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  1. Good point, as Pence has described himself as “a Christian, a conservative and a Republican, in that order.” He said, “I made a commitment to Christ. I’m a born-again, evangelical Catholic.” If someone in a similar position said I put Judaism first or I am an Islamist first, a Hindu first, etc, you would write them off as not representing all the people in this Country. He is against a woman’s right to choose, he is against equal civll and social rights for gay taxpaying Americans, and he actually believes in every world of the Gospel of Jesus, which was not written in Jesus time, nor in is town, nor in his language. Jesus would have spoken to [his people] in a semitic language, and no one really knows what God said to Jesus when he was alone, as with Moses, as with Muhammad. My Constitution has separation of Church and State— Amendment 1 : “Congress shall make [no law] respecting an establishment of religion……. Therefore I question Pence’s ability to use a balanced scale when applying the highest law in the land.

    All these people claiming to be born-again Christians, should lead by following the path of the fictional Jesus. Pence supports Trump’s wall to keep out millions of undocumented Christians, mostly Catholics from crossing the US border without any verifiable documentation. I agree with this, but I don’t claim to be following the path of Jesus. That would make me a hypocrite. When the Church ruled Europe, it was called the Dark Ages well into the Middle Ages. This is why most progressive Countries have separation of Church and State, lesson learned. Any American leader that puts religious dogma before the Constitution, should raise some red flags

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