Should a Christian Group Be Allowed To Fly a Flag Outside Boston City Hall?
The Supreme Court will soon decide a case that tests the limits of expression on government property and religious toleration.

For more than 12 years, Boston flew three flags in front of its city hall. The first was the United States flag, followed by the Massachusetts state flag. For the third, Boston usually raised its city flag.
On certain occasions, however, the city would allow local groups to temporarily raise their own flags in the coveted final spot. Flags from such groups as the Chinese Progressive Association and Boston Pride flew for a time, as well as the flags of almost a dozen countries, raised by local cultural organizations.
Over 12 years, Boston approved 284 flag-raising applications—and denied just one.
In July 2017, Christian civic group Camp Constitution, which hosts a yearly patriotic family camp designed "to enhance understanding of our Judeo-Christian moral heritage," applied to raise a "Christian flag" for one hour, during which the group planned to hold "short speeches by some local clergy focusing on Boston's history" around the flagpole.
At the time, Boston had no written policy for evaluating these applications. Despite the lack of guidance, a city official rejected Camp Constitution's request. His reasoning: The prominent religious imagery "concerned" him, and he believed raising the flag could violate the Establishment Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
The group sued but lost in a lower court. Eventually Shurtleff v. Boston made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which may be poised to rule against the city.
Several justices appeared skeptical of Boston's claims during oral arguments in January. "When you say anybody can speak by putting up a flag," Justice Samuel Alito pointedly asked the city's lawyer, "are you not creating a forum for private speech rather than speaking your own mind?" Justice Brett Kavanaugh went further, remarking that at the root of the city's position "is a mistaken view about the Establishment Clause."
While the latest developments seem promising for Camp Constitution, the legal precedent in this case is murky. In the 2015 case Walker v. Texas Division, Sons of Confederate Veterans, the Court ruled that specialty license plates are government speech—and thus that Texas was not required to approve a group's request to create a plate bearing the Confederate battle flag. In 2017, however, the Court sided with an Asian-American dance-rock band provocatively called The Slants, ruling that the government cannot deny trademarks for "disparaging" names.
The outcome of this case turns on whether the Court will decide that Boston's flagpole was functioning as a "designated public forum"—public property that the government is not obligated to open for free expression but has nonetheless designated for that purpose—or as a form of government speech. If the former, it is likely to find that Camp Constitution was the victim of unlawful viewpoint discrimination. If the latter, it is likely to side with the city on the grounds that the government is barred from unduly favoring one religion or another.
Yet as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) wrote in an amicus brief filed on the case, "When the government creates a public forum, it generally does not violate the Establishment Clause merely to allow religious speakers to use the forum on the same terms that apply to non-religious speakers."
In fact, equal access to public forums is constitutionally required, and Boston's challenge to that right should trouble anyone who values free expression. As ACLU National Legal Director David Cole told ABC News, "This case is really about private citizens' access to government property to express themselves. And that access is critical to our ability to speak to each other, to express our views and the like." Camp Constitution is entitled to raise its flag, in other words, regardless of the group's religious nature.
If the Court decides that Boston's flag-raising program does not constitute a public forum, it will be giving the city permission to discriminate at will. The outcome of this case will therefore help determine whether state actors can use the Establishment Clause as justification for violating religious groups' First Amendment rights for years to come.
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If you’re going to let anyone fly the flag you need to allow everyone to fly their flag.
Or, transfer the flag decision to Twitter so that the White House can censor which flags they don’t like. #privatecompany
If the flagpole usage is a general public forum then the Boston government is not endorsing the message of the groups involved. If they reject for content, then they are endorsing the message. If they do endorse the message of, say, Boston Pride then it is in some sense condemning the theology of religious organizations that consider homosexual acts sinful and may arguably be violating the establishment clause in that way.
Let them raise their flag. I'm an atheist, but they have established that pole as a public forum, not a statement of city policy.
+1
I'm too lazy to google it, but surely there must be an actual gay Christian group in the country who could offer a Christian rainbow flag to throw some confusion into the mix.
At 284 flags, I can't fathom that they haven't flown a flag with a cross or star or crescent on it.
Sorry, at 284 *blindly accepted* flags. And that's actually pretty pointed, the fact that they started *just now* discriminating should be a clear sign to the justices to drop the hammer on this bullshit. If they'd had a long-standing policy of not flying explicitly religious flags there might be a maybe/maybe not case (AFAICT, Camp Constitution isn't calling on anyone to believe or worship anything), but the fact that, all of the sudden, this rule appears? GTFO.
I'd even accept a ruling of "The City can have this policy going forward but lacking clarity on the issue in the current case, cannot bar this flag from going up."
Really, the city should've just given them their one day or whatever and moved on.
The Christian group should contract a Muslim group to petition to fly their flag, When the city approves, and they will, sue the city. The city hall should sport thousands of flags just to conceal that butt ugly building.
Like Muslims care for anybody else's rights. Judging by the silence of Islamic nations on the Red Chinese suppression of the Uighurs and indeed judging by the praise of Islamic rulers for Red China's heading of the UN Human Rights Commission, Muslims don't even care about the rights of other Muslims.
I wouldn't necessarily knock the "Brutalism" of government buildings either. Government buildings should be simple and easy to maintain and refurbish, so that citizens have their own paychecks free to be as Baroque as they wish. Hey, go Baroque 'til you go Bar-oque! 😉
“I’ll sure add confusion with MY choice of flag!” —Rob Misek
as well as the flags of almost a dozen countries
I can't fathom how this alone doesn't render it a designated public forum. If they're flying the Chinese/Syrian/Afghan/Albanian/whatever flag "to celebrate Chinese/Syrian/Afghan/Albanian/whatever-American culture and community" then it's speech, otherwise, it's a government endorsement of China/Syria/Afghanistan/Albania/whatever and they shouldn't be flying those flags either.
Take it outside, God boy.
I do feel I should point out Reason and other S230 advocates saying, "The outcome of this case will therefore help determine whether state actors can use the Establishment Clause as justification for violating religious groups' First Amendment rights for years to come."
The issue being bad faith, which you can't legislate away because any subsequent laws can equally be applied in bad faith regardless of the text and is up to the judicial system to interpret as bad faith.
Personally, it seems weird that I should have to point out bad faith interpretation of a law, passed by Congress, literally written as "protecting the blocking and screening of offensive material", but it seems kinda appropriate in the context of a bad faith reading of the 1A.
Let their freak flag fly.
Stupid city poohbahs need to READ that First Article of Ammmendment. It states that CONGRESS (that means, the publifally elected representatives of each of the several states" shall make NO LW EStABLISHING A RELIGION.
UNless the dummies running Boston can PROVE that flying that flag for one hour has as its end goal the estalbishment of any one religious sect or group as the national religion of the entrei countr, ther IS no breack of that First Article.
Some moronic karen type is pushing their own agenda here. Glad the gruo are fighting it.
Yes.
As I said in one of the Roundups, the only flag Boston should fly is an Official City Flag...and it should fly at every thoughfare on the City Limits so people will know they're approaching Boston and can U-Turn. 🙂
As for Christian Flags, Pride Flags, Confederate Flags, etc., let each private property owner fly any flag they want on their own private property. Flags and poles are inexpensive enough that no one needs a City Flag Pole dedicated to them.
There must be millions of places where Christian flags can be flown without any objection or outcry, so why pick the one place where it's going to produce nothing but controversy? Kind of like those gay wedding cake folks...they chose the one place where they knew there would be a fight, while completely ignoring many other places where their business would have been welcomed. On the other hand however, this particular issue was set on fire by one city official without any established written guidance, who decided it might become a constitutional issue if a Christian flag was allowed to be flown like the previous 284 which were approved.
Why must lgbt groups fly their flags from government buildings? To allow one group to do so but not another IS establishment of a religion. Just because the religion is godless secularism doesn’t mean it isn’t the establishment of a moral code by government officials.
Either they give equal time to all ideas or they remove their support from all ideas.
Once again, I don't think Cities should have extra flag poles for anything other than the U.S. Flag and the official City Flag, but the Pride Flag isn't a Godless Secularism Flag, since it is used by LGBTQ+ people and allies of all beliefs and non-beliefs.
Now, a flag with the Atheist Atom or the circled letter "A" made with a single pen stroke would be the Godless Secularism Flag.
As a Pansexual Atheist, I don't need my own Flag on a City flag pole to be a Citizen with equal rights and justice before the law and I don't browse the Lifestyle/Faith section of the newspaper looking for things to protest. Just privatize non-official flag poles and I'm good.
How much does anyone want to bet that the same Boston City Government that has this flag pole also has zoning against private property owners having their own flag poles? Hmmmm...