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Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Rewriting History at the U.S. Supreme Court

I believe I blogged on this some time back, but WorldNetDaily has an update on the story about how some people are trying to erase evidence of America's Christian heritage--right in the US capital.

WND earlier reported on his documentation of the other representations of the Ten Commandments in the Supreme Court Building, the importance society at that time placed on the laws of Moses and the general recognition during that era by courts of the Ten Commandments as the basis for much of the U.S. law.

However, DuBord said he never got a response to his request, which was mailed and faxed to Court Information Officer Kathy Arberg, that the Supreme Court reconsider, and so he's documented additional evidence that he believes should convince officials of the validity of his request for the change.


A stone relief that is clearly a representation of the Ten Commandments has been renamed in official literature as the "Ten Amendments."

"If you look at our website there are pages of information on architectural detail, including a description of the tablets over the bench. According to the correspondence between the sculptor and the architect, it is the ten amendments," she said.




Our nation's capital is so rich in evidence of America's Christian heritage that it stands to reason those who contend that heritage never existed would attempt to rewrite history.


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