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Legislating Violations of the Constitution (ACLU swills at the public trough)
The Washinton Post ^
| September 30, 2006
| Erwin Chemerinsky
Posted on 10/01/2006 11:07:34 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o
click here to read article
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For decades the taxpayers have been required to pick up the check as the ACLU feasts at the banquet table for performing the following "public services": stopping valedictorians from thanking God in their commencement speech, banning the display of "unconstitutional symbols" such as crosses at memorials for fallen soldiers, and suing school districts for "impermissible" abstinence education.
That's right: they get to blow up the foundations of our culture, and we get to pay for it.
If the U.S. House of Representatives can separate the ACLU guzzlers from the public trough, I'll send a love letter to my Congresscritter.
To: Mrs. Don-o
"unconstitutional symbols on religious property"? Did I read that right?
To: kayak; Chairman_December_19th_Society; Baby Driver; Republicanprofessor; mcvey; JamesP81; ...
3
posted on
10/01/2006 11:16:45 AM PDT
by
Mrs. Don-o
(Mater et Magistra.)
To: squarebarb
That's what the guy said.
4
posted on
10/01/2006 11:17:55 AM PDT
by
Mrs. Don-o
(Mater et Magistra.)
To: Mrs. Don-o
This is one of the biggest shots of the culture war. I hope it kills the intended victim....the ACLU.
5
posted on
10/01/2006 11:18:53 AM PDT
by
jeremiah
(Our military are not "fodder", but fathers and mothers and sons and daughters.)
To: Mrs. Don-o
This is 'journalism'? I wrote better articles than this for my elementary school paper when I was in fifth grade. If I was this guy's editor he'd be fired.
6
posted on
10/01/2006 11:20:05 AM PDT
by
darkangel82
(Higher visibility leads to greater zottability.)
To: Mrs. Don-o
I have two questions:
1. Where in the Constitution does it say the ACLU should be publicly funded? Must be something I missed.
2. Is Professor Erwin Chemerinsky an ACLU member? If so, it should be stated.
7
posted on
10/01/2006 11:21:53 AM PDT
by
BW2221
To: Mrs. Don-o
And Liberals thought Richard Cohen said he was just blowing wind when he said the overuse of hard narcotics is a big problem in the Washington Post newsroom.
Apparantly the practice has spread to the editorial board.
8
posted on
10/01/2006 11:25:27 AM PDT
by
muawiyah
To: darkangel82
If you go to the full article in washingtonpost.com, you'll see the writer is a law professor at Duke (and I would venture to guess an ACLU member).
9
posted on
10/01/2006 11:26:11 AM PDT
by
BW2221
To: Mrs. Don-o
And Liberals thought Richard Cohen was just blowing wind when he said the overuse of hard narcotics is a big problem in the Washington Post newsroom.
Apparantly the practice has spread to the editorial board.
Correction
10
posted on
10/01/2006 11:26:21 AM PDT
by
muawiyah
To: BW2221
Probably is. This guy is a law professor? Ironic, considering how ignorant he is of the Constitution.
11
posted on
10/01/2006 11:30:42 AM PDT
by
darkangel82
(Higher visibility leads to greater zottability.)
To: Mrs. Don-o
he bill has only one purpose: to prevent suits challenging unconstitutional government actions advancing religion. Wrong. It will not prohibit a single lawsuit.
Its purpose is to prevent liberal judges from stealing taxpayers monies to fund the ACLU and rewarding its bullying tactics in seeking to punish and destroy traditional religious faith and ensconcing atheism as the official state religion in violation of the First Amendment.
In short, if the ACLU and its supporters want to continue their brutal assault on the First Amendment, they'll have to do it on their own dime--not the US taxpayer's.
12
posted on
10/01/2006 11:32:43 AM PDT
by
JCEccles
("Islam. No religion demands more of others and less of itself.")
To: darkangel82
Like many liberal judges, the "not-so-good" professor believes the Constitution should mean what he wants it to mean (at any given time).
13
posted on
10/01/2006 11:35:13 AM PDT
by
BW2221
To: Mrs. Don-o
The First Amendment has a Free Exercise Clause as well as an Establishment Clause. The ACLU conveniently forgets that.
To: muawiyah
The mook who wrote this tripe is not on the WAPO editrial board. If you go to the article it states at the end:
Erwin Chemerinsky is the Alston & Bird Professor of Law and Political Science, at Duke University.
I'm also going to take a wild a$$ guess that he's a member in good standing of the ACLU.
15
posted on
10/01/2006 11:37:28 AM PDT
by
Condor51
("Alot" is NOT a word and doesn't mean "many". It is 'a lot', two separate words.)
To: Unam Sanctam
However, this bad law is going to hurt the ACLJ and Thomas Moore Center and other conservative groups who do stand up for free exercise. Just as much as the ACLU and maybe worse.
The law of unintended consequences is going to bite.
16
posted on
10/01/2006 11:46:28 AM PDT
by
thomaswest
(Just curious.)
To: Mrs. Don-o
The only way the aclu "American communist leftover union" uses the Constitution is after they twist it into what they want it to be.
17
posted on
10/01/2006 11:50:53 AM PDT
by
JOE43270
(JOE43270, God Bless America and All Who Have and Will Defend Her.)
To: Condor51
Like you, I suspect he is an ACLU member. If so, the WaPo should have stated so.
18
posted on
10/01/2006 11:51:16 AM PDT
by
BW2221
To: BW2221
Same place that it separates Church and State; "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;"
'Respect' per my W7NCD, a relation to or concern with something usually specified. 'Establishment,' a public or private institution.
19
posted on
10/01/2006 11:54:54 AM PDT
by
dhuffman@awod.com
(The conspiracy of ignorance masquerades as common sense.)
To: thomaswest
I figure lawyers should be paid by the people who they work for.
If the people who they are working for don't want to pay them, it would say something about the quality of the services rendered.
Lawyers are highly paid, and they should only be consulted and their services employed when there is significant harm. If they are paid using the coercive power of the Court when there is not significant harm, the productive powers of the country are stunted, and the treasure of the country is shifted to the pockets of the lawyers. Another name for Tyranny.
20
posted on
10/01/2006 12:18:02 PM PDT
by
donmeaker
(If the sky don't say "Surrender Dorothy!" then my ex wife is out of town.)
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