A federal district court in San Francisco has ruled that reciting the Pledge of Allegiance in public schools is unconstitutional.
U.S. District Judge Lawrence Karlton ruled that the pledge's reference to one nation
"under God" violates school children's right to be "free from a coercive requirement to affirm God." Karlton said he was bound by 2002 precedent of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Your Senators could have stopped this nonsense last year but they failed to act. In 2004, the House of Representatives passed a bill that would have prohibited liberal judges from ruling on issues involving the pledge, but failed because the bill died in U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee.
S. 1046 The Pledge Protection Act of 2005 has been introduced in the U.S. Senate. Let's not let this happen again! S.1046 - The Pledge Protection Act of 2005 - reads as follows:
‘No court created by Act of Congress shall have any jurisdiction, and the Supreme Court shall have no appellate jurisdiction, to hear or decide any question pertaining to the interpretation of, or the validity under the Constitution of, the Pledge of Allegiance, as defined in section 4 of title 4, or its recitation.'
By exercising the authority of Congress to regulate the jurisdiction of federal courts, the Pledge Protection Act will do more than express an affirmation by Congress that the Pledge is
constitutional. It will rein in a renegade judiciary that has confused the freedom for religion with freedom from religion. Email Your Senators Now! If your Senator is already
a co-sponsor, be sure to thank him or her for supporting this vital legislation.
If not, urge your Senator to sign on as a sponsor S.1046 - The Pledge Protection Act of 2005.
Click Here To Email Your Senators Now!
Interesting article is it not? Having a great interest in this topic, I took a bit of time to look into this issue.
1. Acclaimed atheist Michael Newdow is coming before the Supreme Court to attempt to take “under God” out of the pledge of Allegiance.
Note: Mr. Newdow doesn’t even have custody of this daughter, his wife does, and his wife wants her to recite the pledge.
2. Mr. Newdow is under the false impression that his daughter’s hearing the pledge forces “God” on her. Please view this FAQ from one of Oklahoma’s representatives, Congressman Istook.
Question:
So I’m a school student; a fellow student wants to say a prayer over the intercom and I don’t want to hear it. Or, I’m a parent and I don’t want my children to hear it. Are my children protected? Where do they go? Do they have to leave the room? Don’t they have the same rights as those saying the prayer in that room?
Answer:
The parent is making two incorrect assumptions in this scenario. The first is an underlying assumption that hearing a prayer, or expression from one religion, is inherently harmful or unconstitutional. The second error is that the amendment would somehow DICTATE prayer. This amendment does not mandate prayer. It expressly prohibits such a command.
The Constitution never guaranteed to protect us from hearing something with which we disagree. Students (and others) who engage in religious expression should no longer be singled out for censorship. Our religious rights should not be lost when we set foot on
public property. Everyone remains under the Equal Protection clause of the Constitution. This amendment does not remove that, nor the ban on establishing an official religion. We will always support and keep those protections.
3. Someone’s morality will be enforced. I feel this cannot be stressed enough. I heard just the other day that Planned Parenthood or some such organization was attempting through a court case to force a Christian hospital to conduct abortions. This is a prime example, someone’s morality will be enforced. If you are driving down the road at 100 miles per hour and the policeman stops you, he is enforcing his beliefs (rules made by the government) on you. If you take “under God” out of the Pledge of Allegiance you are suppressing religion. I have heard argument after argument saying just make education neutral, don’t put anything in there controversial, and just state the facts. Well, I want to see public school curriculum state the facts about our founders and the greatest men of our nation. I want public schools to return Washington’s Farewell Address to the textbooks.(Where it once stood quite well, I might add) I would like schoolchildren to read this quote from that great speech:
Of all the dispositions and habits, which lead to political prosperity, Religion and Morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man claim the tribute of Patriotism, who should labor to subvert these great pillars of human happiness, these firmest props of the duties of Men and Citizens. The mere Politician, equally with the pious man, ought to respect and to cherish them. A volume could not trace all their connexions with private and public felicity. Let it simply be asked, Where is the security for property, for reputation, for life, if the sense of religious obligation desert the oaths, which are the instruments of investigation in Courts of Justice? And let us with caution indulge the supposition, that morality can be maintained without religion. Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds of peculiar structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect, that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle.
I think that if America’s education was reformed we would laugh these crazy cases out of court. Even Justice Sandra Day O’Conner recognized this fact:
It is unsurprising that a nation founded by religious refugees and dedicated to religious freedom should find references to divinity in its symbols, songs, mottoes and oaths. Eradicating such references would sever ties to a history that sustains this Nation even today.
Amen, Mrs. O’Conner. Amen.
You know, the thing I wonder is just why this Michael Newdow is able to get all these cases to Federal courts. Is he independently wealthy, or is someone… like the ACLU… funding this scumbag?
To me, the fact that the courts will even take this guy’s case, when he doesn’t have custody of the child, and the mother wants her to recite the Pledge, shows how corrupt the courts are. This guy would be better off digging ditches somewhere in the hot sun than stirring up trouble in the courts of the country.
I agree completely S.A.
His legal footing is shaky at best, but here he goes on a crusade to pull “God” out of the pledge. Let’s pray that the Roberts Supreme Court will not give this case a second thought.
Travis
Very well written article Travis! I agree 100%, Love that quote by O’Conner, where did you find it?
Thanks Elizabeth! Um…I’m not sure where I found that quote at this point. :-(