Supremes OK Cross on PUBLIC Land!
Posted: Thu Jun 20, 2019 2:34 pm
"The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." (Psalm 19:1)
https://discussions.godandscience.org/
Personally I agree with Ginsburg's dissent. There's just no way that a gigantic cross towering over an intersection can be taken as anything other than an endorsement of ChristianitySure, just as 100,000's of burqua's or hajib's can't be taken as anything other than an endorsement of Islam.
How is a 7-2 ruling "narrow?"Ed: t was a very narrow ruling, though,
Ed, this doesn't mean that just because a monument has a religious meaning, the government is endorsing religion. That's just a ridiculous belief. ALLOWING does not mean endorsing!Ed: It's actually not too bad, considering that the GOP packed the SCOTUS with right wing radical activist judges. Remember when they used to complain bitterly about judicial activism? Yeah, that was BS, too. Anyway, I expect that things will get worse.
The narrowness of the ruling has nothing to do with the vote count. A broad ruling would have said that there's nothing wrong with religious monuments on public land and anybody who wants to can go ahead and buy a cross to put on the roof of their local courthouse. This ruling said that that particular cross could stay because it had historical significance above and beyond its religious significance. In other words, the court said that it would be anti-religious and oppressive for the government to systematically remove every public monument that included religious symbols, but that the court still recognized that there are people in the US who aren't Christians and the government is still secular, so people looking to build new Christian monuments on public property would be wise to reconsider.
Sometimes it doesn't. Often is does.
Those are graves, Phil. The message there is that the person who died was a proponent of whatever faith or tradition is represented on the cross. There are a lot of options other than crosses, mostly because the families of dead service members sued to make it that way.
Phil, you're a member of the privileged majority. You know perfectly well that if there were a free-for-all to fill public spaces with religious symbols the overwhelming majority of them would be Christian. "Good news, everybody, there's now a Ten Commandments statue in every courthouse in America, and all it cost us was a puny star and crescent moon mural in Dearborn. Ha!"
That's a response to this policy:Philip wrote: ↑Fri Jun 21, 2019 11:21 amSometimes we see the extreme other spectrum of what free expression might require: https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/20 ... an-prayer/
She was among the plaintiffs in the lawsuit litigated by the ACLU of Alaska against the borough after it approved a 2016 policy saying that people who wanted to give the invocations at the government body’s meetings had to belong to official organizations with an established presence on the Kenai Peninsula, which lies 75 miles (121 kilometers) south of Anchorage. Other plaintiffs who had been denied permission to give the invocations included an atheist and a Jewish woman.They had it coming. It's also worth noting that the Satanists (most of whom literally don't believe in Satan) only do this stuff in response to the kinds of unconstitutional Christian overreach described above. If the Christians stopped pushing for special privileges and making exclusionary policies then the Satanists, Pastafarians, atheists, and so forth would stop trolling them.