South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford has never shied away from talking about his holy faith, so as the case may be it should have come as no stagger that he invoked "God's law" throughout his long, disconnected cluster colloquium Wednesday afternoon to divulge his year-long extramarital concern with an Argentine woman. But in acknowledging his infidelity, Sanford was in point of fact admitting that he had destroyed a national law: adultery is still punishable in South Carolina by up to a year in hoosegow and a $500 fine. Fortunately for Sanford, the statute is an unenforced relic.
But even if he faces no hoodlum penalties, Sanford is unpleasantly informed that he will profit in other ways. "I supposition where I'm vexing to go with this is that there are honourable absolutes, and that God's canon indeed is there to keep safe you from yourself," Sanford said at the structure capitol in Columbia. "And there are consequences if you infraction that. This clasp conference is a consequence.".
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