If you want to read the Complaint that has been filed to maintain the monument, check out the PDF document at
Findlaw.com. The Complaint is, in my judgment, laughable.
For those of you not used to reading legal pleadings, you might not know whether this is how a pleading ought to be drafted. This is
not how a pleading ought to be drafted, unless one has an intent to seek publicity. The sort of extraneous material in this pleading (especially paragraph 1) is comparable to the crap that Fox put in its complaint against Al Franken, and most of it is not appropriate for a legal pleading.
In addition, some of the allegations in the pleading are ridiculous.
[Para. 17] To remove the Ten Commandments Monument from the Alabama State Judicial Building is highly offensive to the plaintiffs in that God, and mention thereof, is being eradicated from the State of Alabama and this country in deference to the religion of nontheistic beliefs.
And who are these plaintiffs, that their offense gives them a legal right to sue? Well, one of them lives in Mobile, Alabama, and the other lives in Tallassee, Alabama, but pays regular visits to the Alabama State Judicial Building "for the express purpose of visiting the Ten Commandments Monument."
It is very likely that the defending attorney, or the judge on his own motion, is going to question whether these individuals have "standing to sue." What does the Complaint say about standing? Well, according to the Complaint, the plaintiffs are both aware of the monument and have read its full text. (Gosh!) And there's more:
[Para. 18] The plaintiffs believe that any attempt to remove the Ten Commandments Monument is an affront to their religious freedom and an attack on their Christian beliefs.
In their view, the Monument in the Alabama State Judicial Building is not an endorsement of religion. Quite the contrary:
[Para. 23] The removal of the Ten Commandments Monument creates an excessive entanglement of government with the religion of nontheistic beliefs and therefore violates the plaintiffs' rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
[Para. 24] The display of the Ten Commandments Monument in the Alabama State Judicial Building does not create an excessive entanglement of government with religion.
These allegations present a serious problem for the plaintiffs, because the appellate court has already ruled that displaying the Monument is not appropriate. Accordingly, the plaintiffs have what would appear to be an impossible task before them: trying to convince a judge that they are likely to prevail in a controversy that has already been litigated and lost on the merits. The plaintiffs don't see this as a problem however, as their
Application for a Temporary Restraining Order asserts:
...there is a likelihood that plaintiffs will prevail on the merits of the Application for Preliminary Injunction.
An attorney either has to have a lot of b*alls or a deficit of brains to make that assertion. I offer no opinion as to which is the case here.
The Application for a Temporary Restraining Order includes a memorandum (like a brief), which includes a plethora of preposterous assertions, including a discussion of the "standing" problem. Hold onto your hats:
In ... the event the Ten Commandments Monument is removed, the plaintiffs will be burdened not only by a change in their behavior, said change evidenced by no longer visiting the Alabama State Judicial Building for reasons more fully set forth below, but will suffer the affect [sic] of being ostracized from the community because of their stand in support of the Ten Commandments....
Incredible! Most lawyers would hang their heads in shame for making such assertions! Let me spell out what that means. These folks are saying, apparently with straight faces, that they will be harmed if they have to visit the monument somewhere other than the Alabama State Judicial Building. Even if the monument is moved to a church a block away, they will be harmed. Also, they make the
astonishing argument that they will be harmed
merely by not winning the suit! I find it hard to imagine any judge, no matter how sober, who wouldn't laugh out loud at reading that. But it gets even better:
Entry into the Alabama State Judicial Building by the plaintiffs, in the event the monument is removed, would be symbolic of bending a knee to Baal, a false god recognized by some of the nations written about in the Old Testament of the Bible. The Bible is quite clear as to the punishment that those nations received [as] a result of bending a knee to Baal; plaintiffs seek not the same treatment.
Stop it, you're breaking me up! Instead of establishing nontheism, the government would be establishing Baalism, and inviting the wrath of the Almighty?? The next thing you'll be saying is that the Ten Commandments came from the Founding Fathers instead of Moses!
The Ten Commandments Monument represents the foundation of jurisprudence given to this nation by our Founding Fathers for purposes of establishing laws not religion.