ThaBawse
Guest
Unknown vandals unhappy about atheists' billboard in Charlotte, N.C., spray-painted Under God on the ad, the city's atheist association discovered Monday. The defaced message will remain in place until after July 4, the group reports, which is the soonest that workers can furnish a fresh billboard image. Here's how the vandalized billboard now looks:
The billboard reads, One Nation Indivisible, which is the phrase preceding the 1954 insertion of the words under God to the Pledge of Allegiance, reports the Charlotte Observer's Tim Funk. The billboard was erected on Billy Graham Parkway last week. (Graham is, of course, the state's famous evangelical preacher.)
Similar North Carolina ads have gone up in Asheville, Greensboro, Wilmington, Raleigh, and Winston-Salem as a Fourth of July project by the area's atheist association. The group has filed a police report and will replace the billboard.
âIt was done by one or two people off on their own who decided their only recourse was vandalism rather than having a conversation,â Charlotte Atheists & Agnostics spokesman William Warren said. âIt does show how needed our message is. As atheists, we want to let people know we exist and that thereâs a community here.â Warren told the Observer when the sign first went up that its location wasn't intended as a rebuke to the Rev. Graham.
Read the rest of the story: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/ynews_ts2936

The billboard reads, One Nation Indivisible, which is the phrase preceding the 1954 insertion of the words under God to the Pledge of Allegiance, reports the Charlotte Observer's Tim Funk. The billboard was erected on Billy Graham Parkway last week. (Graham is, of course, the state's famous evangelical preacher.)
Similar North Carolina ads have gone up in Asheville, Greensboro, Wilmington, Raleigh, and Winston-Salem as a Fourth of July project by the area's atheist association. The group has filed a police report and will replace the billboard.
âIt was done by one or two people off on their own who decided their only recourse was vandalism rather than having a conversation,â Charlotte Atheists & Agnostics spokesman William Warren said. âIt does show how needed our message is. As atheists, we want to let people know we exist and that thereâs a community here.â Warren told the Observer when the sign first went up that its location wasn't intended as a rebuke to the Rev. Graham.
Read the rest of the story: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/ynews_ts2936