To expand on this, the term "separation of church and state" itself comes from a letter written by Thomas Jefferson in 1802 to the Danbury Baptist Association of Connecticut. In this letter, Jefferson explained that the First Amendment was intended to create a "wall of separation between church and state" to prevent the government from interfering with religious practices and to protect the church from government influence. This idea became widely cited in legal cases and discussions about religious freedom.
Opening more portals I see... since they can't flood the country with illegals now, they'll go for option 2. flood the country with evil spirits that make the vessels vote democrats
No surprise that Kelly signed it. I'm a born & raised Kansan. With a few minor exceptions, our state governors were predominantly Republican until the late 1950s. Then it began to flip back & forth every election cycle or two. This was mainly due to idiotic voters who decided to "vote their conscience for the candidate and not the party line." For instance, Republican Governors Brownback & Colyer followed democrats Sebelius & Parkinson. Kansans on both sides of the aisle took exception to Brownback's policies. Kris Kobach was Sec. of State under both Brownback & Colyer, so when he ran for governor against Kelly, the conscience-voting geniuses were afraid he would be a continuance of Brownback policies and decided a vote for the democrat would be better. I guess they forgot what a travesty Sebelius was. Now here we are with a Satan-supporting witch in the governor's seat. So, if you ever decide to "vote your conscience," make sure you have one first.
Personally, I had no problem with Brownback's policies, and I don't think Kobach would have continued them. I think he got robbed in the gubernatorial election.
Kansas is another state with the implausible combination of a veto proof Republican legislature and, somehow, a Dem Governor.
Dominion voting machines, son
Need Christian mass now. Cant say no
What happened to separation of Church and State?
There is no separation of church and state in the Constitution. This is just another skirmish in the was against Christianity.
To expand on this, the term "separation of church and state" itself comes from a letter written by Thomas Jefferson in 1802 to the Danbury Baptist Association of Connecticut. In this letter, Jefferson explained that the First Amendment was intended to create a "wall of separation between church and state" to prevent the government from interfering with religious practices and to protect the church from government influence. This idea became widely cited in legal cases and discussions about religious freedom.
It's in a letter from T Jefferson>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x0Bp2gCprpg
Thomas Jefferson - The Truth about the Separation of Church and State
Read Letter from the Danbury Baptists & President Jefferson's Reply: http://thestoryofliberty.intuitwebsit...
The DEMONrats scream it all the time.
What happened to "kill them all and let God sort them out"?
Duke Nukem is mowing lawns now?
Works for me.
Exactly.
)))BOOM((( Hey, we're not in Kanas anymore! Ahhhhh
https://files.catbox.moe/9j1ipb.jpg
An Exorcist will have to visit that building afterwards. Probably need a few visits by a really good one.
I was thinking about that... if exorcism chased off the bad spirits from the place, where do they go afterwards? :O
When Jesus cast the legion out of that man, they went to the pigs. When Ghostbusters eliminate the ghosts, they put them in their labtubes.. :D
Opening more portals I see... since they can't flood the country with illegals now, they'll go for option 2. flood the country with evil spirits that make the vessels vote democrats
No surprise that Kelly signed it. I'm a born & raised Kansan. With a few minor exceptions, our state governors were predominantly Republican until the late 1950s. Then it began to flip back & forth every election cycle or two. This was mainly due to idiotic voters who decided to "vote their conscience for the candidate and not the party line." For instance, Republican Governors Brownback & Colyer followed democrats Sebelius & Parkinson. Kansans on both sides of the aisle took exception to Brownback's policies. Kris Kobach was Sec. of State under both Brownback & Colyer, so when he ran for governor against Kelly, the conscience-voting geniuses were afraid he would be a continuance of Brownback policies and decided a vote for the democrat would be better. I guess they forgot what a travesty Sebelius was. Now here we are with a Satan-supporting witch in the governor's seat. So, if you ever decide to "vote your conscience," make sure you have one first.
Bill Graves was a good Governor!
Yes, and he was a Republican.
Personally, I had no problem with Brownback's policies, and I don't think Kobach would have continued them. I think he got robbed in the gubernatorial election.
For sure!