Church and state
2005-09-15 07:57 amI note with considerable approval that a federal judge in Sacramento ruled Wednesday that requiring children to recite a Pledge of Allegiance that contains the phrase "under God" in public schools is unconstitutional.
I remember distinctly when that phrase was first inserted into the Pledge; I was in second grade at the time (1954). I felt it was an imposition at the time, and simply stood silently when the phrase was said -- as I do to this day when the occasion calls for it. Given the current administration and the likely makeup of the Supreme Court when the case finally reaches them, I have little doubt that the justices will find some way to weasel out of the fact that "under God" is clearly a government endorsement of a particular family of religions. But a temporary, local victory is all we're likely to get, so I'll enjoy it while I can.
I remember distinctly when that phrase was first inserted into the Pledge; I was in second grade at the time (1954). I felt it was an imposition at the time, and simply stood silently when the phrase was said -- as I do to this day when the occasion calls for it. Given the current administration and the likely makeup of the Supreme Court when the case finally reaches them, I have little doubt that the justices will find some way to weasel out of the fact that "under God" is clearly a government endorsement of a particular family of religions. But a temporary, local victory is all we're likely to get, so I'll enjoy it while I can.
Re: California
Date: 2005-09-16 01:21 pm (UTC)And these days it's not an empty symbol, but the thin edge of a wedge (along with "faith-based" charities and school voucher programs) that's going to progress to "intelligent design", and then more and more religion snuck in under the wall, until we have an education system befitting the theocracy the US is rapidly becoming.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-16 04:36 pm (UTC)