Nothing will be resolved here.
1 posted on
12/04/2007 7:56:17 AM PST by
SmithL
To: SmithL
Why don’t they just send it to the Supreme Court? After all, the 9th is going to decide wrong (no matter what they determine) and they are going to be overturned by the Supreme. It’s a well established pattern...why not cut to the chase?
2 posted on
12/04/2007 7:58:41 AM PST by
highlander_UW
(I don't know what my future holds, but I know Who holds my future)
To: SmithL
Michael Newdow I'm so sick of this guy. He has hate in his heart, and wants to spread his misery to all Americans. He's disgraceful.
3 posted on
12/04/2007 7:59:20 AM PST by
MaestroLC
("Let him who wants peace prepare for war."--Vegetius, A.D. Fourth Century)
To: SmithL
This guy just can’t let go of his 15 minutes.. liberals have always reminded me of small children with their attention seeking antics.
4 posted on
12/04/2007 8:00:48 AM PST by
Awestruck
(All the usual suspects)
To: SmithL
Well, San Fransicko is a very fair-minded and tolerant venue to decide this case. Oh, sorry, I was thinking of Jacko getting on with the young boys in his life.
To: SmithL; P-Marlowe; blue-duncan
In God we Trust is on our money and “under God” in our pledge as a reminder that we are endowed by God with our rights. They don’t come to us from the state.
Newdow’s complaint also has no merit because his complaint is essentially that he is dissatisfied with the cultural norms that entail in the culture in which he lives.
There is no one forcing him to change his mind. Obviously, he hasn’t.
Atheism is a doctrine that offers zero hope.
8 posted on
12/04/2007 8:15:39 AM PST by
xzins
(Retired Army Chaplain! True Supporters of Our Troops Support the Necessity of their Sacrifice!)
To: SmithL
"
..the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Newdow lacked standing to sue because he didn't have custody of the daughter on whose behalf he brought the case. He immediately filed a second lawsuit on behalf of three unidentified parents and their children."
Newdow apparently has an incessant case of idiocracies if he can't comprehend a basic similarity of his and his imaginary plaintiffs.
The guy must have a few synapse short circuits and my tag says it all.
9 posted on
12/04/2007 8:16:11 AM PST by
azhenfud
(The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.)
To: SmithL
When I was a kid we were taught in (Catholic) Sunday School that when we were called upon to recite the Protestant version of the Lord's Prayer in school all we had to do was refrain from reciting the "Protestant" part...."for thine is the Kingdom...."
No problem....no fuss....no lawsuits...no disrespect to the Protestants...just don't recite that part.Problem solved.
So if you insist that you kid is to become an atheist just tell him/her not to recite "under God".
11 posted on
12/04/2007 8:24:51 AM PST by
Gay State Conservative
(Wanna see how bad it can get? Elect Hillary and find out.)
To: SmithL
In 2005, a federal judge in Sacramento found in favor of Newdow, ruling the pledge was unconstitutional because its reference to "one nation under God" violates children's rights to be "free from a coercive requirement to affirm God." I must have been asleep when this amendment was added to the Constitution. The 60 year slide to Judicial tyranny continues.
14 posted on
12/04/2007 8:43:06 AM PST by
Jacquerie
(The United States of America - Once a republic.)
To: SmithL
Newdow obviously has way too much time on his hands.
17 posted on
12/04/2007 10:10:40 AM PST by
k omalley
(Caro Enim Mea, Vere est Cibus, et Sanguis Meus, Vere est Potus)
To: SmithL
Paging Mr. Gramsci. Paging Mr. Antonio Gramsci. Please pick up the red courtesy telephone to talk to your fellow travelers about their long march through the institutions. Paging Mr. Gramsci.
19 posted on
12/04/2007 10:18:00 AM PST by
redpoll
To: SmithL
The 9th Circuit, the most reversed in history, should have been split into two different districts as a foundation called for.They are filled with lefty nutcases. They will outlaw God, Santa, the Const. if they get a chance. That is how inane they really are.
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