truly believe in. It just doesn’t make sense to have them swear an oath on something that is meaningless to them.

If the roles were reversed and a Christian were asked to swear an oath on the Quran, it would have no meaning and no binding effect.

If I lived in this guys district in Virginia, I would start campaigning against him right now.

5 Responses

  1. Mike W. says:

    Finally, something I think we can all agree on. There was a letter to the Editor in the Deseret News last week by some bigot in St. George who was livid about this, saying that the soldiers in Iraq weren’t fighting so that Rep. Ellison could swear on the Quran. But that’s exactly what I hope they are fighting for.

  2. Dave W. says:

    Actually I disagree. Just kidding!

    One thing I have agreed with W on was the Dubai Ports World issue. But because of zenophobia from people like Rep. Goode, a legitimate company in a moderate Muslim country became the baby thrown out with the bath water, and the Muslim world saw us for a bunch of zenophobes.

    We Americans are so isolated we don’t see that most people around the world are just like us, trying to scratch out a tune without breaking our necks.

  3. Reluctant says:

    Agreed. I don’t understand why American as a “melting pot” can be so racist. Of any nation on earth, we should be the ones most open to this type of thing. Because we are made up of almost every race and religion on earth, we should be more accepting of each and every one of them

  4. Mike W. says:

    This is an interesting piece from The Nation regarding Goode and the Q’uran.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/thenation/20070103/cm_thenation/1153689

    Warning Dan; it’s a liberal political magazine (but the piece isn’t liberal, except in the classical Jeffersonian sense).

  5. Reluctant says:

    Excellent article! I especially liked the following from Ellison:

    “When I’m officially sworn in, I will do it the same exact way as every other Congressperson-elect who was sworn in,” explains the Representative from Minneapolis. “We will all stand up and in unison lift our hand and swear to uphold that Constitution, and then later, in a private ceremony, of course I’ll put my hand on a book that is the basis of my faith, which is Islam, and I think that this is a beauty–this is a wonderful thing for our country because Jewish members will put their hands on the Torah. Mormon members will put their hand on the Book of Mormon. Catholic members will put their hand on the book of their choice–and members that don’t want to put their hand on any book are also fully free to do that. That’s the American way…. I think the diversity of our country is a great strength. It’s a good thing that we have people from all faiths and all cultures to come here.”

    That’s what the constitution is talking about when it mentions the separation of church and state. It’s the freedom to choose. That government will not push one single church, but that all are welcome.

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