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Ala. Judge Loses Ten Commandments Appeal
Washington Post ^ | July 1, 2003 | Associated Press

Posted on 07/01/2003 2:47:12 PM PDT by Lurking Libertarian

ATLANTA - A federal appeals court ruled Tuesday that a Ten Commandments monument the size of a washing machine must be removed from the Alabama Supreme Court building.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously affirmed a ruling by a federal judge who said that the 2 1/2-ton granite monument, placed there by Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore, violates the constitutional separation of church and state.

[snip]

Moore put the monument in the rotunda of the courthouse in the middle of the night two summers ago. The monument features tablets bearing the Ten Commandments and historical quotations about the place of God in law.

[click link to read remainder of article]

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...


TOPICS: Breaking News; Constitution/Conservatism; Front Page News; US: Alabama
KEYWORDS: churchandstate; roymoore; tencommandments
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To: lugsoul
First - the opinions you reference on prayer are about leading others in prayer - not the right of a person to pray. You can't find a single decision that prohibits a citizen from praying.

Answer me this: If a football coach leads his students in prayer, does that constitute an endorsement by the state of Christianity? This is common sense stuff here (don't expect liberal elitists snobs in black robes to have common sense).

First - the opinions you reference on prayer are about leading others in prayer - not the right of a person to pray. You can't find a single decision that prohibits a citizen from praying.

Wrong. Moore hasn't tried to force his Prostestantism on anyone. He merely posted the 10 commandments. So, go remove decalogue from the Supreme Court forthwith or admit that the ruling is schizoid. There is no avoiding it.

Third - As I have said above, ad nauseum - I agree that those Commandments relating to our conduct toward others are a foundation of moral and civil law. But Nos. 1-4? Are they the foundation of all law? If so, whose God is the one true God? Whose Sabbath must be observed under the law? Is the Catholic view, the Protestant view, or the Jewish view of graven images controlling? What about those citizens who don't subscribe to any of those?

The D of I certainly recognized God's ultimate moral authority - the Christian God. That is clear from thefounders' writings. Commandments 1-4 have to do with man's relationship to God, and 5-10 have to do with man's relationship with other people. Clearly, one cannot enforce 1-4 - these are matters of conscience between a person and God. Therefore, logic and practicality and common sense dictate that our laws must be concerned with the behavior of people as it affects other people. Remember, the purpose of govt is to secure our rights - right to life, liberty, etc. Can you deny that murder is wrong, than stealing is wrong, that lying is wrong, that adultery is wrong? By the way, there were blasphemy laws in our early republic.

461 posted on 07/02/2003 10:28:24 AM PDT by exmarine
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To: inquest
From a purely logical standpoint, the court could have ruled that government should be sterilized from any reference to religion. Stamping "In God We Trust" on all money certainly could look like an official endorsement of religion by the government, especially to those who emphatically don't trust in God.

But this court went out of its way to make clear that it didn't view that and other cited examples as violating the Constitution. Not that it could have, since this court can hardly overrule the Supreme Court.

What seemed to impress this court about this monument was the "in your face" aspect of it. The bigger and more blatant the endorsement of religion (as well as the newness of it), the more likely it's going to be found in violation of the establishment clause.

That seems like a fairly common sense standard to apply, which is why I disagreed with you on that particular point.

462 posted on 07/02/2003 10:33:13 AM PDT by Dog Gone
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To: lugsoul
Read the opinion. When the judge who puts them there - the Chief Justice - does so expressly to exalt his version of Christianity above all other faiths, and refuses to allow other expressions of faith in the same manner, then YES, it most certainly does.

Again, who are you kidding? There have been other rulings pulling down 10 commandments (Kentucky for example). Are you going to assert that anywhere the 10 commandments are posted it is related to the attempted establishment of a state religion? Let's not obfuscate the intent of these judges - they are looking for an excuse to stamp God out the public square anywhere they find it.

463 posted on 07/02/2003 10:33:38 AM PDT by exmarine
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To: Catspaw
Look, all of these Ten Commandment monuments and plaques have one thing in common: They're not the 10 commandments! They're a very condensed version, extremely condensed in fact. If someone hasn't read the real version in awhile they're an eye opener.
464 posted on 07/02/2003 10:36:36 AM PDT by ReaganWarrior
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To: exmarine
Obviously you haven't read it, but you criticize it freely. This same court, just two weeks ago, upheld the right of a court in Georgia to have the Ten Commandments on its seal.

It is a wonder that you are so quick to criticize a decision you clearly know little about.

465 posted on 07/02/2003 10:38:50 AM PDT by lugsoul
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To: Catspaw
Funny, if you asked Madison, Hamilton, Washington, Jay those same questionsl, they would all answer the same way as Moore!
466 posted on 07/02/2003 10:40:20 AM PDT by exmarine
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To: exmarine
"Clearly, one cannot enforce 1-4 - these are matters of conscience between a person and God."

Ever heard of a blue law?

467 posted on 07/02/2003 10:41:46 AM PDT by lugsoul
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To: Catspaw
Since the Supreme Court has the 10 commandments emblazoned on it, I say we should call for an inquiry as to why they are there. Was Congress and the sculptor attempting to establish a state religion? These rulings are so contradictory, inconsistent and szhizoid, that it is plain to anyone who cares that ideology, not law, is behind these rulings. How many judges on the court are members of the ACLU, and how many lawyers to sue in these cases are members of the ACLU (American Communist Leftists Union)?
468 posted on 07/02/2003 10:43:37 AM PDT by exmarine
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To: exmarine
You clearly haven't read Moore's own testimony, or his own decisions. He expressly chose this version of the Commandments because it came from the Bible HE recognizes - quite different from the Catholic version, for example.

Look, rant and rave all you want about a decision you haven't read and don't understand. It is useless to debate it if all you do is make general statements that do not reflect what these judges did.

Finally, one thing should be clear. A bunch of people here continually reference the Declaration of Independence. I love the Declaration of Independence. But it is NOT THE LAW.

469 posted on 07/02/2003 10:45:16 AM PDT by lugsoul
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To: exmarine
Since the Supreme Court has the 10 commandments emblazoned on it, I say we should call for an inquiry as to why they are there. Was Congress and the sculptor attempting to establish a state religion?

If you would bother to read the case, this court addressed that very question.

470 posted on 07/02/2003 10:45:29 AM PDT by Dog Gone
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To: lugsoul
I can see the rulings in other cases, and hear their rhetoric, and I know the god-hating bent of the people behind the "separation" doctrine. They want to erase our Christian heritage. I will fight to the death before I let them do that. I will DEFY these godless amoral morons. It's time to take America back.
471 posted on 07/02/2003 10:45:51 AM PDT by exmarine
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To: exmarine
Would you prefer that the Supreme Court (and the appellate courts) be prohibited from ruling on this aspect of the 1st amendment and leave that to Christian ministers?
472 posted on 07/02/2003 10:47:34 AM PDT by Catspaw
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To: lugsoul
Finally, one thing should be clear. A bunch of people here continually reference the Declaration of Independence. I love the Declaration of Independence. But it is NOT THE LAW.

Anyone who knows the true history of our nation (and hasn't been indoctrinated in liberal lying revisionist history - you know the govt. school version that says our founders were deists and that our nation is not founded on Christian moral principles), knows that the Constitution was written to secure the rights declared in the Decl. of Independence. One is a declaration of moral principle, the other is the legal instrument that secures those rights.

473 posted on 07/02/2003 10:49:51 AM PDT by exmarine
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To: Dog Gone; exmarine
If you would bother to read the case, this court addressed that very question.

That'd be section V. If one bothers to read the case, that is. It's towards the end, so it may be a struggle to reach that point.

474 posted on 07/02/2003 10:53:46 AM PDT by Catspaw
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To: exmarine
Quite a rant. "I don't know what these judges did, but I heard some other judges were attacking Christians so these judges are godless morons."

Yep, that makes a lot of sense.

I'm sure you'd be surprised to know that these three judges are all good Christian Southern men. But you'll probably just say it ain't true 'cause they're godless and then call them some names.

Why not just read what they ruled before you go off on them?

Let me ask you a question. When you were a Marine, weren't you required to obey orders? And were you allowed to decide for yourself whether those orders were consistent with the Marine code of conduct, the Constitution, or anything else? Or did you just have to follow them, as your duty?

Think about that, read the opinion, and get back to us.

475 posted on 07/02/2003 10:55:10 AM PDT by lugsoul
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To: Catspaw
I think it would make a lot of people on this thread happy if we just repeal the 1st Amendment.

Either that, or we could amend it to read

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, except for the one (insert name of poster) personally prefers, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;

476 posted on 07/02/2003 10:56:28 AM PDT by Dog Gone
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To: lugsoul
The real culprit here is the failure of the Reagan-Bush administrations to insist on only conservative judges for the higher and lower federal courts. We will reap the horrors of the treacherous O'Connor, Kennedy, Souter, and their clones for years to come.
477 posted on 07/02/2003 10:57:10 AM PDT by Theodore R.
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To: Catspaw
I say that most of the justices on today's SCOTUS aren't fit to be judges. They rule based on fiat like the POLITBURO. They are turning America into an oligarchy - or worse. They make a rulings that conform to their ideology (don't try to say they don't) and not the intent of the framers. If the Constitution is a living breathing document subject to change according to social and ideological norms, as I believe at least 5 of the 9 justices believe, then so your God-given rights are also subject to change by the POLITBURO. One cannot logically maintain that constitutional law is governed by changing social/cultural norms and simultaneously hold to any unchanging absolute moral principles.
478 posted on 07/02/2003 10:57:40 AM PDT by exmarine
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To: Theodore R.
There is no culprit in this decision. It is correct. If you've read it, point to something in it that is incorrect. If you haven't, you've no room to say it is wrong.
479 posted on 07/02/2003 10:58:26 AM PDT by lugsoul
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To: Dog Gone
What seemed to impress this court about this monument was the "in your face" aspect of it. The bigger and more blatant the endorsement of religion (as well as the newness of it), the more likely it's going to be found in violation of the establishment clause.

10 X 0 = 0. If there's no constitutional violation in the expression of a particular belief, then expressing it louder isn't going to create a violation. The court is simply making up the law as it goes, not applying it impartially. It's the typical pattern with activist judges. There's no rhyme or reason to the way they rule; they just find one or two aspects of the case before them that they can latch onto, and then pretend that they've discovered a legal principle. Except it's missing the most important ingredient - PRINCIPLE!

In all their pseudolegalistic attempts at justification, one simple fact stands out: Nobody's rights were being violated. Now they may have imagined that their rights might be violated as a result of this particular expression, but until they can show that they actually are being violated, they don't have a legitimate case.

480 posted on 07/02/2003 10:58:53 AM PDT by inquest
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