Re: Re: Re: Newdow yet again.....This time the inauguration
I've often wondered if the supporters of religion, ceremonial or not, in government would change their minds if the religion wasn't theirs?
Not necessarily. Many jews, for instance, oppose the "secularization" of the American public square despite the fact that the religion in the public square is usually Christianity.
I'm betting they would, in which case I would tell them that they may have freedom of religion, but not freedom from religion, and then I'd bless them in the name of Vishnu.
Well, there ARE Hindus in the USA (quite a few, actually). Would it really offend you that a religious procession honoring Vishnu is walking down the street to the local Hindu temple?
And if it DID, would you have the right to stop the procession under the claim that you have the right not to see religious ceremonies if you don't want to?
I think Newdow is a great american. Challenging the status quo is a good thing (tm).
He may be dickweed, but at least he's dickweed that challenges authority.
Ah, yes, the T-shirt mentality: "Question Authority" (except that of whatever philosophy is "cool" at the moment).
What about questioning whether women have the right to vote, or whether blacks are actually human beings and not apes? Shouldn't we QUESTION such assumptions?
Mill's argument--that it is GOOD to question authority for its own sake as this would force authority to respond with better arguments to truth's benefit--had been disproven by history over and over again. In many cases, the result of "questioning authority" had merely been the continual weakening of the social fabric and morality to no good effect.
Surely, whether it is good or not to question authority depends on WHAT you are questioning. Just because authority says so doesn't mean it's wrong.
The concern is that the inauguration is an official state function, not a private function, and that invocation of divine guidance is planned as being an official part of that official function.
Sure--but the same can be said of numerous speeches and official procalamations by Washington, Lincoln, FDR, JFK, and, well, just about any American president. Were they all acting unconstitutionally?
Or how about the official Chaplain of Congress? There is official prayer there, too. Is it illegal?
It seems unlikely that all of them had "misinterpreted' the 1st amendment. The 1st amendment deals with what CONGRESS can or cannot do WITH THE LAWS IT PASSES: "Congress shall make no law...", etc. It doesn't say a damn thing about the PRESIDENT can or cannot mention God (the president does not make the law, although he can veto it), nor, for that matter, about what Congressmen can or cannot do in the building itself.
The idea that the 1st amendment is intended to--in effect--forbid ALL mentions or religion by ALL government officials would have seemed absolutely absurd to the founders, or, for that matter, to anybody before the 1960s.
It's just not what the Constitution says.