Huckabee wants Ten Commandments in the White House
PaulSpoerry | December 23, 2007
As the campaign unfolds, Mike Huckabee sounds less like a former governor, and more like a religious right activist with reporters following him around.
Ron Chusid directed my attention to Huckabee’s latest remarks, delivered to reporters on a campaign bus in Iowa, which delved into his church-state thoughts in more detail.
[W]hen he was pressed on whether he would continue certain practices he began in the Arkansas state house, such as a Christian Heritage Week or hanging the Ten Commandments in his office, Huckabee said, “[I] don’t know why I wouldn’t.†[…]
As for the Ten Commandments in the Oval Office, “the Ten Commandments are in the Supreme Court,†Huckabee said, adding that he “wouldn’t hesitate†to hang them in the White House. “The Ten Commandments form the basis of most of our laws and therefore, you know if you look through them does anybody find anything there that would be all that objectionable? I don’t think most people would if they actually read them,†he said.
The problem here, though, is that the candidate who doesn’t know anything about foreign policy, national security, immigration policy, economic policy, or history also is confused about the Ten Commandments, which presumably should be his specialty.
First, the notion that the Ten Commandments “form the basis of most of our laws†is transparently ridiculous. I don’t know if Huckabee has looked at the Commandments lately, but just the opposite is true.






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