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05-06-2003, 03:47 AM | #1 | |
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Penny for your thoughts, dollar for your prayer?
Judge awards $1 in school prayer case
http://www.cnn.com/2003/LAW/05/05/sc....ap/index.html Quote:
And this story implies that she was allowed to use the PA system. Unless I'm reading it wrong. I'm confused. Can someone help? Thanks. |
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05-06-2003, 04:07 AM | #2 |
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I'm a bit confused by that as well...
Her constitutional rights were not violated -- she was not prohibited from praying. She was only prohibited from pushing her religion on others through the use of the PA system. The court should have charged her for the taxpayer money she wasted. |
05-06-2003, 07:03 AM | #3 |
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Much like a neutered dog, I don't get it. Too little information is often every bit as useless as no information at all, and this AP story bears that out rather nicely.
The history of this particular school district's policy on prayer before football games, along with the Supreme Court's reasons for finding the final version of that policy unconstitutional, can be found in Santa Fe Independent Sch. Dist. v. Roe. It's just a guess, but I suspect that at the time this student filed suit there was a federal court of appeals decision in effect holding that the prayer policy violated the Establishment Clause. It looks like the district changed its policy to comport with the court of appeals ruling, and that the change in policy prompted this kid's lawsuit. A restraining order can be crafted to do almost anything, so the use of that term in the article doesn't come as a big surprise. However, given the status of the Santa Fe litigation at that time, how this girl's lawyers managed to persuade the judge to issue an order of the sort described in the article is a complete friggin' mystery. It's also tough to see how the plaintiff is entitled to an award of nominal damages plus attorney fees (no doubt a sizeable chunk o' change after all this time) considering that the Supreme Court ultimately vindicated the complained-of policy change. |
05-06-2003, 08:29 AM | #5 | |
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