Holiday Wars

The resting place of threads that were very valid in 2004, but not so much in 2024. Basically this is a giant historical archive.


Post Reply
User avatar
Kollyvas
Protoposter
Posts: 1811
Joined: Mon 26 September 2005 5:02 pm
Location: Mesa, AZ
Contact:

Holiday Wars

Post by Kollyvas »

More on the left's "inside job" aimed at distancing you from your faith...

http://www.cruxproject.org/HolidayWars.htm

Holiday Wars
Twas the Season for Discrimination
by Thomas M. Sipos

While the First Amendment's Establishment Clause forbids government from promoting a particular religious sect, that same amendment's Free Exercise Clause protects the open practice of religion. The tension between these clauses is most evident during what is now called "the holiday season." How government resolves that tension is often confused, contradictory, and discriminatory. And while it may be the opposite in the Bible Belt, here on the coasts, perhaps motivated by sensitivity to minority faiths, the bias is often against Christians.

On May 20, 1998, Catholic League president William Donahue, in testimony before the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, noted that in "Manhattan Beach, California, a public school removed a Christmas tree from school property after a rabbi objected that the tree was a religious symbol; however, the school allowed the display of a Star of David. . . . In Mahopac, New York, Boy Scout students were barred from selling holiday wreaths at a fundraiser, even though a wreath is a secular symbol; Hanukkah gifts, however, were allowed to be sold at the school's own fundraiser."

Yet government does not consistently regard Jewish symbols as secular. Donahue adds, "I confronted an attorney for New York City Schools Chancellor Rudy Crew regarding the practice of banning crèches in the schools while allowing menorahs. At first, she cited the 1989 County of Allegheny v. ACLU decision to buttress her case, but when I pointed out that that decision undermined her case—making the argument that the high court declared a menorah to be a religious symbol, not a secular one—she quickly retreated. Such ignorance strikes me as willful."

Adding to the confusion, US Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito is unconvinced that menorahs—or crèches—must be banned from state property. On July 1, 2005, the Washington Post reported that, while on the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, Alito "wrote for the majority in 1997 in finding that Jersey City officials did not violate the Constitution with a holiday display that included a creche, a menorah and secular symbols of the Christmas season."

But despite Alito's opinion that crèches and menorahs are both secular symbols, a woman named Andrea Skoros recently found herself forced to sue New York City's Department of Education, alleging that her sons were "coerced" into coloring menorahs at school, were taught the story of Hanukkah but not Christmas, and that their schools displayed menorahs, dreidels, Kwanzaa candelabras, wreaths, bells, Santa Claus, snowmen, and Islam's star and crescent (for Ramadan). Skoros requested that Nativity scenes be added to include Christianity.

The school system’s lawyers argued that, unlike menorahs and Islam's star and crescent, Nativity scenes did not represent a historical event (a positively breathtaking lie, I might add). Newsday's Wil Cruz quoted Skoros as saying that her sons were "coerced to accept Judaism and Islam at the expense of their Catholic beliefs." On February 18, 2004, Brooklyn federal judge Charles Sifton upheld the school’s policy on holiday displays, ruling that Nativity scenes were "purely religious" whereas the others had "significant secular connotations"—another grotesque lie, given that the nativity has at least as strong a historical pedigree as the story of Hannukah.

Sifton's ruling illustrates an ominous Establishment Clause loophole. If government can declare some religious symbols and stories to be secular and historical, and others to be "purely religious," then government can allow favored religions to circumvent the Establishment Clause—much like African slaves' rights were circumvented by declaring them to be "not persons."

One solution to this problem may be to declare that symbols that are in any way religious are religious, whatever else they may be, and hence treated the same as all other religious symbols. But that still leaves government in charge of interpreting the rules—and if government were an honest broker and men were angels, we wouldn't have so many contentious school board elections or lawsuits to begin with.

A better solution may be to avoid such conflicts altogether by reinforcing "separation of church and state" with "separation of education and state." School vouchers would be a start, empowering low-income parents to choose whether to send their children to a religious school, a multireligious school, or a secular school. Right now, parents sending children to private schools must pay twice: taxes for public school and tuition for private school. That's not fair.

Those opposing school vouchers have argued that they don't want their taxes promoting religion. Andrea Skoros would probably say that public schools are no guarantee that that won't happen.
In private life one can celebrate—or not—as one wishes and protest or boycott businesses one feels slighted by. You vote with your wallet.

Let's extend that vote to low-income parents seeking to educate their children.

Thomas M. Sipos is Vice Chair of the L.A. Westside region of the California Libertarian Party. His novels include Vampire Nation and Manhattan Sharks. For full bio and contact info go to CommunistVampires.com.

User avatar
Kollyvas
Protoposter
Posts: 1811
Joined: Mon 26 September 2005 5:02 pm
Location: Mesa, AZ
Contact:

The Campus Crusade For Christmas

Post by Kollyvas »

http://www.orthodoxnet.com/redirect.php ... 77713.html

The campus crusade for Christmas
Dec 5, 2005
by Mike S. Adams ( bio | archive | contact )

Email to a friend Print this page Text size: A A Recently, an atheist student organization at The University of Texas at San Antonio set up a “Smut for Smut” booth allowing students to exchange their religious scriptures (mostly the Holy Bible) for pornography. Unsurprisingly, they got the idea from another group at The University of Texas at Austin.

If the “Smut for Smut” exchanges begin to spread across the country, many readers will undoubtedly ask why such displays aren’t banned by campus speech codes due to possibly “offensive,” “disrespectful,” or “demeaning” content. Of course, the answer to that question is simple:

Campus speech codes were not designed to preserve our Judeo-Christian heritage through an equal application of rules. They were designed to destroy it through a selective application of rules.

And that is why we observe that a) atheist students are free to call the Word of God “smut” and “pornography” in between campus showings of hard-core porn films, while b) religious students are prevented from using offensive terms like “Christmas.”

It almost gets depressing when you look at schools like Auburn University – a school that is preparing for the lighting of a Holiday Tree, instead of the lighting of a Christmas Tree – a term deemed too offensive and “under-inclusive” in the postmodern era of higher education. And this kind of thing is happening at Auburn, not merely at schools like Brown and Harvard.

But note that in the last paragraph I said it “almost” gets depressing. Enter Laura Steele (steellc@auburn.edu), a member of the Auburn Student Government Association (SGA). She and a few other members of the SGA have sent forth the following resolution – one that should serve as a model for students seeking to Roll back the Tide of diversity that has consumed other southern schools like the University of Alabama:

RESOLUTION

Whereas, a decorated tree is the traditional, historical symbol of Christmas; and

Whereas, the Christmas tree is a decorated tree celebrating and symbolizing the historical Christmas season; and

Whereas, a tree has historically been known as a Christmas Tree in the State of Alabama, the United States of America and around the world; and

Whereas, the tree has historically been known as a Christmas Tree on Auburn’s campus; and

Whereas, calling the tree a Christmas Tree preserves historical correctness and embraces religious diversity; and

Whereas, in pursuit of Auburn’s spirit of diversity and tolerance of differing ideals, the Student Government Association Student Senate maintains that traditional symbols, religious and otherwise should not be suppressed; and

Whereas, labeling a Christmas Tree as a “Holiday Tree” appears to be religiously intolerant toward those who celebrate Christmas; and

Whereas, the University Administration and the Student Government Association have promoted a spirit of diversity and religious tolerance on campus; and

Whereas, the name of the tree is not a legal issue rather an issue of preference and historicity; and

Whereas, even the display of a manger scene by a government body has been held to be constitutional to celebrate Christmas and its origins;

Therefore be it Resolved, that the Auburn University Student Government Association Student Senate recognizes the decorated tree on campus during the Christmas holiday season by its historical name of “Christmas Tree”; and

Therefore, Be it Further Resolved, that the decorated tree re-labeled a “Holiday Tree” be properly reinstated with its original, historical, traditional, intended, and common title and identified for what it actually is, a “Christmas Tree.”

With the help of the College Republicans, Laura Steele has so far gathered 650 signatures from students urging the SGA Senate to support the resolution. The reason for that is simple: In the name of true tolerance, she supports including other religions in the ceremony. And she thinks that Jewish students would appreciate having a University Menorah on display without having the campus thought police rename it a Mynorah to avoid sexist overtones.

Join me today in writing sga@auburn.edu to let these kids know that there is no better place to wage a war against narrow-minded political correctness than Auburn University. And there are no better leaders in our nation’s current cultural war than a young pack of War Eagles soaring high above the Tides of bigotry that masquerade as progressive thought.

Mike Adams is a criminology professor at the University of North Carolina Wilmington and is a regular columnist for Townhall.com.

Copyright © 2005 Mike S. Adams

Email to a friend Print this page

User avatar
Kollyvas
Protoposter
Posts: 1811
Joined: Mon 26 September 2005 5:02 pm
Location: Mesa, AZ
Contact:

Appeals Court Bars Nativity In Schools...

Post by Kollyvas »

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/artic ... E_ID=48667

LAW OF THE LAND
Appeals court bars Nativity at schools
But approves Jewish, Islamic symbols in NYC public system


Posted: February 4, 2006
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

A divided federal appeals-court panel ruled New York City schools can ban the display of the Christian Nativity during Christmas while permitting a Jewish menorah and the Islamic star and crescent during Hanukkah and Ramadan.

The Thomas More Law Center, which brought the case on behalf of Andrea Skoros and her two elementary school children, called the 2-1 decision Thursday by the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan "another outrageous example of federal courts discriminating against Christians."

"Many federal courts are using the contrived endorsement test to cleanse America of Christianity," said Richard Thompson, the center's president and chief counsel. "This unprincipled test allows judges to impose their ideological views under the pretext of constitutional interpretation."

New York City has the nation's largest public school system, with more than 1 million students enrolled in its 1,200 schools and programs.

"This should be a wake-up call for Christians across this nation," Thompson said of the decision.

Thompson noted Judge Chester J. Straub issued a lengthy, 46-page dissent. Earlier this week, Straub was the lone dissenter against his court's decision to rule unconstitutional the federal law banning partial-birth abortion.

Straub said in his opinion Thursday, "It is my view that the policy of the New York City Department of Education to arrange for the children to celebrate the holiday season in schools through the use of displays and activities that include religious symbols of the Jewish holiday of Chanukah and the Muslim commemoration of Ramadan, but starkly exclude any religious symbols of the Christian holiday of Christmas, fails under the [Constitution], both on its face and as applied."

Refering to the First Amendment, Straub concluded, "I find it clear that the current policy and displays violate the Establishment Clause insofar as a reasonable student observer would perceive a message of endorsement of Judaism and Islam and a reasonable parent observer would perceive a message that Judaism and Islam are favored and that Christianity is disfavored."

The New York City schools' policy states that the display of "secular holiday symbol decorations is permitted" and lists as examples the menorah and the star and crescent.

But the policy specifically excludes the display of the Christian Nativity scene.

The city argues the menorah and star and crescent are permissible symbols because they are "secular," whereas the Nativity scene must be excluded because it is "purely religious."

The majority, in fact, said the city's argument was fallacious, stating that the policy "mischaracterizes" these symbols, but still upheld the ban on the Christian Nativity.

The court wrote, "No reasonable objective observer would perceive from the totality of the circumstances in this case that the purpose of the challenged display policy was, in fact, to communicate to city schoolchildren any official endorsement of Judaism and Islam or any dismissal of Christianity."

The majority opinion concluded the "actual and perceived purpose of the holiday display policy was to use holiday celebrations to encourage respect for the city's diverse cultural traditions."

Straub argued the Nativity scene "depicts a historical event and thus, has some non-religious aspects to it."

He contended the city's "action in defining a menorah and star and crescent as secular, and a crèche as 'purely religious,' is impermissible insofar as it takes positions on divisive religious issues."

Robert Muise, Thomas More's attorney handling the case, called it a "shocking decision" that should outrage Christians.

"We strongly believe that the majority decision is fundamentally flawed, as pointed out by the dissent, and we intend to take this fight to the next level," he said. "This battle is far from over."

Muise, said he will ask the full 2nd Circuit to hear the case, and, failing that, will appeal it to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Muise said, according to the Associated Press, the new Supreme Court justices were "just waiting for cases like this to come before them to hopefully straighten out the mess the courts have created."


Related offers:

Tick off the ACLU! New edition of 100-year-old book proves America's Christian heritage

New Testament DVDs will transform your Bible reading

Compact Text Bible, New King James Version

New Strong's Expanded Exhaustive Concordance


Previous stories:

Couple wins Nativity scene battle

Officials remove Nativity to avoid ACLU

Library backs down, welcomes holy family

Holy family, Magi nixed from Nativity

Group takes offensive with Nativity scenes

Dreaming of a White House 'Christmas'

Bush White House's Christ-less Christmas

Nativity display erected on public land by church

Officials remove Nativity to avoid ACLU

Post Reply