pgwenthold
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2001
- Messages
- 21,821
Is this a case of Alito being an "activist" judge, and redefining the facts of a case before him, as opposed to properly evaluating the judicial process?
To my way of thinking, the label "activist" is next to meaningless. Alito, like Scalia and Thomas, wanted to end all the litigation (with the cross remaining up, of course). Alito's rationale is (shall we say) extremely THIN legally (the good Justice apparently being unable to find a single precedent that the government may select a cross to honor people of all faiths), but I would not call that "activist" by most conventional meanings of the word.Is this a case of Alito being an "activist" judge, and redefining the facts of a case before him, as opposed to properly evaluating the judicial process?
Another approach is even simpler. Honor fallen servicemen with a non-sectarian symbol. This is the NORM throughout the US, so it can be done. The Mojave cross is the only national memorial that includes a solitary cross.FWIW, it would seem to me that this could have been solved simply by applying the same reasoning as is normally applied to courthouse lawn displays. Include other, secular, elements that are associated with honoring veterans and fallen soldiers, to make it clear that one isn't endorsing the particular religion, but rather invoking the symbol of the traditional graveyard cross in military cemeteries. Unless of course that wasn't their agenda in the first place.
Well there could be an argument that it is now an historical geographical alteration of that desert site and therefore removing it would be an additional alteration of that site and could require an enviromental assessment to determine the consequences of such a removal. Is there a burrowing owl nest anywhere around it?
Anyhoooo...I'm not really joking.
The cross was erected in the 1930's
"The cross in the desert was erected in the 1930s by the Veterans of Foreign Wars to honor fallen service members"
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/08/us/08scotus.html?_r=2&hp
I just do not understand Scalia's mindset or anyone that agrees with him here. How can he possibly argue that a cross commemorates non-Christian war dead as well? Is the memorial devoid of any religious connotation at all in his mind even though it has a cross? does he really think everyone embraces the cross as a symbol of honor and respect for the dead?
I just don't get Scalia.
That's because you don't understand. Jesus loves all his children.
In otherwords, Scalia is just another Christian that doesn't understand that not all people feel honored to be acknowledge with a cross.
Justice Kennedy agreed with the point made by Justice Scalia at oral argument, namely, that the cross honors EVERYONE, regardless of religious beliefs. To remove the cross is to diss ALL of the country's fallen soldiers.
Another approach is even simpler. Honor fallen servicemen with a non-sectarian symbol. This is the NORM throughout the US, so it can be done. The Mojave cross is the only national memorial that includes a solitary cross.
Why is this so hard? Why not have a non-sectarian memorial?
Justice Stevens will long be missed.Justice Stevens also felt is was necessary to repeat what should be clear, that the "solitary cross conveys an inescapably sectarian message. ... Making a plain, unadorned Latin cross a war memorial does not make the cross secular. It makes the war memorial sectarian."
The concern with three of the dissenters was not that the Government was trying to solve the problem, but that the Government was trying to solve the problem while specifically enabling the cross to stay up. In other words, the Government was trying to get rid of the legal entanglement while still wanting to keep the cross on display.But if the federal statute is upheld, then the cross will no longer be on public property. If they sold the land specifically to avoid the appearance of an endorsement of religion, then they have still avoided the appearance of an endorsement of religion - the government basically stipulated that it could not have the cross on land owned by the government. So they sold the land. Now it isn't on land owned by the government. Why should it matter why they sold the land? Was selling the land not within Congress' authority?
At any rate, this case does nothing to clarify exactly what is acceptable and what is not, and therefore it is likely of little precedential value outside of further proceedings in this case.
The notion of "intent" in Establishment cases opens the door to all sorts of mischief, some of which we saw in the Ten Commandments cases and the Pledge case. Those who seek to foist religious concepts upon others by law NEVER do so with the intent of religious proselytization or establishment. Oh, no. They do it for OTHER noble purposes, such as to teach history or promote culture or solemnize events or develop ethics or accommodate others or advance education or honor the dead or encourage social harmony or raise community standards or blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
In other words, these cases typically REEK of disingenuousness and false evidence of non-religious motives.
Crosses aren't religious but atheism is?
The concern with three of the dissenters was not that the Government was trying to solve the problem, but that the Government was trying to solve the problem while specifically enabling the cross to stay up. In other words, the Government was trying to get rid of the legal entanglement while still wanting to keep the cross on display.
As others have said, if the government wants to get rid of the entanglement, let it offer to sell the land to folks who want to put up OTHER religious symbols. Oh, no, the Government doesn't want to do that!
I agree that the case does little to clarify the substantive issues. On the issues of procedure, the main plurality and the dissents agreed on quite a bit. Justice Stevens remarked that on some points the plurality was correct and "I agree with the plurality’s basic framework..."
From the oral argument:Regardless of the intentions of the erectors, can someone really make the case that a Jewish observer would view a cross as "honoring the dead Jewish soldiers"?
And there was this:MR. ELIASBERG: ... I believe that's why the Jewish war veterans --
JUSTICE SCALIA: It's erected as a war memorial. I assume it is erected in honor of all of the war dead. It's the -- the cross is the -- is the most common symbol of -- of -- of the resting place of the dead, and it doesn't seem to me -- what would you have them erect? A cross -- some conglomerate of a cross, a Star of David, and you know, a Moslem half moon and star?
MR. ELIASBERG: Well, Justice Scalia, if I may go to your first point. The cross is the most common symbol of the resting place of Christians. I have been in Jewish cemeteries. There is never a cross on a tombstone of a Jew.
(Laughter.)
MR. ELIASBERG: So it is the most common symbol to honor Christians.
JUSTICE SCALIA: I don't think you can leap from that to the conclusion that the only war dead that that cross honors are the Christian war dead. I think that's an outrageous conclusion.
MR. ELIASBERG: Well, my -- the point of my -- point here is to say that there is a reason the Jewish war veterans came in and said we don't feel honored by this cross. This cross can't honor us because it is a religious symbol of another religion.
Justice Scalia, apparently trying to suggest that the Government wasn't playing favorites with religious affiliation, when informed that it WAS doing such a thing, said he didn't think it mattered.JUSTICE SCALIA: Has the government ever turned down -- let's say the Jewish war veterans request to put up a war memorial on --
MR. ELIASBERG: They did. There was a request made for -- to put up a memorial on the site, and the government said no and said, our regulations forbid it.
JUSTICE SCALIA: I am talking about -- on this site?
MR. ELIASBERG: Yes.
The Brief for Secretary of the Interior made no mention of Jews being honored or that any reasonable person would come to such a conclusion. The amicus (friend of the court) briefs basically did not argue that Jews were honored by a cross or that there was any perception of honor. A couple of the briefs (arging in FAVOR of keeping the cross) actually suggested that history went the other way, pointing out that in WWI, Flanders Field (famous for its crosses row on row), Stars of David were used to mark the graves of Jewish soldiers. But they were also quick to point out that everybody else got a cross regardless of religion or lack thereof.JUSTICE SCALIA: ... what I'm getting at is I don't agree with you, that -- that every time the government allows any religious symbol to be erected, it has to allow all religious symbols to be erected at the same place, so long as it is -- it is not discriminatory in -- in accepting or rejecting requests to erect religious symbols in different places.
...
JUSTICE SCALIA: I mean, do you know of any instance in which Jewish war veterans or if there is an organization of Muslim war veterans, requested to erect a memorial on public land, it was turned down?
MR. ELIASBERG: As I said before --
JUSTICE SCALIA: I just don't see why they all have to be on the same piece of land, in -- in order for the government to be impartial.