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I Pledge Allegiance to the flag
of the United States of America
and to the Republic for which it stands,
one Nation under God,
indivisible,
with liberty
and justice for all.
WHEN in the Course of human Events, it becomes necessary for one People to dissolve the Political Bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the Powers of the Earth, the separate and equal Station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent Respect to the Opinions of Mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the Separation.
bikkle wrote:cstaylor wrote:Then have Congress remove the line.
That's exactly what this ruling does. Are you sure you're not coming down with a case of not-reading-the-link-itis?
No, it doesn't work that way. The court can't make law, so it's not saying, "You can remove this line".
kamome wrote:Regardless, what the court here has done is, as ultra said, overturning a provision of the 1954 act on the basis of its specious constitutionality. If you want to call that "law making", there could be a valid argument there, but it is within the court's jurisdiction to do so. See Marbury v. Madison.
kamome wrote:Since when do the courts not make law? There is something called the common law, which is basically the patchwork of judge-made laws upon which statutes are written to plug the holes/rewrite judge-made law. Law in the US comes from various sources, including the courts, the legislatures, and agencies.
A federal appeals court ruled Wednesday that the Pledge of Allegiance is an unconstitutional endorsement of religion and cannot be recited in schools.
The court said the phrase violates the so-called Establishment Clause in the Constitution that requires a separation of church and state.
I agree with Marshall: the court's job is to reign in the legislature from making laws that are unconstitutional. That's not the same as making law (IMO).
Except what if they teach it in Civics class?
What's next? Rewrite of the Declaration of Indepedence?
Thanks to Kamome for the insight into the matter....I only wish I'd read it before I put up that last post.
kamome wrote:Except what if they teach it in Civics class?
I'm not sure I understand the question.
...and to assume among the Powers of the Earth, the separate and equal Station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent Respect to the Opinions of Mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the Separation.
bikkle wrote:And who started this one, kimosabe?cstaylor wrote:Oh man, not another contest of dueling dictionaries...
One of the nice things about "living in America" is that you can say things like this without getting strung up or run over by tanks. Why is that so? Some old white guys over 200 years ago thought it would be a nice idea if you could speak your mind without being thrown in prison and tried without appearing before court (some of the inalienable rights you have as an American).guitaranthony wrote:People who are stupid enough to get into nationilistic things such as a pledge of allegiance, or anything like that is stupid in the first place. I'm not an american i just live here
Here it is: Separation of Church and State. Children in public school. They are asked to read the Declaration of Independence in civics class. It has the word "God" in it, in fact, it has it more plainly than the pledge
With the current anti-terrorism legislation, it certainly does seem silly to say we all have "liberty and justice". You're a suspect? Habeas Corpus, what's that?kamome wrote:To me, the entire idea of reciting a pledge in school is basically thinly veiled indoctrination/brainwashing of children. It's also a prayer to the State apparatus: "I pledge allegiance...to the Republic....". This republic that is America is one nation under god? With liberty and justice FOR ALL? What a load of highfalutin crap--since when was there liberty and justice for all in the "divine" United States?
If it's taught in school, it's subject to Church and State separation. Were you taught the Declaration of Independence in school? I was, and you can't honestly discuss the Declaration in depth without touching on Natural Law (which supposes a creator, Christian or not).
Look, I said that the beginning of this thread that I think schools should be working on studying the three-R's instead of wasting time reciting a poem. I just worry that this will be the first move to removing other more important things from the schools.
With the current anti-terrorism legislation, it certainly does seem silly to say we all have "liberty and justice".
kamome wrote:We're talking about this ruling, right? Under the RULING, studying the Declaration in a classroom doesn't suddenly become a violation of church and state, even though the word God is mentioned in the document. Why? Because simply having the word in front of you or discussing natural law as the philosophical underpinnings of the Declaration doesn't automatically create a First Amendment violation.
The Lemon v. Kurtzman test will still be applied to church-state cases as it was before (Lemon was the Supreme Court decision that established a 3-prong test for determining when a government regulation abridges the Establishment clause). I believe you could even incorporate the New Testament as a subject of study in a public school literary, history, or comparative religions course. It all depends on the focus of the course of study, how it is presented, the mandatory nature of the course, etc.
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