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Friday, February 20, 2009
Ken Klukowski :: Townhall.com Columnist
God Save America from Militant Atheists
by Ken Klukowski
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On Feb. 23, a federal court will consider the latest attempt to secularize America, led by militant atheist lawyer Michael Newdow. His lawsuit, Newdow v. Roberts, seeks to purge all references to God from presidential inaugurations.

It's the latest assault on people of faith in America, with the goal of creating a purely secular society, and it will only get worse if President Obama fulfills his promise to recreate the Supreme Court.

Although originally filed to affect the 2009 inauguration, this suit now targets 2013 and beyond. Newdow v. Roberts seeks two changes to the ceremony. First, it seeks a court order forbidding the chief justice from saying "so help me God" as he administers the oath of office. Second, it seeks an order forbidding both prayers during the ceremony: the invocation and the benediction. Newdow's suit claims that these actions violate the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.

The suit includes atheist plaintiffs from several states, and several aggressive organizations such as the Freedom From Religion Foundation. That's the group that posted a sign next to holiday displays in the Washington State Capitol last year saying there is no such thing as God or Heaven, and that religion enslaves minds. And plaintiff Newdow is the lawyer who tried to have the Pledge of Allegiance declared unconstitutional because it includes the words "one nation under God."

For 20 years, the Supreme Court has usually applied the "endorsement test" in Establishment Clause cases, asking whether the challenged government action gives the appearance that government endorses a particular faith. Newdow alleges that the inaugural events convey such an endorsement.

But his argument fails for three reasons. First, the endorsement test allows for "ceremonial deism," which the Court describes as solemnizing rituals at public events, or generic words of faith such as "In God We Trust" on currency. The generic religiosity of "so help me God" or prayers asking for national blessing fall within this category.

Second, the endorsement test is probably no longer the rule. Moderate former Justice Sandra Day O'Connor was long the fifth vote on the nine-member Supreme Court for the endorsement test. The Court's four conservatives, and the Court's one moderate, Anthony Kennedy, reject the test. Justice Kennedy instead argues for the more faith-friendly coercion test, which asks whether observers of the religious action feel coerced to lend their support to it. Justice Kennedy's writings make clear that he would not consider the inaugural actions coercive, and since he is now the swing vote on the Court, his test probably will be the new general rule. Continued...

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About The Author
Ken Klukowski is a fellow and senior legal analyst with the American Civil Rights Union.
 
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Donjindra
"The diagram is not the universe. It's a simple algorithm. But if you refer to it you must flip it 180 degrees. IOW, you're looking at it wrong, making time run backwards"

Of course I know that diagram is not the universe, but it is a useful tool to show the cause/ effect principle

The second law of thermodynamics states that entropy increases in a closed system, chaos increases- energy degreases. Since chaos increases, the diagram makes sence. More disorder and less energy leads to trillions upon trillions of events- decreasing in energy down the chart. The big bang had a huge amount of energy- so the big bang(caused by God) caused lots of events- all with less energy than the big bang. Those, in turn, caused more events with less energy than them. The graph is the right way around.

Ok, here is another thing for you to think about. Since objects in the universe are dependent on a cause- think not about the cause of how they exisit, but instead think about the cause of WHY they exist. What is the cause for their existance? Why does are universe have something instead of nothing? Again, the need for a cause does nessisarily apply to physical objects, but does not nessisarily apply to God- of who is a nessisarily existing being by his definition.

Nathan C.
"Correct, there are millions upon millions of causes. Two causes can lead into one effect, but everything eventually would taper back to an intial cause. again, look at the chatoic bifrication diagram...."

The diagram is not the universe. It's a simple algorithm. But if you refer to it you must flip it 180 degrees. IOW, you're looking at it wrong, making time run backwards.

"As the universe tends to chaos, events will be complex happeneing that occur at criscrosses of millions of causes."

There was nothing more chaotic than the Big Bang, so the word "chaos" is misleading. Through time there will be less interaction between chunks of matter, not more.

"You have just stated that there are inital conditions, what caused those conditions?"

You are reading me wrong. There are always "initial" conditions. That's just a snapshot of what you want to look at.

"The fact that we can't calculate something does not mean it does not exist."

It's not only the fact that we cannot calculate it. The evidence seems to be that the universe runs on probabilities, not certainties.
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