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God, the Pledge and schools
TownHall.com ^ | Tuesday, June 9, 2002 | by Phyllis Schlafly

Posted on 07/08/2002 11:02:18 PM PDT by JohnHuang2

The atheists overplayed their hand. After their string of victories banning prayer and the Ten Commandments, they must have thought the time was ripe to get rid of God in the Pledge of Allegiance.

But our country simply isn't going to stand for the ridiculous Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling. A Newsweek poll found that a phenomenal 87 percent of Americans support "under God" in the Pledge.

Congress should not wait for the Supreme Court to reverse the Pledge decision. Congress should immediately use its Article III constitutional power to withdraw jurisdiction from the federal courts by passing a law that reads: "Judicial power may not interfere with the peaceful invocation of God." The U.S. Supreme Court decision in the Cleveland school-choice case the same week is being heralded as a turning point in judicial policy toward religiously affiliated schools, but the Pledge of Allegiance decision may turn out to be even more influential. It may galvanize Americans to call a halt to the damage that activist judges have been inflicting for decades.

The Pledge decision came hard on the heels of a media orgy about the 30th anniversary of Watergate. The damage Richard Nixon did to the Constitution in Watergate, however, was minuscule compared to the damage he did in appointing Justice Harry Blackmun of Roe v. Wade (abortion) fame and Alfred T. Goodwin, the Ninth Circuit judge who achieved his Andy Warhol 15 minutes of fame with a decision that brought down the wrath of everyone from Jerry Falwell to Tom Daschle.

The judge apparently didn't remember how the Pledge of Allegiance issue helped to defeat Michael Dukakis in 1988. A typical liberal who shrank from flag-waving symbolism, Dukakis had vetoed a law to require public school teachers to lead the Pledge of Allegiance every morning, and his nose was rubbed in his own stupidity by George Bush the First. The Supreme Court upheld the Cleveland school option plan as "a program of true private choice" even though the big majority of voucher-using parents chose (gasp, gasp) religiously affiliated schools. Some are saying that this is the most important school decision since prayer in schools was banned by Engel v. Vitale in 1962 or even since segregation was banned by Brown v. Board of Education in 1954.

The Cleveland plan is limited to poor children whose parents want them out of some of the worst rated schools in the country. It won't pay tuition for the children of rich liberal Senators who sanctimoniously orate against school choice for poor kids at the same time that they send their own children to expensive private schools. While the ruling in the school voucher case applies only to Cleveland, it can usher in a new era of competition in education. It's a significant rupture in the monopoly that the teachers unions hold over tax-supported elementary and secondary schools.

Competition is the only reform that will improve schools. Throwing good money after bad will not help; the public schools already spend several times more money per student than the schools to which the voucher-using parents are so eager to transfer their children.

Lengthening the school year or reducing class size will not help.

Forcing children into schools at age 3 or 4 will not help. Teaching self-esteem to children who can't read, write or calculate won't help.

In watching the tantrums indulged in by the teachers unions and their allies, such as the National PTA, their principal argument is not First Amendment but financial. They are squealing because school-choice plans divert a tiny fraction of public funds to private schools "that are not accountable to the public." Public schools are currently accountable only to the political bureaucracy that the unions control. Private schools are accountable to the parents who pay the tuition and can withdraw their children if the schooling isn't satisfactory.

In an argument that doesn't pass the laugh test, the teachers unions assert that private schools and their students should pass government tests to assure that their curriculum is of high quality.

"High quality," like the Cleveland public schools where only 10 percent of students can meet the most basic levels of achievement? In a letter to the Economist magazine, American Federation of Teachers president Sandra Feldman boasted that "the official state-mandated study of the Cleveland voucher program ... found that the gains of public-school students were greater than those of voucher students." That's an argument FOR, not against, a school-choice plan because it shows that competition works.

School choice plans actually save public funds because private schools consistently educate students for much less money than the public schools are spending. School choice plans may, however, cause the flow of union dues to fall, and that may be the unions' real objection.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
Tuesday, June 9, 2002

Quote of the Day by YaYa123

1 posted on 07/08/2002 11:02:18 PM PDT by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2

2 posted on 07/09/2002 12:26:45 AM PDT by ppaul
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To: ppaul
Bump!
3 posted on 07/09/2002 12:27:22 AM PDT by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
GOD fearing bump.
4 posted on 07/09/2002 5:21:08 AM PDT by GailA
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To: GailA
All of this about not being able to say the "Pledge of allegiance" is a bunch of BS. In the First Amendment it say's
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Already on public schools they have abolished the free exercise of Prayer. Due to the fact that the atheists do not believe in the one true God. There are many other out there in this world today that do, and say nothing about what is happening and just going with the flow. We are letting those who do not believe in God stand in the way of our faith. Our country the United States of America was founded on the bases of Christianity. Many of the people today think that it is just going to be another law and that they will pray at home and go to church/mass on Sunday. But what we are showing the atheists is that we will take the grieve from them and back down from what we believe in, and sink to the level of the society of today's world. Granted there are many people fighting what these people are saying about our faith. But these atheists have no faith and do not have the right to disgrimiate against ours. For hundreds of years on every school public and or private everyone, believers and or non-believers said the allegiance. But we are letting them stand in the way for what we believe in no matter what religion we are. Now we double and even triple the amount of Atheists that are out there with our faith. And we still can’t manage to keep the fire going within our hearts. A many of us have tried to show them the only way to heaven and many have converted many have not. But we can’t help those who have not. I pray for those who do not believe and for those who do believe not to be embarrassed about their faith and pray no matter where they are. Not thinking what others will think about them. But doing what is right. Taking the Pledge out of schools is against our Amendments for the right of religion. Now I don’t have a problem with the atheists out there, and honestly I don’t care if they say the pledge or not but they have no right to try and stop everyone for saying it just because they don’t believe it is right. And I don’t believe what they are doing is right so does that mean the pledge is back in?
5 posted on 07/09/2002 6:00:48 PM PDT by go_usna
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