It's not the government's job to protect me. Not in the supermarket, not in the workplace, not in my own house and definitely not in my church.
There is nothing anti-religious about politicians seeking to protect the health of their constituencies by limiting the number of congregants in a closed space during a pandemic; what’s anti-religious is to use God as an excuse for doing something that you know could harm people.
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Replying to @BRhashtag
So no traffic lights then? Safety standards for airplanes? Regulating toxins in food and water?

Nov 27, 2020 · 4:10 AM UTC

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Replying to @marwilliamson
Those are the exceptions to the rule, not the rule itself. I hope we can at least agree on the bill of rights including the right to peaceably assemble - peaceably assemble without the fear of shut down from the government if we have 51 people there, not 50.
Why the police and the military drain on our taxes then...if that's the argument? The restrictions are actually about not killing other people...an inconvenient truth enshrined in the 10 commandments that is ignored in the name of the God they worship who said don't kill people.