I hope you don't ever buy a horse because you would be beating that poor thing to death. All of your threads are minor variations on the same exact thing.
Look, when the founding fathers established this country they purposely made the government separate from churches, and here is the reason why: They came from a country that had an official Church (Church of England) where the King was the official head of that church and you had to do what they said or be beheaded. The founding fathers wanted no part of that stuff. They wanted to allow Quakers and Lutherans and other Protestants a different Christians to do their own thing, and I suppose even Jewish people too. (Catholics were actually excluded from government, but that's another topic.) I believe that they assumed most of the population would always be Christian and therefore Christian values would be followed without any need to incorporate them into law. I don't think they foresaw what we have now, with Islam creeping in, atheism creeping in, and weird dangerous religions on top of that.
A nation like ours requires the people to already have ethics and morals or else it does not work. When people lose their morals the government steps in to impose its own ethics and morals, and the problem with that is you may have a government run by people you don't like.
Perhaps the great American Experience experiment is a failure because of this one flaw. It assumes a homogeneous people with generally the same ethics, and cannot handle the strain of so many diverse opinions. That's above my pay grade to analyze any further but it's certainly possible.
At any rate, be that as it may, our government is set up in such a way that you cannot impose religious morals in the forms of law. If you want your morals and ethics to win the day in this country and have them reflected in our laws then you damn well better find a good way to make your argument without bringing religion into it. It can be done; bright men can make great arguments that appeal to all peoples. But that's the way it is here.