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Old 05-16-2002, 09:45 AM   #31
dk
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Originally posted by IvanK:
I think what I'm trying to get at is that there always has been a considerable minority that wants to overthrow the secular government instituted by the Founders and establish a Fundamentalist Protestant theocracy in the U.S. Their influence waxes and wanes and was felt more in certain periods, such as around the time of the Civil War (reference to their deity first placed on U.S. currency), after World War I (Scopes trial) and the 1970s-80s (Moral Majority and its fellow travelers). They are usually well-organized, well-disciplined and well-funded, but they are also always a minority and so cannot prevail for long in a democratic system such as ours. A couple factors, including backlash from believers who don't want to sully themselves with concerns over "worldly affairs" and their own hubris, such as passing inane laws and regulations that raise the controversy level and result in their removal from, for instance, the Kansas state school board, help to keep them down. But they remain a constant danger to our liberties, the well-known price of which is eternal vigilance.
If what you say is true, then its strange that the federal courts (a non-democratic body) ordered remedies like "seperate but equal, de jure school busing for public school integration, censorship of religious speech in public schools, abortion, and most recently began to select presidents etc... I think you're confusing the powers of a judicial oligarchy with democratic processes. Federal Judges aren't elected but appointed for life.
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Old 05-16-2002, 09:49 AM   #32
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IvanK : The "missing article" argument is an old chestnut that has been tried and failed. (SNIP) -- absolutely no one -- in the U.S. in the 1790s objected to the Congress and President endorsing the idea that the U.S. was not, repeat not, in any way to be considered a "Christian nation." And in fact it adds fuel to the fire of the argument that the Constitution is a secular document that has been gradually eroded by the intrusions of mostly Protestant believers.
dk: It shouldn’t surprise anyone that nobody in the 1790s objected to Article 11, because Article 11 was non-existent; that’s what Stanford’s Law Library says. Perhaps you can demonstrate how the Treaty has shaped U.S. foreign or domestic policy. I looked and found nothing.
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IvanK: You seem to have a more thorough knowledge of what "secular doctrine" is than I do. In my world most secularists do not object at all to public discourse on any subject, which is why we call ourselves freethinkers and believe strongly in the value of truly free expression. What we do object to is government supported or endorsed expressions of particular religious beliefs, which the Supreme Court has additionaly held to violate the Constitution's Establishment Clause.
dk: Are you pleading ignorance? The American Secular Union and Freethought Federation (ASUFF) was founded in the later quarter of the 19th Century. With many affiliated societies the ASUFF was dedicated to a platform “Separation of Church and State”. If you’re going to reference the Supreme Court, please quote them. I have no idea who “we” is.

In Everson v. the Board of Education (1947, 330 U.S. 1) Justice Jackson, dissenting, wrote
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Our public school, if not a product of Protestantism, at least is more consistent with it than with the Catholic culture and scheme of values. It is a relatively recent development dating from about 1840.1 It is organized on [330 U.S. 1, 24] the premise that secular education can be isolated from all religious teaching so that the school can inculcate all needed temporal knowledge and also maintain a strict and lofty neutrality as to religion. The assumption is that after the individual has been instructed in worldly wisdom he will be better fitted to choose his religion. Whether such a disjunction is possible, and if possible whether it is wise, are questions I need not try to answer.”
----- <a href="http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?navby=case&court=us&vol=330&invol=1" target="_blank">link to Everson v. Board of Education</a> .
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Prior to the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, the First Amendment did not apply as a restraint against the states.
------ Footnote 15 ] Permoli v. Municipality No. 1 of City of New Orleans, 3 How. 589. Cf. Barron, for Use of Tiernan v. Mayor and City Council of City of Baltimore, 7 Pet. 243. 330 U.S. 1 footnote 15
In Madison v. Marbury the Supreme Court of the U.S. claimed exclusive jurisdiction over judicial review (to interpret the U.S. Constitution). The classical theories about legal positivism, and naturalism have been challenged by legal criticism, feminist jurisprudence.
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dk: I'm factually stating the U.S. Constitution was first interpreted as a purely secular document in the Mid 20th Century.
IvanK : You're stating it but it's not factual. You need to read some more history, starting with Kramnick and Moore referenced above. The most powerful U.S. religious groups of the late 18th Century objected strenuously to the ratification of a U.S. Constitution that contained then and contains now no mention of the Christian religion or the Christian deity other than proscribing religious tests for public office. Their objections are in the historical record and argue that the Constitution was in fact a purely secular document from the beginning, reagardless of what the Court said or did not say in the mid-20th Century or at any time before or since.
dk: - You’re arguing with yourself again, not me. Its public education that gives rise to the conflict, and public education isn’t mentioned in the constitution anymore than Jefferson’s impenetrable wall. We agree government has no business mucking around to establish of a religious hegemony, not in the name of secular humanism, Christian, Buddhist, etc… .

The Supreme Court has elevated secular humanism to a religion to bless draft deferments given conscientious objectors. The Supreme Court orders local public school administers to censor valedictorian graduation addresses and students at a pep rally at a football game. These principles and precedents are conflicted, and sucking the courts into a philosophical political battle that has the potential to shred the national identity, one faction against another. Seems to me pretty clear jurisprudence fails by definition when the constitutional appellate courts swing on ideological bias.

[ May 16, 2002: Message edited by: dk ]</p>
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Old 05-17-2002, 06:43 AM   #33
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Originally posted by dk:
<strong>The Supreme Court orders local public school administers to censor valedictorian graduation addresses and students at a pep rally at a football game.</strong>
You're misconstruing the law. What the Lemon test requires is that governmental action at any level that takes religion into account have a secular purpose; not favor any religion over any other or irreligion over religion; and not involve excessive entanglement of government and religion.

Local school officials are under no obligation to censor student speeches at graduation exercises, pep rallys or any other official event. What the law requires is that, if they allow Christian students to witness about their religion, they must allow students of any other religion or of no religion to make equivalent statements and indeed to allow any student to make any statement about any subject at all. So if a valedictorian were allowed to preach at a captive audience, another student could swear; another could criticize the school, its teachers and staff; another could foment racial hatred; another could do a strip tease, etc. etc.

Most schools being unwilling to allow their students unlimited free speech rights, they tend to review student speeches planned for official school events. If they then pass a speech containing Christian witness they must pass any speech containing any controversial statement or they will probably be found to have violated the Lemon test.

This you can bank on: the schools all have lawyers too, good lawyers who aren't depending on dissents, footnotes or argument from absence* when they give schools legal advice about what speech they can allow at school-sponsored functions.

And for the last time, religious speech, prayer and devotion is not subject to censorship in public schools as long as it meets the same test as any other speech and is not disruptive to the educational purpose of the school. Kids can pray in school pretty much anytime they please; many schools have accomodations for regular Islamic prayer in fact.

* One copy, in Arabic, of the Treaty of Tripoli may be missing Article 11. I haven't seen it and if I did see it it wouldn't do me any good as I don't read Arabic.

Every copy -- absolutely every one, without exception -- of the Treaty of Tripoli in English contains Article 11 with its statement that the U.S. is in no sense to be considered a Christian nation. Whether that treaty is still valid or not (it is not as it has been superceded), whether it had or has any effect on U.S. policy or not, changes my argument not one whit. The plain English statement that the U.S. was not a Christian nation was endorsed by a unanimous U.S. Senate and signed into effect by the U.S. President without so much as a whisper of dissent from any quarter of the U.S. populace in the 1790s.

[ May 17, 2002: Message edited by: IvanK ]</p>
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Old 05-19-2002, 06:25 AM   #34
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IvanK: - You're misconstruing the law. What the Lemon test requires is that governmental action at any level that takes religion into account have a secular purpose; not favor any religion over any other or irreligion over religion; and not involve excessive entanglement of government and religion.

Local school officials are under no obligation to censor student speeches at graduation exercises, pep rallys or any other official event. What the law requires is that, if they allow Christian students to witness about their religion, they must allow students of any other religion or of no religion to make equivalent statements and indeed to allow any student to make any statement about any subject at all. So if a valedictorian were allowed to preach at a captive audience, another student could swear; another could criticize the school, its teachers and staff; another could foment racial hatred; another could do a strip tease, etc. etc.
To prevent student religious speech the faculty and administration need the power to discipline the speaker. Its called censorship. It puts public schools in an untenable position. If schools censor they violate freedom of speech and religious rights. If the schools don’t censor religious text they face the ACLU lawyers and court costs. It is called a dilemma. The constitution protects the unfettered expression of ideas and religion, yet students are denied the right to express religious topics of any kind.
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IvanK: Most schools being unwilling to allow their students unlimited free speech rights, they tend to review student speeches planned for official school events. If they then pass a speech containing Christian witness they must pass any speech containing any controversial statement or they will probably be found to have violated the Lemon test.

This you can bank on: the schools all have lawyers too, good lawyers who aren't depending on dissents, footnotes or argument from absence* when they give schools legal advice about what speech they can allow at school-sponsored functions.
Most schools want to spend the taxpayers money on education, not endless legal battles.
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IvanK: And for the last time, religious speech, prayer and devotion is not subject to censorship in public schools as long as it meets the same test as any other speech and is not disruptive to the educational purpose of the school. Kids can pray in school pretty much anytime they please; many schools have accomodations for regular Islamic prayer in fact.
Religious speech is a subject censored in public schools.
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IvanK: * One copy, in Arabic, of the Treaty of Tripoli may be missing Article 11. I haven't seen it and if I did see it wouldn't do me any good as I don't read Arabic.
So drop it. As a legal precedent it’s a no-show because the Constitutional Appellate & Supreme Courts and amici have never introduced the Treaty of Tripoli as a fact of U.S. Constitutional Law. Maybe someday they will, but until then the document lacks authority and context so the facts are unclear.
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IvanK: Every copy -- absolutely every one, without exception -- of the Treaty of Tripoli in English contains Article 11 with its statement that the U.S. is in no sense to be considered a Christian nation. Whether that treaty is still valid or not (it is not as it has been superceded), whether it had or has any effect on U.S. policy or not, changes my argument not one whit. The plain English statement that the U.S. was not a Christian nation was endorsed by a unanimous U.S. Senate and signed into effect by the U.S. President without so much as a whisper of dissent from any quarter of the U.S. populace in the 1790s.
The Supreme Court has sole power to interpret the U.S. Constitution. In the mid 20th Century for the first time the Supreme Court interpreted the U.S. Constitution as a secular document. I presented the legal precedents, quoted the arguments of the Justices and demonstrated the inherent conflicts that have arisen between secular doctrines and the First Amendment. When the constitutional courts order (force) government agencies, bureaucracies, organizations, associations and institutions to censor speech, it triggers conflicts that lead back to the courts. This is analogous to “Separate but Equal” doctrine used to interpret the 14th the Amendment in Plessy v. Ferguson by the Supreme Court. Over time Jim Crow Laws and de jure racism gave rise to conflicts that lead back to the courts. Likewise, the Civil War was a conflict that arose from the Dred Scott Decision that denied the blacks race access to the Federal Courts and struck down the Missouri Compromise as unconstitutional. To understand the magnitude of interpreting the U.S. Constitution as a secular document one need only look at the legions of lawyers and resources dedicated solely to re-codification, application and interpretation of the Law. It certainly boggles my mind, Justice Jackson wrote concurring in the Supreme Court decision (1948)
MCCOLLUM V. BOARD OF EDUCATION
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It is idle to pretend that this task is one for which we can find in the Constitution one word to help us as judges to decide where the secular ends and the sectarian [333 U.S. 203 , 238] begins in education. Nor can we find guidance in any other legal source. it is a matter on which we can find no law but our own prepossessions. If with no surer legal guidance we are to take up and decide every variation of this controversy, raised by persons not subject to penalty or tax but who are dissatisfied with the way schools are dealing with the problem, we are likely to have much business of the sort. And, more importantly, we are likely to make the legal 'wall of separation between church and state' as winding as the famous serpentine wall designed by Mr. Jefferson for the University he founded.
That spells it out in plan English. I am always amazed at the untenable positions in which people place themselves. I have to remember its matter of indoctrination and dogmatic fanaticism that overwhelms people on some issues.
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