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"Romney says he wouldn't appoint qualified Muslim to cabinet"

6 Comments -

1 – 6 of 6
Blogger ogre said...

What a flaming hypocrite.

And a man patently unfit for the office he seeks, since he'd openly affirm his intention to violate the Constitution.

Article VI.
"... no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States."

No test, ever, for ANY office, Willard. It's what allows you to seek public office, too, since by your measure, we should only elect Catholics to the presidency, since they're the largest single faith group in the USA.

The man should be beaten black and blue with a clue-stick.

12:12 PM, November 27, 2007

Blogger Jettboy said...

I think the guy in the op-ed lied about the conversation. I would like to see someone ask the question and have it on tape.

6:58 PM, November 27, 2007

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Would a UU President appoint a Catholic or Episcopalian to a cabinet post?

Dudley M. Jones
jonesdudley@hotmail.com

8:32 PM, November 27, 2007

Blogger Zachary Drake said...

It would be good to get external verification of that quote. But so far I haven't heard a denial from Romney, and the story has attracted some significant attention: TPMtv
has picked up the story.

Mr. Jones, I am sure a UU president would have no trouble appointing Catholics, Episcopalians, or people of other denominations to cabinet posts. Given that UU's comprise only 0.2% of the US population, a UU president would be insane to try to fill all cabinet posts with fellow UUs. I don't think any president of any denomination has tried to do that.

Fortunately, with UU presidents one doesn't have to ponder hypotheticals, one can look at what the 4 Unitarian presidents (Adams, Adams, Filmore, and Taft) have done. As far as I know, they had members of other denominations in their cabinets.

9:23 PM, November 27, 2007

Blogger ogre said...

Jettboy, what reason do you have for believing that the quote is a lie?

Dudley (anonymous) -- absolutely. The idea of applying a religious test would be anathema--both unconstitutional AND highly offensive to fellow UUs.

9:35 PM, November 27, 2007

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I don't think there are enough LDS in this country to qualify for a presidency.

11:13 PM, November 27, 2007

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