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| | Alan Wolfe, "Still E Pluribus Unum? Yes" , eJournal USA: Society & Values, December 2004 |
 | | The fault line in America, we are frequently told, is religious in nature, gathering all those who believe strongly in God, whatever the God in which they believe, on one side, and those who do not see the hand of the divinity guiding all human action on the other. |
 | | If it turns out to be the case, however, that religion in America is as much a source of unity as it is of division, then the prospects for e pluribus unum are significantly enhanced. |
 | | Many of America's founders believed that a common morality required a common religion. |
| usinfo.state.gov /journals/itsv/1204/ijse/wolfe.htm (2631 words) |
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