new drkitten said:You're not reading closely enough. This specifically applies to agents and entities, not just people.
Well, people are agents. Entities I'm not sure; you might have a point there.
I think it's been specifically drafted to cover the recent Ten Commandments' monuments cases, where people asked for "relief" in the form of having the monuments removed, when the state agency, acting in its official, corporate capacity, was "acknowledging ... God as the sovereign source of law, liberty, or government."
I see. My thing is, with the Alabama situation, it was paid for with taxpayer money and displayed in a room that belonged to the taxpayers. It's a different thing, IMO, with the judge who had it stitched to his robe, as my understanding is it's his personal robe and he personally paid for the stitching. The latter should be allowed; the former shouldn't.
Basically, it's a licence for any state or federal agency, agent, or entity to establish Christianity (in flagrant violation of the Bill of Rights) and a violation of separation of powers in denying the possibility of judicial review of such establishment.
If that's the case, then the law itself is unconstitutional and the judicial can strike it down. As I've said, the guys who are putting it forward aren't exactly known for their dedication to the Constitution.
The idea is that the courts wouldn't even have jurisdiction to hear the case asking for the monument to be relieved.
Well, the courts would certainly be able to hear the case under Article III. So again, if that's the case, it would just make the law unconstitutional anyway. Which, again, isn't surprising.