Individuals are free to exercise their religious freedom. Government officials, acting in their official governmental capacity, are not free to use thier government position and government resources to promote their religious views. That is what opening prayers are all about, the use of public office to promote private religious views. This is where the Supremes are wrong.
Now let's revisit your post:
You imply that a person who might object to the un-Constitutional insertion of religion into the pledge as "a piece of shit traitor".
You go on to tell us that people with minority religious views should change religions or move. Again, the whole point of the anti-establishment clause was to to prevent folks from using the power of government for religious coercion. Yet here you are advocating just that. The Supremes ignored the Constitution in this decsion, going so far as to state that there should be no court review of the content of official prayer, thereby opening the door wide open for the use of government position and resources for sectarian purposes.
Yes, let us revisit my post, and also revisit whether or not you are able to read and comprehend and have a brain capable of critical thought, shall we?
1. Your first portion of the quote is wrong. Probably because you seem to believe you know more about the constitution than the majority of the nine most well-versed parties in it. The primary difference between you and them is that they are actually looking at it objectively and permitting individuals to practice their religion without forcing it on others, and you would rather look at it like someone who wants to oppress religions while claiming that they are somehow promoting their religion by practicing it.
2. The insertion of "religion" as you call it into the pledge is obviously not unconstitutional, or else the pledge would be changed. I'm sure someone as filled with knowledge of the constitution is aware that this challenge has been thwarted. I call them pieces of shit traitors because they refuse to say the pledge of allegiance of their country in full, meaning that you refuse to align yourself with your country. If you refuse to pledge your allegiance to my country because you fail to comprehend the difference between believing a religion and respecting and fulfilling an oath, yet choose to live in the country, then you can go fuck yourself because you are a shithead traitor. The shithead traitor part is more of my opinion than a court-ruled fact, hence the parenthesis.
3. I go on to then state that people who don't hear their religions' prayers at a city council meeting where the council is elected by popular vote and will be more in-line with the residents who elected them should change their religion to one that would be heard, or move somewhere where their religion is prominent. In other words, move somewhere where officials that get elected hold the same beliefs as you -- and maybe you'd hear a prayer from whatever crazy as shit religion you may be! Which is of course perfectly fine as long as they aren't forcing others into the religion, establishing it as official, or promoting it -- none of which are occurring in this scenario.
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I would go through and point out the further stupidity in pretty much everything you have written, but it would be pointless because whatever religion/non-religion you are, you are an incompetent radical.
Maybe you are of a religion / non-religion who has the goal of suppressing the religions of others? This seems to be pretty in-line with your claims of how everything is unconstitutional. Or perhaps you are trolling? I find it hard to be someone that claims to have a firmer grasp on the constitution than the Supreme Court could legitimately be unable to read and comprehend the meaning of words. Actually scratch that, I can.