Posted on 08/21/2003 8:33:17 AM PDT by rwfromkansas
Edited on 04/22/2004 12:37:00 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
MONTGOMERY, Ala.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
1969 Tinker v. Des Moines
1971 U.S. v. New York Times The Pentagon Papers
1975 O'Connor v. Donaldson
1978 Smith v. Collin
1992 R.A.V. v. Wisconsin
1995 Lebron v. Amtrak
Only at length could I explain why I think each of these cases were wrongly decided. In many cases, it has to do with the failure to distinguish between public and private spheres of conduct. In others, it has to do with the right of a community or state to promulgate laws for rational purposes (for example - to allow peaceful assembly on common sites and prevent violence likely to be incited by certain expressions otherwise protected by free speech rights). In the Pentagon Papers case, national security was recklessly breached and people's lives endangered in the name of free speech, which is not and never has been an absolute right, even in a society as blessedly free as ours. Many of the rights that we enjoy result from the ability of our government to protect us against enemies foreign and domestic, and that sometimes results in limitations on individual action and/or expression. The limits to such intrusion are codified in the Constitution as a whole, which exists exclusive of, and not dependent on the Bill of Rights.
Associate justices overrule Moore, vote to comply with order
By BOB JOHNSON
The Associated Press
8/21/2003, 10:41 a.m. CT
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -- The eight associate justices overruled Chief Justice Roy Moore on Thursday and directed that his Ten Commandments monument be removed from its public site in the Alabama Judicial Building.
A federal judge has ruled the monument violates the constitution's ban on government promotion of religion and must be removed from its public place in the rotunda. He set a Thursday deadline, but Moore said he would not move it.
The associate justices wrote that they are "bound by solemn oath to follow the law, whether they agree or disagree with it."
The monument was briefly walled off from public view Thursday as the federal court deadline passed for the marker to be out of public sight. Then the plywood-like wall came down, displaying the monument again.
Houston said the building manager may have put up the partition in order for the state to be in compliance until the associate justices made a decision. Their seven-page order, signed by all eight, was issued about 10 a.m. The partition had blocked public view of the monument from about 6:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m.
Moore's spokesman, Tom Parker, said Moore was out of town for a family funeral but decided to return to Montgomery when he learned the monument had been walled from public view.
"This is an example of what is happening in this country: the acknowledgment of God as the moral foundation of law in this nation is being hidden from us," Moore said in a statement issued by Parker.
U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson had set a Thursday deadline for Moore's monument to be removed outright or moved to a private part of the judicial building.
Late Wednesday afternoon, the U.S. Supreme Court had rejected Moore's emergency plea for a stay of the federal court order, declining for the time being to be drawn into a dispute over whether the monument violates the Constitution's ban on government promotion of religion.
Richard Cohen, an attorney for plaintiffs, said a motion was filed Thursday morning with Thompson asking that Moore be held in contempt for not removing the monument. Thompson, who had threatened $5,000-a-day fines against the state, is expected to consider the contempt motion Friday, but it might be moot if the monument is in compliance.
"This just shows what an extremist Roy Moore is, than all eight of the other justices are refusing to stand with him," said plaintiff's attorney Ayesha Khan. "We applaud the efforts of the other justices to obey the rule of law. It's a far more patriotic act to obey the constitution and the federal courts than to do what Justice Moore has done."
The monument has not bee viewed as a partisan issue. Moore is a Republican; seven of the eight associate justices also are Republicans.
Dozens of Moore supporters remained outside the building Thursday morning, kneeling in prayer. Several hundred had gathered earlier for a rally. Supporters had sung and prayed outside the building throughout the day Wednesday as those inside were removed from the rotunda in handcuffs when they refused to leave voluntarily.
A total of 21 protesters were arrested and taken to the Montgomery County Jail, where they were charged with trespassing. Most were released on their recognizance.
Stephen Hopkins, pastor of Burnet Bible Church in Burnet, Texas, was one of the 21 people arrested Wednesday night. He said he was willing to be arrested even though he has 10 children.
"This is a great hypocrisy," Hopkins said. "This is an assault on God. They're saying we're going to cover up God."
Patrick Mahoney, the demonstration organizer who is director of the Christian Defense Coalition, called the partition put up briefly Thursday morning "the Berlin Wall of religious tyranny."
During Wednesday night's rally, former presidential candidate Alan Keyes delivered a fiery speech, saying the efforts of courts and government to stifle religion must end.
"This must end or freedom will end with it," Keyes said. "No longer can we tolerate this crime that is being done against our movement for almighty God."
Moore, who installed the monument in the rotunda of the judicial building two years ago in the middle of the night, said in a statement that he does not consider the case over. He said he still plans to appeal to the Supreme Court on the merits of the case.
"The U.S. Supreme Court's denial of a stay today will not deter me from continuing to fight for the right of our state to acknowledge God," Moore said in the statement.
The Supreme Court has never ruled on the constitutionality of such indoor and outdoor government displays. In 1980, the court barred Ten Commandments from classroom walls in public schools.
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According to this story, the courthouse is closed to walk-in traffic until August 25:
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No, that should be written, "...endorsing the lower court's decision..."
It's really tough to believe that 7 of 9 SCOTUS members were appointed by Republicans.
That must be it! It couldn't posibly be the ACLU's radical left-wing agenda.
It is quite true that ConsistentLibertarian chose very old cases for the most part. What he ignores is the thousands of "cases" in which poor schools or organizations are threatened with financial ruin into settling with the ACLU for lack of resources to even get to court. We are all aware of these cases. It is a long time since Skokie. They simply are NEVER on the side of anyone not representing an extreme-left viewpoint or countercultural position.
The ACLU would NEVER EVER have intervened in the California State recall effort had Pete Wilson been the target. Can anyone dispute this? They are a purely left-wing group with a jihadist agenda to undermine traditional American values, and to create new "rights" for Marxist-supported groups which were never enumerated in the Constitution.
I couldn't agree with you more. Those ACLU a55h0les are one ignorant bunch of self-centered, socialist jerks. Why does it always take FR to lead the masses out of darkness and toward the light of truth?
That doesn't mean that God has no interest in our government institutions. Far from it - he established them (Romans 13.) His kingdom does not gain it's power from worldly sources. Yet He is intensely interested in our world.
Not buying it. "No preference in law" means no preference in law. Justice Moore has no authority to pass any laws, or to even administer the laws outside of an actual case or controversy before him in court, therefore his action cannot possibly be considered to partake in any way of the authority of law.
Now, you tell me. If the Alabama Legislature passes the following law, does it pass constitutional muster:
The State of Alabama hereby declares that the Christian God is sovereign over all laws of the State and each citizen of the State, and that this sovereignty shall be recognized by the erection of a large monument in the rotunda of the Judicial Building, to remind all citizens of Alabama and all litigants in its courts that the Christian God is the source of all legal authority in this State. The display of non-Christian or secular sources of law alongside the monument is expressly prohibited.
Well, it would satisfy the first criterion in the prohibition - namely, that it's an actual law - but then it's a dead end from there. Such a law is not granting preference to a particular organization ("sect, society, denomination") nor to a particular mode - that is, method - of worship.
Article I, Section 3 of the Alabama Constitution of 1901"
Bears repeating.
Yes it does.
There is a huge difference between the government establishing a religion and forcing it down everyone's throat under penalty of imprisonment, and the recognition of religions.
To be consistent, the next step by the ACLU will be to keep the government from giving special tax exemption to churches/religions and keep the rest of us from receiving tax deductions from giving charity to churches.
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