'Fourteen months later, at his inaugural prayer breakfast, Walker said, "The Great Creator, no matter who you worship, is the one from which our freedoms are derived, not the government."'
This sort of ignorance and arrogance common to many theists is disturbing and should be of concern.
Our inalienable rights manifest as a consequence of our humanity; they can be neither taken nor bestowed by any government, constitution, or man – and our rights are certainly not bestowed upon us by any creation of man, such as 'god' as perceived by theists.
'Walker's views disturb Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation.
"It is frightening that the highest executive in our state suffers from the delusion that God dictates his every move," she says. "Consider the personal and historic devastation inflicted by fanatics who think they are acting in the name of their deity."'
Disturbing, indeed; given the fact there is no 'god' as perceived by theists, elected officials are subject only the the authority of the Constitution and its case law, not a non-existent deity invented by humans.