Until
Wednesday the phrase "America Under Attack" would
most certainly have been used to describe the war on terror.
Now it can be used to describe the actions of the 9th Circuit
Court of Appeals in California.
There, two old men from San Francisco - both in their 70s -
decided that nine Western states can no longer recite the
Pledge of Allegiance in schools because the words "under
God" in the pledge violate the Constitution's clause
barring establishment of religion.
This ruling (Newdow
v. U.S. Congress) will not stand. It is in direct
opposition to written documents of America's founding, and
provides further evidence of unelected judges trying to take
over the country by usurping policymaking authority. (It is
also in conflict with the 7th Circuit in Chicago).
The fundamental question is what the First Amendment's
Establishment Clause means, and it shows how far we've come
from the Founding.
"Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise
thereof..." is clearly written to guard against the
establishment of a state-sponsored religion. The Founders
didn't want America to be a Protestant state.
Remember the Pilgrims came from church repression.
But the court has moved from conventional understanding of
the antiestablishment clause to reading it as an anti-religion
clause.
Essentially the court has developed this idea of a coercive
environment: Little Suzy is gravely affected when others
around her say the pledge, including the phrase, "one
nation...under God."
However the law doesn't normally condition ones behavior on
how it will affect others around them. Instead, we are told to
avert our eyes and turn our heads away from something we find
objectionable.
In Cohen v. California, the Court found that the
words "F--k the Draft" on the back of a war
protester's jacket, worn in a public place, were
constitutionally protected speech. The rights of unwilling
viewers by do not outweigh the speakers. Furthermore, the
Court explained that a viewer, after becoming aware that the
message was offensive, could avert their eyes and avoid
further contact with the "speech."
While some would view this as a great moment for teaching
tolerance and diversity, we are instead relegated to bad
sociology. Religion should be a more highly protected value,
not a lower protected value. At the very least it deserves
equal protection.
Equally disheartening is the partial dissension in the Newdow
case, where the judge wrote that the use of "one Nation
under God" is ok, because its use has "drained [it]
of meaning."
But it does have meaning. In The
Declaration of Independence the Founders write: