Isn't that going to be a museum exhibit? How would a museum exhibit break the rules?
It's funded with taxpayer money. "The planned memorial--which will at long last be unveiled this September--has received millions in federal money."
The whiners that sued alleged that "the cross is an insult to the many 9/11 victims who were not Christian and a violation of the separation of church and state; it proposes either removing the cross or setting aside an equal amount of space at the memorial to honor the sacrifices on non-Christian or non-religious victims of the attack."
And, "The WTC cross has become a Christian icon. It has been blessed by so-called holy men and presented as a reminder that their god, who couldn't be bothered to stop the Muslim terrorists or prevent 3,000 people from being killed in his name, cared only enough to bestow upon us some rubble that resembles a cross," American Atheists President David Silverman said in a statement. "It's a truly ridiculous assertion."
article
Didn't make the news here. :carryon:
It was in
post #2 of this thread
Sounds like the school was violating the establishment clause in supporting an evangelical christian organisation. Don't they know the rules?
"the project at SkyView was student-initiated and student-led"
read
here
Gov't property: they should know better. In fact they probably did and wanted to get the fuss and publicity.
Who wanted the to fuss and get publicity?
The Capitol rotunda is open to any group that applies through the state Department of Management Services as long as their displays follow guidelines on size and other restrictions. The Florida Nativity Scene Committee decided to use that opportunity to display the biblical scene of Jesus' birth.
"We are not trying to offend anyone, but we are taking a stand for Christ in Christmas, a stand for truth and religious freedom," said Pam Olsen, who organized the event. "And what better place to do this than the heart of our state government." |
There was no fuss as their display was perfectly within the rules and guidelines set by the FL State Capital.
Guess who did fuss....the ACLU and Freedom From Religion. They are the whiners.
"They may now have a right to do that, but there are better places," Simon said. "There are houses of worship and there are each of our homes if we choose to commemorate the holidays."
Groups that advocate for the separation of religion and government say the display is on solid constitutional grounds because the state is not spending money on it and it has designated the Capitol rotunda as a public forum. A disclaimer was posted near the Nativity scene that said the state does not support or endorse the display, which is across the rotunda from a giant menorah that marks the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah.
And it's why the state is letting the Freedom From Religion Foundation to hang a banner with its views. The banner is expected to be hung Thursday. It will depict Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and the Statue of Liberty adoring the Bill of Rights placed in a crib typically used to depict Jesus and the Nativity scene.
source |
What a positive message that is no way mocking the nativity :doh:
Broke equality laws and acted like a dufus over it. No sympathy at all.
I'd never serve anyone in hoods! They would by intimating the owner. But if they were in ordinary clothes and not chanting KKK slogans, there would be no issue, surely.
Isn't it their right to wear their Klan outfit at a restaurant? Wouldn't it be discriminating against their Aryan theology to refuse to serve them? You seem to have a double standard here.
Why can a baker not refuse a same-sex wedding cake but a black business owner can refuse Klansman?
Should our money say "in God we trust"?
Why not? If you were to sue the US government, what would be your case? Why hasn't anyone already sued over this issue? :think:
Why do they need to be cross shaped? Not all servicemen are christian, are they? We (UK) recently changed one of our crosses into a circular design for discrimination purposes. Sounds reasonable to me.
So we should back and change all the crosses to more circular shapes? The point is, they are and were cross-shaped and no one made a stink about it. Why is that?
Now you're getting silly. Unless the cemetery requires all plots to be marked by crosses even for muslims and jews. (They don't, do they?)
Cross of Sacrifice/Canadian Cross at Arlington National Cemetery.
Why wouldn't this be a violation?
It’s true that various groups have in the past sued to prevent state or federal governments from erecting religious monuments on public property. In 2001, for example, the ACLU of Southern California sued for removal of the Mojave Desert Cross at Sunrise Rock, which stood on land that had become part of a national preserve run by the National Park Service. That long and tangled legal battle continues and is now before the U.S. Supreme Court. (Update, April 28, 2010: The high court later ruled against the ACLU in that case, allowing the cross to stand. Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote: "The goal of avoiding governmental endorsement [of religion] does not require eradication of all religious symbols in the public realm.") |
here
The ACLU states that they will not sue to remove individual gravestones but is fighting against memorials similar to the Cross of Sacrifice.
Only those that break the constitution. Is that many of them?
You seem to feel more are in violation than the Supreme Court or even the ACLU seem to agree do. :think: