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Bumblebee
06-24-2007, 09:20 PM
In Florida , an atheist became incensed over the preparation of Easter and Passover holidays. He decided to contact his lawyer about the discrimination inflicted on atheists by the constant celebrations afforded to Christians and Jews with all their holidays while atheists had no holiday to celebrate.

The case was brought before a wise judge. After listening to the long passionate presentation by the lawyer, the Judge banged his gavel and declared "Case dismissed!"

The lawyer immediately stood and objected to the ruling and said, "Your honor, how can you possibly dismiss this case? The Christians have Christmas, Easter and many other observances. Jews have Passover, Yom Kippur and Hanukkah...yet my client and all other atheists have no such holiday!"

The judge leaned forward in his chair and simply said, "Obviously your client is too confused to even know about, much less celebrate, his own atheists' holiday!"

The lawyer pompously said, "Your Honor, we are unaware of any such holiday for atheists. Just when might that holiday be, your Honor?"

The judge said, "Well it comes every year on exactly the same date - April 1st! Since our calendar sets April 1st as 'April Fools Day,' consider that Psalm 14:1 and Psalm 53 state, 'The fool says in his heart, there is no God.' Thus, in my opinion, if your client says there is no God, then by scripture he is a fool, thus April 1st is his holiday! Get it?"
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Wadi66
06-25-2007, 01:11 AM
Great joke Bee. One to remember. :clap1:

FKLBRLS
06-25-2007, 03:31 AM
Did this actually happen? If so THIS GUY NEEDS TO BE ON THE SUPREME COURT!

Bumblebee
06-25-2007, 03:03 PM
FKLBRLS, I got it in email, and at the bottom of the page, it said, "go judge, way to go. We need more judges like this,"

It had me guessing, too. But I figured if it was true, they would have used his name. So, I deleted that part, and put it up under humor. :confused1:

Red Chevy
06-25-2007, 04:08 PM
I thought this was going to be about Roy L. Pearson and his $54 million pair of pants.