Corporations are legal fictions. They own nothing, so any action taken against a corporation is taken against the individuals who own that corporation -- whether a single owner or millions of stockholders. This is the myth of "corporate taxes" -- they don't take money from a "corporation", they take it from individuals ... either by lower profits for the shareholders (who, in the US, are likely to be average, middle-class folks with 401Ks) or as increased costs to the individual consumer.
There is no such thing as "separation of church and state" in the Constitution. In fact, the word "separation" appears nowhere. I'll wait while you check ...
There is an establishment clause in the First Amendment:
So where does it say that churches can't support or endorse a candidate? Where does it say that the government can prohibit them from doing so? The answer is that it doesn't.Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
"Separation of Church and State" was a phrase first coined by Thomas Jefferson in a letter to the Danbury Baptists:
Can you honestly read the full context of Jefferson's use of the term and believe that his intent was for the State to limit the Church? That he would condone the State telling a preacher that he can't express an opinion from the pulpit of his own church?Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man & his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should "make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof," thus building a wall of separation between Church & State
That phrase was then misused in a Supreme Court ruling and it's been downhill ever since. There are people who actually think the phrase is in the Constitution.
Why should the church be able to express an opinion on an election but the State can't put a preacher in the pulpit? Because the Constitution isn't about limiting the rights of the church, it's about setting forth and limiting the powers of government. The individual, in the person of a preacher in the pulpit of his church, which is private property, should not have the intrusive, police-powers of government used to tell him what he may and may not say.
The misuse of "Separation of Church and State" is one of the things this country should be ashamed of.
This growing absurdity is one of the reasons I'm no longer a member of the ACLU -- yes, I was a card-carrying, dues-paying member of that organization for over a decade. They left me behind when they stopped being about protecting Constitutional rights and started being about promoting a left-wing agenda.
One of the reasons for my leaving was an instance where a high-school valedictorian had her speech censored. The topic of her speech was what had inspired her to work so hard that she earned the honor of being valedictorian -- one of the things that did so was her personal faith. The school denied her the right to say this.
Now this wasn't the school forcing all the kids to pray. It wasn't a school employee in a position of authority over the students proselytizing. It was a student, in time she earned to express her personal opinion, talking about what inspired her -- not preaching, not proselytizing, but simply saying, "My faith in Jesus Christ inspired me to work hard."
It's okay, last year, for a student to talk about Barack Obama in his speech, because he was (rightly so) inspired by Obama's success to work hard himself, but being inspired by religious faith is verboten? A personal political opinion is okay, but a personal religious one isn't?
How is telling a teenager she can't say she was inspired by her faith not "prohibiting the free exercise thereof"?
It doesn't stop there -- in schools all over the country, students are told they can't wear a religious symbol on a necklace, can't bring a personal Bible to school to read in their free time, can't form a group to pray before class, can't even talk to their friends about religion. All of this in the name of the First Amendment:
"Hi, we're from the government and we're going to protect your religious freedoms by telling you what you can't do."Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
And they'd scream rightly. The whole basis is that the People have absolute rights and the Government has limited power.
Now, I don't agree with blue laws -- don't like them, think they're stupid -- but that church leader's opinion, expressed to his congregation, in their church or homes or even on the public street, is none of the government's damn business.
"Congress shall make no law ..." -- "Shut up, there's a law."
Now, please keep in mind that this rant is brought to you by a self-described Apathetic Agnostic. I don't have any religious faith, I'm just not arrogant enough to deny the possibility and join the Church of Atheism. And, ultimately, I dislike organized religion.
But its a fundamental right in this country that's being eroded, slowly, surely and, make no mistake, deliberately -- the conversation that caused me to send my ACLU membership card back with instructions that they could fold it until it was all sharp corners and then stick it someplace inconvenient left me with no doubt of that.