Rocky
The Flying Squirrel
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2001
- Messages
- 296
phildonnia said:From what I heard, most of the grilling he got was concerned with newdow's legal standing. So yeah, pretty much everyone expected this.
From a very good article a week ago by Vincent Phillip Muñoz
"To his credit, Michael Newdow — the lawyer who filed the pending litigation — studied the law and shrewdly brought the perfect case. He has backed the Court into a corner, pushing their accepted doctrines to their logical extreme. "
"... the Court has generally employed two doctrines to adjudicate establishment-clause disputes: the "endorsement" test and the "coercion" test.
The endorsement test prohibits the government from explicitly endorsing religion, purportedly to keep it religiously neutral. In the context of public schooling, however, "no endorsement" quickly becomes outright hostility. Activities that a child might perceive to favor religion must be prohibited. If rigorously applied, the test requires the elimination of religious language and symbols from the classroom, including the removal of the words "under God" from the Pledge.
The coercion test forbids the state from coercing religious practice. That standard may seem narrow, but in 1992 the Court prohibited non-denominational invocations and benedictions at public-school graduations because such exercises "psychologically coerce" students to participate in a religious exercise. Applying the same rule in 2000, it struck down the Texas tradition of nondenominational prayer before high-school football games, because, it said, some fans might feel like "outsiders." "