November 21, 2003
New at Reason: As we mourn the passing of Judge Roy Moore's career, Cathy Young makes a last assessment of the pious jurist's great spectacle.
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Passing? I think you're sadly confused. This is only positioning Moore to become the next Governor of Alabama.
If that's what he's shooting for his timing is way off. Alabama just elected a new republican gov in '02. I'm not sure how he can keep the momentum up and his face in front of the camera until '06. By the time the next election comes around he's going to be so "three years ago." Having said that, I could be wrong.
Cathy should realize, for right or wrong, the constitution does not apply to people under the age of 18 and therefore the comment about a grade schooler wanting to read bible passages does not apply.
So where's rst to remind us that governmental signs telling people they can't have a different religion are mere "rocks" and thus don't matter?
Can't the lesbian mother who was denied custody of her child because of her "perversion" appeal on the grounds that Moore was prejudiced?
the constitution does not apply to people under the age of
18
Whoa. Not true.
governmental signs telling people they can't have a different
religion
I'm right here, pointing to the block letters on the back of the
dollar bill that you use to buy things. Does your use of the dollar
bill imply that you trust in God? Nothing about the rock forced the
reader to follow the given instructions. The crime was in not
removing Moore when he denied custody to the lesbian woman and used
biblical passages to do so, or at any point previous where
his actions in his official capacity were
influenced by the religious code that the rock represented. Whether
the rock is placed in the front of the courthouse, or unobtrusively
placed in the back hall, the actual problem was only
solved accidentally. Lifeless objects do not violate rights.
The message Gary is that rights are violated by actions. Not by objects. There is no violation of rights by putting a monument to a moral code in a courthouse...only the followers of the religion that it represents are beholden to it. When in the course of jurisprudence an individual is held to it, then it becomes a violation of this "separation of church and state" everybody is looking for.
rst writes: "Lifeless objects do not violate rights."
So, if I want to put a huge billboard on my lawn depicting a man
masturbating, that's fine by you? No one is forced to look at
it.
Or better yet, how about a disembodied head mounted on a pike
outside the courthouse with a sign draped over it that reads
"heathen".
Its just a (all too) lifeless object. You don't have to fear for
you life if you choose not to, right?
..."how about a disembodied head mounted on a pike outside the
courthouse with a sign draped over it that reads "heathen"."
Or John the Baptist, wouldn't that be cool?
Thanks Cathy. Glad to see the similarity between Islamists and
our own "Judeo-Christianists" is not lost on everyone.
Listening to Islamic fundamentalists when I was a student in the
Middle East in the mid-80's I was consistently reminded of the
Christian fundamentalists in the U.S. I used to comfort myself with
the knowledge that, unlike Islam (and Judeaism prior to the Reform
movement) which lays out a detailed and severely antiquated code of
civil law), Christianity had no basis to even aspire to that.
"Render unto Caesar what it is Caesar's. Render unto God what is
God's" and all that.
I see that has not been an obstacle for Moore, Hannity, O'Reilly
and company.
Christianity is not the religion of Christ, it is a religion
*about* Christ. You'd think prohibitions against idolitry might
disuade Christians from supporting Moore, but they don't because
this isn't about protecting religion it's about promoting it at any
opportunity. Just like school prayer. It isn't about talking to
God, it's about forcing children to pray to a particular God in
unison.
Cause you know how children love to pray in unison, the playgrounds
are full of it.
If you can go into the church of your choice and worship the way
you want without fear, you have freedom of religion. If you can't
walk into a secular government building without being assaulted by
religious imagery, you don't.
latching onto the shrine issue is what ended up getting his
theocratic carcass off the bench
Only because he defied the order to get rid of it. The order which
said: move the rock.
Meanwhile, judges like Moore are still free to deny
lesbians custody of children because God apparently doesn't like
homosexuals. Congrats, moving that rock was a real triumph.
*cough*.
Like I said, it's a rock. You can move it, protest against it, melt
it down and turn it into a sidewalk...you still haven't actually
separated the church from the state. Moving the rock is a sleight
of hand trick to make you think you've moved towards
secularization, relying on your adherence to cheap symbols to
cement the illusion.
I rather agree with RST. A rock, in this context, is hardly an example of being assaulted by religious imagery. The issue is not the courthouse's decor, but rather the way in which Moore's judgements were rendered.
If you can go into the church of your choice and worship the
way you want without fear, you have freedom of religion. If you
can't walk into a secular government building without being
assaulted by religious imagery, you don't.
Leaving aside the impossibility of imagery assaulting anyone, I
have to ask:
Which is it? Why can't both conditions be true at once (as they are
in America?) Since I manufestly can worship the way I want, and
since some government buildings have some reference to something or
other judeo-christian, I seem to be in the position of
simultaneously having and not having religious freedom.
So which is it?
"The issue is not the courthouse's decor, but rather the way in
which Moore's judgements were rendered."
I'd say they're both issues, with the decision to sneak in the
shrine being one of a whole host of terrible decisions by Moore.
But I don't see how objecting to the monument is in any way
counterproductive to the goal of getting rid of nutcases like
Moore. In fact, latching onto the shrine issue is what ended up
getting his theocratic carcass off the bench.
Symbols are important. Ask Mr. (not Judge - hooray!) Moore. Or
Albert Speer.
Getting the shrine off of public property hasn't resolved all this
country's church-state issues. It also hasn't cured the common cold
or given me shaplier hips and thighs. So?
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DATE: 05/21/2004 05:51:16
No cause is so right that one cannot find a fool following it.
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