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Official Unseen Forces's video: IN GOD WE TRUST to be REMOVED from USD Bill U S Currency

@IN GOD WE TRUST to be REMOVED from USD Bill (U.S. Currency)
SUBSCRIBE for more on FEDERAL RESERVE / QE UNLIMITED / U.S. DOLLAR / ECOMOMY / FINANCIAL CRISIS and more - http://www.youtube.com/OfficialUnseenForces IN GOD WE TRUST to be REMOVED from USD Bill (U.S. Currency) Atheists suing to have the "In God We Trust" phrase removed from U.S. currency were smacked down on Thursday, when a federal judge dismissed their lawsuit. The case against the U.S. Treasury Department and other government officials was brought forth by the Freedom From Religion Foundation and others earlier this year. Represented by lawyer and atheist Michael Newdow, the plaintiffs argued that they were "forced to proselytize -- by an Act of Congress -- for a deity they don't believe in whenever they handle money." Newdow claimed that the placement of the motto on bills and coins was unconstitutional, in violation of the establishment clause of the First Amendment. He also claimed that the phrase had particular religious connotations that could be seen as discriminatory to non-believers, including numismatists who no longer felt comfortable collecting coins. But in dismissing the suit, U.S. District Judge Harold Baer, Jr., wrote that "the Supreme Court has repeatedly assumed the motto's secular purpose and effect," according to the Associated Press. Baer also ruled that the federal appeals courts "have found no constitutional violation in the motto's inclusion on currency," and that the placement of the phrase didn't constitute a "substantial burden" on atheists. Congress first approved the inclusion of "In God We Trust" on U.S. coins during Civil War in 1864. In 1956, Congress passed a resolution to recognize the words officially as the national motto, replacing the de facto phrase, "E Pluribus Unum." A year later, it began being printed on paper money. Atheists have challenged the placement of "In God We Trust" on currency in the past. Newdow himself took the case all the way to the Supreme Court in 2011, only to be rejected. He now says he plans to appeal the latest ruling. theist activists' crusade to have the words "In God We Trust" removed from U.S. currency was dealt a major blow this week when a U.S. district court dismissed a lawsuit brought against the Treasury Department by the Freedom From Religion Foundation and Michael Newdow, a lawyer and emergency room doctor. Judge Harold Baer, a federal district judge in the Southern District of New York, ruled that the argument that the national motto violates the establishment clause of the First Amendment is unfounded, CBN News reported. usd dollar u.s. "in god we trust" freedom religion god judge law legal currency money cash motto speech court "supreme court" atheist christian american "united states" constitution church state jesus "jesus loves you" power fed government "federal reserve" bible commerce global congress credit debt loan "credit card" catholic muslim language culture work 2013 2014 "worship god" battle trading forex "forex trading" passport citizen "u.s. citizen" "u.s. passport" agenda career "dollar bill" wealth forces 829speedy alex jones infowars gerald celente trends in the news wearechange david icke tv channel farrakhan lindsey williams glenn beck the blaze The American Center for Law and Justice, a conservative legal organization, submitted a brief to the court defending the motto and calling it ingrained in American history. The organization also noted that the establishment clause isn't intended to provide the public with a pledge that it will not be exposed to religion or religious symbols. "The national motto simply echoes the principle found in the Declaration of Independence that our freedoms come from God and not the state," the organization said. While the ACLJ was pleased with the end result, Newdow and the Freedom From Religion Foundation most certainly won't be. In March, the atheist group announced it was joining 19 other plaintiffs in challenging "In God We Trust." The challenge was filed on Feb. 1 in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. "Our government is prohibited from endorsing one religion over another but also prohibited from endorsing religion over nonreligion," Dan Barker with the Freedom From Religion Foundation said in a statement. "The placement of a monotheistic ideal on our nation's currency violates this stricture and is therefore unconstitutional." A long-standing, irreverent joke slogan was co-opted as the title of Jean Shepherd's 1966 book, In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash. In the movie Oh God, God (played by George Burns) says to his reluctant disciple Jerry Landers (John Denver), "Trust me. Like it says on the money." In the 1994 remake of the film Miracle on 34th Street, the judge uses the phrase "In God We Trust" (and therein the government's implicit recognition of God) to justify ruling that Kris Kringle was, in fact, Santa Claus. Hardcore punk Dead Kennedys titled a 1981 EP, In God We Trust, Inc., as a play on the phrase.

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This video was published on 2013-11-24 06:30:01 GMT by @Official-Unseen-Forces on Youtube. Official Unseen Forces has total 5.9K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 33 video.This video has received 20 Likes which are lower than the average likes that Official Unseen Forces gets . @Official-Unseen-Forces receives an average views of 80.2K per video on Youtube.This video has received 32 comments which are higher than the average comments that Official Unseen Forces gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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