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03-11-2003, 09:03 PM | #1 |
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On line resources?
I may have asked this in a long previous post, but is there a good resource out there of law review/history journal articles on the Establishment Clause? I have suggested to the ACLU and the Christian Legal Society a cooperative venture to provide such a resource. Constitution.org has such a site with connections to articles on the Second Amendment with both sides well represented. I think that honest students of the Establishment Clause would appreciate such a resource. Most of the law review articles I have found require membership in some type of subscription service, which mostly locks out the general public.
{edited by Toto to fix URL} |
03-12-2003, 11:10 AM | #2 |
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The volume of writing on the Establishment Clause is orders of magnitudes greater that the writing on the Second Amendment, so I think that an on-line library would be a major undertaking.
The Internet Infidels maintains a page on CS Separation: http://www.infidels.org/library/mode...te/index.shtml but somehow it omits the best resource on the issue: http://members.tripod.com/~candst/ While this page is a partisan effort to combat the religious right, it is well researched and accurate as far as I have seen. I do not know of a similarly accurate on-line source that supports the neo-conservative views which have been published recently by revisionists, but there may be one. (I assume we all agree that David Barton is not worth considering.) You can also search Findlaw for articles. |
03-12-2003, 12:07 PM | #3 |
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People for the American Way, the FFRF, and positiveathesim.org are also excellent online resources for CSS issues.
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03-12-2003, 12:20 PM | #4 |
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03-13-2003, 08:16 PM | #5 |
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Toto, thanks for the URL fix. I don't know what I'm doing wrong when I try to enter one of those.
Thanks to you all for the websites. Though I was also hoping for some conservative resources, the ones provided were excellent, especially the tripod site, which I had saved in my IE Favorites. |
03-13-2003, 09:08 PM | #6 |
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When you use the "http://" button to construct your URL, it is the reverse of the old uBB software. It used to be that you pasted or typed in your URL, then hit enter, then typed in the page name, and you had yourself a hotlink. Now when you use vBB, you have to type in the web page name first, then the URL.
As to why there are no conservative web sites detailing the neo-conservative views, a real paranoid might think that the religious right wants to hide those views until they have their Federalist judges in positions of power, like Estrada. But you might find some material at The Rutherford Institution or The Becket Fund |
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