Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

in god we trust
in god we trust

Top Stories

Almost Half of College Students Support Removing ‘In God We Trust’ From Currency

Share this story:

The poll of 1,001 college students, drawn from College Pulse’s Undergraduate Student Panel, includes over 240,000 verified students representing more than 800 different colleges and universities in all 50 states.

Share this story:

A poll taken for the College Fix finds that nearly half of America’s college students support removing the phrase “In God We Trust” from American currency.

Students were asked, “Do you  believe the motto ‘In God We Trust’ should remain on U.S. currency or should it be removed?” While more than half–53 percent–of those surveyed said the motto should stay, 45 percent of college students said it should be removed.

There was a major partisan divide on the issue with 94 percent of Republicans wanting to keep the motto while two-third of Democrats in college–67 percent–want to get rid of it. Independents leaned towards keeping the motto with 56 percent wanting it to stay while 44 percent want it removed.

There was also something of a racial divide with 69 percent black students and 57 percent of Asians wanting to keep it compared to 51 percent of white students and 50 percent of Hispanic/Latino students wanting to keep it. American Indian students were heavily against the motto with 75 percent wanting it removed from currency.

There is also a gender gap with female students divided as 50 percent want to get rid of the motto while 49 percent want it kept on currency. A majority of male students–63 percent–want to keep “In God We Trust” on currency while 36 percent want to see it removed.

The survey also found that the main reason some college students were against the phrase because they felt it violated the separation of church and state.

“In God We Trust” was initially put on coins during the Civil War in 1864. In 1955, Congress voted to put the phrase on all currency thanks to U.S. Rep. Charles Bennett, D-Fla., who represented the First Coast and Northeast Florida in Congress for four and a half decades. The phrase is also the official motto of the state of Florida.

The poll did not shock some religious leaders.

“While I’m not surprised, I’m saddened. A generation or two has lost touch with its heritage. For all the talk of equality in America, few realize that it is the theistic foundations that ground it. In our ‘progressive’ removal of God, we should beware of what follows,” Corey Miller, the president of the nationwide campus ministry Ratio Christi, told the College Fix.

The poll of 1,001 college students, drawn from College Pulse’s Undergraduate Student Panel that includes over 240,000 verified students representing more than 800 different colleges and universities in all 50 states, was taken from Aug. 22 through Aug. 24 and had a margin of error of +/- 3.5 percent.

 

Reach Ed Dean at ed.dean@floridadaily.com.

 

Author

1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Andrew Nappi

    September 12, 2019, 5:06 am at 5:06 am

    “In God We Trust” was initially put on coins during the Civil War in 1864. In 1955, Congress voted to put the phrase on all currency thanks to U.S. Rep. Charles Bennett, D-Fla., who represented the First Coast and Northeast Florida in Congress for four and a half decades. The phrase is also the official motto of the state of Florida.”
    So, Lincoln’s treasonous war against the Southern states (the Constitution defines treason as making war upon the States) is the time reference for the motto. Not the founding. This is important. The founders saw no need to apply this to the money. This is similar to the Pledge of Allegiance. No founder would ever utter “the Pledge.” Trust in God is not evident in one’s life because it is written or engraved on a nation’s currency. Trust in God is exhibited in how one lives. Leave it, remove it. Who cares? This is just another “conservative” nonsensical issue in the ongoing war of “liberals vs. conservative” to see which form of authoritarianism will rule the day.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

<

Ed Dean: Publisher

 

Ed Dean is a leading radio and news media personality including hosting the #1 statewide radio talk show in Florida. Contact Ed.Dean@FloridaDaily.com

You May Also Like

Florida Politics

Last week marked the 200th anniversary of the signing of the Adams-Onís Treaty in which Spain ceded the Floridas to the United States.

Follow us on Social Media