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Posts Tagged ‘ACLU’

ACLU Puts Ten Commandments on Trial

Posted by faithandthelaw on May 4, 2012

Giles County, VA – On Monday, May 7, Judge Michael Urbanski of the  United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia will hold a summary judgment hearing on Doe v. School Board of Giles County. Liberty Counsel will represent the school board against the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which represents the Doe plaintiffs in the suit.

ACLU of Virginia sued the Giles County School Board after the Board adopted an open forum policy, which permits the display of historical documents by private individuals or groups. A privately-sponsored historical document display consisting of eleven documents, one of which is the Ten Commandments, in equally-sized frames was posted in Narrows High School. The Foundations of American Law and Government display also includes, among other documents, the Magna Carta, Declaration of Independence and Mayflower Compact. The purpose of the display is to teach the historical foundation of American law. Additional historical documents were later posted, consisting of the First Charter of Virginia, the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, a depiction and quote of Patrick Henry, a depiction of Minutemen, a depiction of George Washington, Washington’s Farewell Address, a depiction of Thomas Jefferson, Jefferson’s letter to the Danbury Baptists, Jefferson’s letter to Reverend Samuel Miller, Jefferson’s 1779 Thanksgiving Proclamation, the Northwest Ordinance, and a document explaining the significance of each.

The Virginia Standards of Learning requires students to know about the foundational principles of civilizations, including the Hebrews, and the foundations of law and government. Secular textbooks published by Prentice Hall and McGraw-Hill trace the roots of democracy and law and specifically refer to the Ten Commandments and many of the documents posted as part of the Foundations Display. One of the Doe plaintiffs, who is the parent of the other Doe plaintiff, a student at Narrows High School, admits that studying such documents is appropriate in a textbook and that the Ten Commandments was significant in the development of law and government. Nevertheless, the parent and the student complain that only the Ten Commandments document should be removed from the display of 20 documents. The ACLU does not challenge the curriculum, which integrates the Ten Commandments as part of various subjects of study, but only the inclusion of the Ten Commandments as part of the display.

Mathew D. Staver, Founder and Chairman of Liberty Counsel, said, “The ACLU has done everything it could to run from the facts and the law that control this case. The Foundations of American Law and Government display has been upheld by multiple federal courts of appeal. It is clearly appropriate to include the Ten Commandments in a display on law, because there is no dispute that they helped shape American law and government. This display includes 20 documents and pictures and reflects the curriculum, which is clearly constitutional. There is no dispute that the Ten Commandments influenced American law and government.”

Mat Staver will argue in federal court on Monday in defense of the Giles County School Board.


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ACLU Tries to Force Rhode Island School to Remove Prayer Banner

Posted by goodnessofgod2010 on September 21, 2011

The Rhode Island Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is seeking a permanent federal injunction to force the city of Cranston, RI to remove a Christian prayer banner painted on a wall in Cranston High School West.

Image shows part of the 8-by-3-foot prayer banner. Jessica Ahlquist, a sophomore at Cranston West, is filing suit with the ACLU over the high school banner.

The banner at Cranston High School West encourages students to strive academically and begins with “Our Heavenly Father” and ends with “Amen.”

Last year, the ACLU asked the school to remove the banner after a parent complained, but school officials voted in March to keep the banner, which has been displayed since the 1960s.

The decision by School Committee members to leave the mural alone is “based not upon some desire to inject religion into the public schools, but on their belief that school history and tradition should be maintained,” they say. The mural was a gift from the school’s first graduating class.

The ACLU filed a lawsuit in May on behalf of Jessica Ahlquist, an atheist who says the banner is offensive to non-Christians. Attorneys Lynette Labinger and Thomas Bender claimed in a brief filed Friday in preparation for an Oct. 13 court hearing that Ahlquist is being deprived of her rights under the 1st and 14th Amendments.

Courtesy of http://www.christianlawjournal.com/culture/religious-freedom-news/aclu-force-rhode-island-school-remove-prayer-banner

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Campaign fights ACLU demand to let kids have porn

Posted by faithandthelaw on August 3, 2011

By Bob  Unruh

A  campaign has been launched to halt an effort by the ACLU to pressure  schools to open their Internet filtering options for children to allow sites  such as polybi.com, where a woman’s naked torso is fondled by three hands;  gaydatingtips.com, which advertises a see-through boxer for men; and  gayquestions.com/hc3.asp, where students would see an image of two naked men  apparently engaged in a sex act.

“It goes without saying that our nation’s public school districts should not  permit minors access to the type of sexually inappropriate internet content  described,” said a letter from the Alliance Defense Fund. ”Yet this  is exactly what the ACLU is demanding by threatening to sue the district unless  it disables the LGBT filter.”

The ADF had written to officials at  the Gwinnett County Public Schools in Georgia about the issue.

Chara Fisher Jackson, legal director for the ACLU of Georgia, wrote Supt. J.  Alvin Wilbanks to warn him that the district’s Internet filter that blocks  “LGBT” websites “violates the First Amendment and the Equal Access Act.”

The ADF countered that school districts “shouldn’t be bullied into exposing  students to sexually explicit materials.”

David Cortman, senior counsel for ADF, said the “latest scare tactic – under  the façade of illegal censorship – is just another act of intimidation designed  to forward the ACLU’s radical sexual agenda for children.”

The letter from the ACLU to Gwinnett officials said, “Your filtering system  currently blocks access to the website for the It Gets Better Project, the  Georgia Safe Schools Coalition, Parents, Families, and Friends of Lesbians and  Gays (‘PFLAG’), GSA Network, and the Gay Lesbian and Straight Education Network.

“None of the blocked websites contains material that is pornographic or  sexually explicit in any way,” the ACLU assured the district. “These websites  all contain ‘G-rated Content’ that is ‘[d]eemed suitable for viewers of all  ages.’”

However, the ADF found that unblocking the district’s Blue Coat filtering  system for homosexual websites would release to students “the following sexually  inappropriate websites: polybi.com, gaydatingtips.com, and  gayquestins.com/hc3.asp.”

“Bowing to the ACLU’s demands may result in the district violating federal  law, if it receives funding pursuant to the Children’s Internet Protection Act  (CIPA),” said the ADF. “This act prohibits libraries receiving CIPA funds from  allowing students under the age 17 to access Internet content that is ‘harmful  to minors.’”

The letter said the harmful images include those that “appeal to a prurient  interest,” depict an actual or simulated sexual act or lack “serious literary,  artistic, political, or scientific value.”

The ACLU had told Gwinnett officials they had no legitimate interest in  blocking the porn images and that its Blue Coat filtering “engages in  unconstitutional viewpoint discrimination by blocking sites that express  acceptance and tolerances toward LGBT individuals but not blocking sites that  urge LGBT persons to change their sexual orientation.”

A spokeswoman in the office of the district’s superintendent said the  district had been reviewing the dispute, but she was uncertain whether a  decision had been made on the ACLU’s demand. She did not respond to a WND  request for confirmation of the plans.

The ACLU has launched a similar campaign in many other states in which it  cites several filtering companies — including Blue Coat, M86, Fortiguard,  Websense and URL Blacklist — for preventing students from having access to such  explicit material.

The organization posted a map showing it has launched cases or is reviewing  claims in Washington, Nevada, California, Arizona, Minnesota, Wisconsin,  Illinois, Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, Michigan, Indiana, Tennessee, Alabama,  Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York,  Massachusetts and Maine.

Cortman told WND that the ADF is researching the companies and the issues in  those states, and is planning to send guidance to the districts regarding their  responsibilities to the children.

He said there are sound legal reasons for schools not to provide such access,  and a First Amendment case is weak.

“The district is well within its legal rights to keep the filter in place,  especially since deactivating the filter would expose students to sites with  sexually explicit content,” the ADF said.

The ACLU’s argument that the filters violate the First Amendment lacks merit  because the district has “broad authority” over what materials students may  access, the ADF said.

The ADF pointed to the ACLU’s claim that there is an “epidemic” of LGBT youth  suicides and bullying, noting not one case had been identified.

“The idea that Internet filters somehow result in student suicides is  preposterous, and the ACLU should be ashamed for making such a connection,” said  ADF Legal Counsel Jeremy Tedesco. “The ACLU cannot mask its attempts to turn  school computers into porn portals for children with a supposed concern for  bullying and suicides. Parents expect schools to be places where their children  will learn knowledge, information, and skills that will make them productive  members of society, not places where they can access pornography.”

Read more: Campaign fights ACLU demand to let kids have porn http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=328849#ixzz1Tw5yXXxb

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Religious Freedom Restored In Florida School District

Posted by faithandthelaw on July 1, 2011

After months of litigation against the ACLU and the Santa Rosa County School District, and on the eve of Independence Day, a Christian legal defense organization has restored freedom to the District’s teachers, staff, students, and members of the community.

Faced with an imminent trial and surmounting evidence of their constitutional violations, the ACLU and the District agreed to settle Liberty Counsel’s federal lawsuit, challenging their Consent Decree on behalf of students, teachers, parents and community members. The Consent Decree that led to criminal indictments against school employees for prayer and banned “God Bless” in Santa Rosa County schools will now be gutted and revised.

“We are pleased that freedom has been restored to Santa Rosa County,” said Mathew D. Staver, Founder of Liberty Counsel and Dean of Liberty University School of Law. “It is appropriate to celebrate these restored freedoms as America celebrates Independence Day. From the beginning we contended that this Consent Decree went too far and swallowed up the rights of teachers, staff, students and members of the community. The Constitution is not some relic that can be discarded at will.”

The amended Consent Decree will restore dozens of constitutional religious freedoms that were previously denied. In addition, Liberty Counsel and Christian Educators Association International will be awarded $265,000 in attorney’s fees and costs from an insurance provider, not the taxpayers, to compensate them for the litigation caused by the ACLU and the District.

“This is a huge step in the right direction and a victory for the citizens in Santa Rosa County,” said Liberty Council in a statement. “The notice of settlement was filed with the court this morning and awaits official approval by the school board and the court. As a result, the teachers will now be able to pray at school during their break times, pray during school events in a nonofficial capacity, attend and fully participate in baccalaureate services, have a Bible on their desk, wear religious jewelry, and assign readings from the Bible to students when relevant to nonreligious academic assignments.” The Consent Decree further acknowledges students’ right to voluntarily pray, submit religious answers in homework, and freely participate in private, after-school religious programs.

Liberty Counsel and its 24 clients will be hosting a Victory Rally and Celebration on Wednesday, July 6, 2011, 7-9 p.m. at Pace Assembly Ministries, 3948 Highway 90, Pace, FL. This event is open to the public, but free tickets are required and can be ordered at www.LC.org.

Courtesy of http://www.christianlawjournal.com/featured-articles/religious-freedom-restored-in-florida-school-district/

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Texas Judge Offers Convicts A Christian Reading Assignment As Alternative

Posted by faithandthelaw on April 13, 2011

A newly elected Texas judge has come under fire for offering an alternative to community service — read a Christian book and give a book report.

Judge John Clinton, who took to the bench in January, says he wants to provide an alternative to the standard community service – something that get’s those in trouble with the law to think about deeper issues.

“I felt it as a calling,” said Clinton. “I’m just trying to think outside the box. Trying to mold the punishment to help these individuals, instead of set them up to fail.”

Last week the judge offered nine defendants this opportunity in place of community service. He proposed that they read the book “The Heart of the Problem” and then come back in a few months and then discuss with him about the book.

Immediately the ACLU targeted the judge’s actions, calling his proposal “inappropriate and unconstitutional.” In a March 29 letter, the ACLU said the book “proselytizes Christianity and advocates turning to God to solve problems.”

Though Judge Clinton believed his recommendation could potentially have helped put the defendants in his court on the right track, the criticism has since caused him to revise his plan.

“I have stopped the book,” explained Clinton, “and I’m looking for something similar that I can offer to everyone.”

Clinton has also adamantly denied accusations that he is attempting to impose his religious beliefs on anyone. “All I was trying to do was help. I was told about the book. I received the book. I read the book. I thought, ‘Hey, this is a great book.’”

Lisa Graybill, legal director for the Texas ACLU, said that regardless of his plan it never should have been posed as an option in the first place.

“It is inexplicable to me how anyone with a law degree could think that what this judge was doing was constitutional,” said Graybill, who filed a complaint against the judge. “Thinking with his faith is not what he’s elected to do. When he dons the robe and takes the bench, his obligation is to think as a judge.”

Judge Sherman Ross, presiding judge of the county’s criminal courts, has stated that he is not going to proceed any further with the complaint.

“In Clinton’s defense, being on the bench for less than four months, he’s been experimenting with a number of things that help in the rehabilitation process,” said Ross. “That said, I did have a chat with him and we both agreed that although not unethical, it was inappropriate and he understands completely.”

However, others praise the idea proposed by the judge Clinton. Houston criminal defense attorney Stanley Schneider told KVUE.com that his idea should be embraced.

“I think this is a man that we really need to get behind. Anyone who wants to take the initiative, and trying to do something to help people in his courtroom to succeed in life, he’s someone we need to applaud.

Courtesy of http://www.christianlawjournal.com/featured-articles/texas-judge-offers-convicts-a-christian-reading-assignment-as-alternative/

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Hawaii Senators Move Forward With Prayer Regardless of ACLU

Posted by faithandthelaw on February 10, 2011

A group of nine Hawaii State Senators have decided to unofficially open the legislative session with prayer, despite the recent ban on official prayers put in place at the insistence of the ACLU.

Last summer, the ACLU sent the Hawaii State Senate a letter insisting that they stop opening their sessions prayer due to the fact that the prayers often referenced the name of Jesus. Although members of various denominations and religions were invited to provide the opening invocation, this was not good enough for the ACLU, who insisted that the Hawaii Senate put an end the long-held practice.

Sadly, the Hawaii Senate conceded to the ACLU’s demands and stripped the legislative session of any kind of official opening prayer. This has led to concern among other states that the ACLU might once again attempt such strong armed tactics in an attempt to remove religion from the public square. Many are hopeful that the Hawaii Senate will follow the precedent that continues to be set by the Hawaii House and reinstate the prayers.

Although the State Senate has not moved to reinstate the official giving of prayers, nine of the twenty-five members gathered together and offered an unofficial opening prayer for the session.

According to CBN news, the State Senators asked God to “guide them as they sought to serve the people they represent.” The same report quotes one of the participants, Democratic Senator Mike Gabbard, as saying “It’s nice to start off the day with a prayer because we need all the help we can get.”

Some believe that the attempt by some to move away from legislative prayers indicates a larger trend that has been developing among elected officials, one which has seen less reliance on God and more reliance upon their own judgement. While this strategy is often tried; it is never successful.

Courtesy of http://www.christianlawjournal.com/news/hawaii-senators-move-forward-with-prayer-despite-ban/

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ACLU plays Grinch in Davey Crockett’s backyard

Posted by faithandthelaw on December 22, 2010

It’s Christmastime, so the ACLU is doing what it does best — hounding public officials to turn observance of this Christian (and federal) holiday into a winter solstice thingy — or else.
 
On December 7, Pearl Harbor Day, the ACLU of Tennessee dropped a letter bomb on all public school superintendents in the home state of freedom fighter Davey Crockett, warning them not to celebrate Christmas. 

The group’s website explains it this way:

“The letter reminded school officials that holiday celebrations focusing primarily on one religious holiday amount to a school’s unconstitutional endorsement of religion.”

Translation: Ditch Christmas — or else we’ll pester you with nuisance lawsuits.
 
The ACLU’s letter says they “welcome holiday celebrations that teach children about a variety of holidays. We believe, however, that holiday celebrations that focus primarily on one religious holiday can result in indoctrination as well as a sense within students who do not share that religion of being outsiders to the school.”
 
Hedy Weinberg, executive director of the ACLU-Tennessee, said, “The founders of the United States believed in the significance of religion. But they also understood that decisions about when and how to practice religion are best left to individuals, families and religious institutions.”
 
Well, yes, but that did not make them hostile to public observances of America’s majority religion. Christian church services were conducted in the House of Representatives chamber (attended for several years by Thomas Jefferson), and presidents from Washington on down have issued Christmas greetings — so the ACLU’s historic understanding is a bit flawed. Maybe they’ve dusted off their Soviet history books and gotten mixed up.
 
Here’s more from the Tennessee Grinches: “The ACLU-TN letter cites several U.S. Supreme Court decisions, explaining that ‘While public schools can teach about religion and religious holidays, public schools may not engage in indoctrination. Thus comparative religion courses can be taught but endorsing religious doctrine or sponsoring religious activities is unconstitutional.’”
 
Lynchburg, Virginia-based Liberty Counsel sent a memo on December 10 to Tennessee school superintendents correcting the nonsense: “The ACLU suggests that any Christmas concert, decoration, or party is a religious activity prohibited by the U.S. Constitution. The ACLU letter leaves the wrong impression with school administrators and omits key solutions to common concerns about public school Christmas activities.”
 
The legal rule of thumb, based on court rulings, is that religious songs and symbols are fine if accompanied by at least some secular fare. So, singing the great Christmas music that has blessed the nation for more than 200 years is out unless the kids also sing “Frosty the Snowman” or perhaps “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Litigator.”
 
A recent Rasmussen survey shows that 92 percent of Americans celebrate Christmas and most prefer saying “Merry Christmas” instead of “Happy Holidays.” Most Americans, it seems, have not gotten the ACLU memo on resisting “indoctrination.”
 
This isn’t the first time that the ACLU of Tennessee has attempted to bully the state’s schools. In 2009, the ACLU sent a threatening letter to the Volunteer State’s schools warning them to make gay propaganda on the Internet available to impressionable kids — or else. No worries about indoctrination there.
 
In closing, and in the spirit of the ACLU’s cracked version of Christmas, let’s wish everyone “happy holidays — or else.”

Courtesy of http://www.onenewsnow.com/Perspectives/Default.aspx?id=1259314

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The ACLU’s Not-So-Holy Trinity

Posted by faithandthelaw on December 16, 2010

By

The ACLU seems unusually active right now. What gives? Maybe it’s the Christmas season, which always seems to spring the ACLU into high gear, more miserable than usual.

I tried to ignore the latest round of ACLU legal challenges against religious Americans, but they became too much. The surge has been remarkably ecumenical, not singling out Protestant or Catholic interests.

First, I got an email from Mat Staver’s group, Liberty Counsel, highlighting a bunch of ACLU lawsuits. Then I read a page-one, top-of-the-fold headline in the National Catholic Register, “Catholic Hospitals Under New Attack by ACLU,” regarding an ACLU request to compel Catholic hospitals to do abortions. Next was an email from a colleague at Coral Ridge Ministries, forwarding a Washington Times article. Then came another email from yet another Christian group on lawsuits somewhere in Florida. And on and on.

That was just a sampling of this year’s Christmas cheer, courtesy of the American Civil Liberties Union. At least the ACLU always finds a way to unite Protestants and Catholics.

In the interest of faith and charity, I’d like to add my own ecumenical offering — a history lesson. It concerns some fascinating material I recently published on the ACLU’s early founders, especially three core figures: Roger Baldwin, Harry Ward, and Corliss Lamont. I can only provide a snapshot here, but you’ll get the picture.

First, Roger Baldwin: Baldwin was the founder of the ACLU, so far to the left that he was hounded by the Justice Department of the progressive’s progressive, Woodrow Wilson. Perhaps it was a faith thing. Wilson was a progressive, but he was also a devout Christian, and Roger Baldwin was anything but that.

Baldwin was an atheist. He was also a onetime communist, who, among other ignoble gestures, wrote a horrible 1928 book called Liberty Under the Soviets. Notably, he was smart enough not to join Communist Party USA (CPUSA). Other early officials of the ACLU, which was founded almost exactly the same time as the American Communist Party, included major party members like William Z. Foster, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, and Louis Budenz (who later broke with the party). Communists used the ACLU to deflect questions from the U.S. government over whether they were loyal to the USSR, were serving Joe Stalin in some capacity, and were committed to the overthrow of the American system.

That whole “overthrow-the-government” thing is something our universities tell us is baloney, a bunch of anti-communist, McCarthyite tripe. In fact, it took me mere minutes of digging into the Comintern Archives on CPUSA to find actual fliers and formal proclamations from the American Communist Party publicly advocating precisely that objective. (Click here to view some of the documents.) I also found the ACLU rife throughout those archives.

So bad had been the ACLU in aiding and abetting American communists that various legislative committees, federal and state, considered whether it was a communist front. The 1943 California Senate Fact-Finding Committee on Un-American Activities reported that the ACLU “may be definitely classed as a communist front.” The committee added that “at least 90 percent of its [the ACLU's] efforts are expended on behalf of communists who come into conflict with the law.” That 90-percent figure was consistent with a major report produced by Congress a decade earlier, January 17, 1931.

Note the consistency: Defending communists secretly committed to Stalin’s Russia had been a central component of the ACLU’s work since its inception.

In my research, I also found constant approving references to the ACLU in CPUSA’s flagship publication, the Daily Worker. The Daily Worker loved the ACLU. Moreover, I was struck by how early the ACLU had been challenging not just Christians but their most joyous holiday, with the Daily Worker‘s eager approval.

To cite just one example, Christmas 1946, one of the first for returning troops from World War II, the ACLU initiated legal action to stop the singing of Christmas carols in California public schools. For that, the communists were most grateful to Baldwin and the boys.

Aside from Roger Baldwin, there were two other especially influential figures comprising this not-so-holy ACLU trinity. They were Corliss Lamont and Harry F. Ward. Covering these two adequately here is impossible. I’ve devoted probably about 10,000 words to Lamont alone in my book, Dupes – both men were precisely that: dupes. The ways in which Lamont and Ward were rolled by communists is astounding, with Lamont granted a special Potemkin village tour of the USSR in 1932, guided by Soviet handlers, where he swallowed the most outrageous propaganda hook, line, and sinker.

Lamont was most inspired by the Bolsheviks’ militant atheism, especially the churches they converted into wicked atheist museums. Lamont had already written his atheist classic, The Illusion of Immortality, which had been his dissertation at Columbia University under John Dewey, godfather to American public education, who himself had made a Potemkin village tour of the USSR (1928).

Given his leftist atheism, Lamont was at home with the ACLU. Harry Ward, however, was a Methodist minister, and a professor at Union Theological Seminary. How could be possibly support the ACLU?

That’s what made Harry Ward an even bigger dupe. More than supporting the ACLU, Ward was chairman as Baldwin served as director.

Imagine: a Christian was a founder of the ACLU. That’s Harry Ward.

When it came to sheer manipulation by communists, Ward was arguably the single greatest dupe in the entire history of the American Religious Left. Tellingly, a major Congressional report (July 1953) on communist activities in the New York City area featured more references to Ward than any other figure — twice as many as the next most-cited figure, Earl Browder, longtime face of American communism.

I found documents in the Soviet archives where communist officials in Moscow and New York deliberately targeted Ward to help push their propaganda. In one, a December 1920 letter, Ward is listed by Comintern officials as a source to get their materials on the shelves at the seminary library.

It wasn’t atheistic communism that concerned the Rev. Ward. No, it was anti-communism. Writing in Protestant Digest in January 1940, long before Senator McCarthy arrived on the scene, Ward admonished the faithful of the perils of “anti-communism,” which was being employed “under the leadership of [Congressman Martin] Dies in a new red hunt,” one “more ruthless than that of [former Attorney General] Mitchell Palmer.” (Both Dies and Palmer were Democrats.)

Alas, Christian charity compels me to concede a key fact, particularly at Christmas time. Among this not-so-holy trinity of Baldwin-Lamont-Ward, there was a measure of redemption for Baldwin at least. Baldwin eventually, after the Red Terror, after the Great Purge, after the Ukrainian famine, after the Hitler-Stalin Pact, after millions of rotting corpses, after the gulag, after the communists had violated every imaginable civil liberty, awakened to the stench of the Soviet system. He finally saw communism, and communists, as a genuine concern.

By the early 1950s, Baldwin began insisting that ACLU officers take a non-communist oath. Call Baldwin crazy, but he figured that any ACLU member who held allegiance to “totalitarian dictatorship” was not truly serious about civil liberties. Perhaps they were publicly exploiting American civil liberties to privately support a nation (the USSR) that had no civil liberties?

Good thought. Who could argue with that?

Well, Corliss Lamont could — as could I. F. Stone (who the latest evidence suggests was an actual Soviet agent), several editors at the Nation, several professors from Columbia, the New York Times, and other usual suspects. Finding a purge they could finally condemn, they objected to this ACLU “purge.” Lamont resigned.

So, yes, Roger Baldwin’s ACLU backed away from its communist leanings.

Sadly, however, Roger Baldwin’s ACLU never seems to have shirked from its atheist leanings, which haunt us still today.

Could it be that the ACLU’s alleged onetime “90-percent” commitment to defending communism has shifted to a 90-percent commitment to defending atheism? It certainly seems like it, especially this time of year. And if the ACLU doesn’t like that perception, it should do something to change it.

Courtesy of http://spectator.org/archives/2010/12/14/the-aclus-not-so-holy-trinity/1

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ACLU sues South Carolina Jail Over Bible Policy

Posted by faithandthelaw on October 12, 2010

(AP) – A South Carolina jail was sued Wednesday over its policy barring inmates from having any reading materials except the Bible.

The American Civil Liberties Union filed the federal lawsuit seeking to overturn the policy on behalf of Prison Legal News, a monthly journal on prison law. The 16-page complaint says officials at the Berkeley County jail in Moncks Corner, about 100 miles southeast of Columbia, are violating several of the magazine’s and inmates’ constitutional rights including free speech, freedom of religion and right to due process.

Since 2008, the publishers of Prison Legal News have tried to send magazines, letters and self-help books about prison life to several inmates at the jail, the complaint says. Some were sent back, and in July a jail official wrote an e-mail to the publishers referencing the jail’s policy.

“Our inmates are only allowed to receive soft back bibles in the mail directly from the publisher,” First Sergeant K. Habersham noted in the e-mail. “They are not allowed to have magazines, newspapers, or any other type of books.”

The jail confirmed Wednesday that it doesn’t have a library and that the only reading materials inmates are allowed are paperback Bibles. A spokesman for Berkeley County Sheriff Wayne DeWitt did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

“Not only does it prevent communication and clearly violate free speech rights, it also violates the establishment clause because it discriminates on the basis of religion,” said David Shapiro, an attorney for the ACLU’s National Prison Project. “The information that’s being blocked and censored is information about prisoners’ basic legal rights.”

In addition to unspecified punitive damages, the lawsuit also asks a federal judge to order the Bible-only policy halted and to let a jury hear the case.

“Each Defendant’s conduct was motivated by evil motive or intent, involved reckless or callous indifference to the federally protected rights of Plaintiffs,” the lawsuit says.
(Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

Courtesy of http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/aclu-sues-sc-jail-over-bible-policy

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Florida Passes Law to Protect First Amendment Rights in Public Schools

Posted by faithandthelaw on June 8, 2010

Tallahassee, FL – Responding to the gross violation of free speech brought about by the ACLU in the Santa Rosa County School District (District), the Florida legislature passed a law that requires school districts to obtain the consent of staff and students before entering into any agreement that infringes upon or waives their First Amendment rights. The new law takes effect July 1.

The law (HB 31) reads as follows: “District school boards, administrative personnel, and instructional personnel are prohibited from taking affirmative action, including, but not limited to, the entry into any agreement, that infringes or waives the rights or freedoms afforded to instructional personnel, school staff, or students by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, in the absence of the express written consent of any individual whose constitutional rights would be impacted by such infringement or waiver.”

This new law will prevent further situations like the one in Santa Rosa County, where school officials caved to the ACLU and agreed to sign a Consent Decree which prohibits religious expression, such as voluntary, student-initiated prayers or off-the-clock religious discussion among adults. A student was told he must say “Good Luck” instead of “God Bless;” staff testified in court they now hide in closets to pray; teachers cannot reply to emails from parents if the email from the parent contains “God bless” or other religious language; staff must censor private, after-school groups from engaging in religious expression or prayer; staff are forbidden to voluntarily participate in private, off-campus baccalaureate services; and much more. Liberty Counsel is currently litigating against the ACLU and the District to overturn the Consent Decree obtained by the ACLU.

Mathew Staver, Founder of Liberty Counsel and Dean of Liberty University School of Law, commented: “Liberty Counsel will ask the Santa Rosa School District to request the court to reconsider the Consent Decree in light of this new law. Liberty Counsel will continue to press this case until the Consent Decree is set aside. Not only is the decree unconstitutional, it is also moot, since the ACLU student plaintiffs graduated three weeks before the order became final. This Consent Decree, drafted by the ACLU and agreed to by the Superintendent, is the most unconstitutional order I have ever read. It was written as though the First Amendment does not exist. It is only a matter of time before this Consent Decree is overturned.”

Courtesy of http://www.lc.org/index.cfm?PID=14100&PRID=946

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