ACLU: Indiana License Plates Are Unconstitutional

2007-04-24
By


The license plates, like our currency, say “In God We Trust.” I’ll give you four tries to guess who’s upset about it … A-C-L-U.

Full article HERE.

10 views

  • mruffolo

    Is our money unconstitutional also?

  • BobH

    Do the cities of San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Bernadino and San Antonio have to change their names?

  • http://mensnewsdaily.com/author/the-gonzman/ The Gonzman

    The ACLU in this instance seems to forget that all but a small handling fee for the special license plates out of that fifteen bucks they are whining about goes to the organization or charity associated with those license plates.

    Dumbasses.

    The Anti-Christian Litigation Union strikes again. You can believe in they said “In’shah Allah” they wouldn’t be saying a word.

  • RestoringGuy

    For some bizarre reason, most states prohibit references to a deity on their plates (having nothing to do with the ACLU). Why no outcry about that?

    For both the ACLU, and their critics, this all seems like a pretty selective self-serving set of objections.

  • MartianBachelor

    I think using the word “we” on the plate is a bit presumptuous, and I’m not sure what interest or business the state of Indiana has in promoting such groupthink in any way even if it’s a majority view.

    Nobody’s keeping anyone from putting a bumper-sticker or sign on their car saying they trust in whatever-they-like. If the idea is truly worthy it should be capable of selling itself on its own merits and doesn’t need the state’s help.

    > The Anti-Christian Litigation Union strikes again.

    This comment just confirms that the common perception is that it’s the Christian god the state is promoting, not a harmlessly generic one.






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