“In God We Trust,” according to some folks, is a religious statement.
The way I interpret the phrase is that it has become almost a stock line, a virtual cliché. It now adorns the police cruisers in at least two Texas Panhandle communities — in Childress and Hutchinson counties. The phrase has drawn criticism from anti-religious zealots.
My question is this: Can’t you find more worthy opponents to take on?
Dallas Morning News blogger Jim Mitchell has weighed in with his view that the phrase doesn’t belong on police cars.
In God We Trust can be found on our currency and on public building. Mitchell has no problem with that.
My only gripe about the phrase on police cars is that the cops could have chosen another phrase to place on its cars. How about “To Protect and Serve”?
But the phrase “In God We Trust” doesn’t, in my mind, say anything offensive. The term doesn’t suggest that cops are going to interrogate motorists they pull over about their religious faith, or ask them if they believe in God.
The phrase appears to be merely a statement that the relevant police agency trusts in God — which, incidentally, can be an ecumenical deity that takes in people of various faiths.
As for those with have no faith in God, well, the phrase means nothing to them. That’s fine, too.
But to protest it? Get a life … please.