Atheist wants to abolish "In God We Trust."


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Beethoven
November 15, 2005, 07:33 PM
:cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss: :cuss:



Source: http://www.sacbee.com/content/news/courts_legal/v-print/story/13862042p-14701755c.html




Newdow targets 'In God We Trust'

Local atheist's latest fight will be to halt use of motto on money.

By Lesli A. Maxwell -- Bee Staff Writer


Published 2:15 am PST Tuesday, November 15, 2005


Michael Newdow, the atheist who continues his fight against the Pledge of Allegiance, will open a new front this week in his campaign to purge references to God from government.

He plans to file a lawsuit Thursday in U.S. District Court in Sacramento, challenging the national motto: "In God We Trust."

Newdow wants to remove the phrase from U.S. paper money and coins because he believes it represents a government endorsement of religion.

"We are the nation that gave to the world the establishment that government should not endorse religion and everybody should be what they want," Newdow said Monday. "And of all the possible choices, we go with the motto of 'In God We Trust,' which totally contradicts that tradition."

One constitutional expert who has closely followed Newdow's pledge cases doubts that a challenge to the national motto - printed on a range of government buildings in addition to currency - will succeed.

The courts tend to view certain expressions like the national motto as casual religious references that have been around so long they've lost religious power, said professor Alan Brownstein, a constitutional expert at the University of California, Davis.

" 'In God We Trust,' " Brownstein said, "is not something that most people look at and even associate as being religious."

As recently as Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court turned down a request to review a ruling that the motto's inscription on the front of a government building in Lexington, N.C., does not violate church-state separation.

Newdow, an emergency room physician who is trained as a lawyer, is also waiting for a federal judge in Sacramento to rule on his request to permanently ban two Sacramento-area school districts from having students recite the pledge.

Newdow filed the lawsuit on behalf of himself and families whose children attend schools in Elk Grove Unified and Rio Linda Union after his earlier fight to remove "under God" from the pledge ended last year at the U.S. Supreme Court.

In that case, Newdow's battle against Elk Grove Unified - where his daughter was a student - ended when the Supreme Court said he lacked standing to pursue the case because he didn't have custody of his daughter.

As he works on his two legal cases, Newdow is also rehearsing a one-man musical about the U.S. Constitution that he will perform Nov. 22 at Sheldon High School in Elk Grove.

"Our Coruscating Constitution" - coruscating means sparkling - will feature Newdow playing guitar, singing about the "brilliance of our Constitution" and explaining his legal battles, he said.

"My goal is to make people understand what these cases are about," he said.

Tickets to Newdow's show can be purchased the night of the performance at Sheldon High School. They are $3 for students, and $5 for adults, Newdow said.

About the writer:

* The Bee's Lesli A. Maxwell can be reached at (916) 321-1048 or lmaxwell@sacbee.com.

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longeyes
November 15, 2005, 07:38 PM
Some people were put on earth to try others' patience.:mad:

R.H. Lee
November 15, 2005, 07:39 PM
" 'In God We Trust,' " Brownstein said, "is not something that most people look at and even associate as being religious." Not even close, bozo. Acknowledgment of God is not the same as an institutionalized system grounded in such a belief. Take a hike.

FeebMaster
November 15, 2005, 07:43 PM
Sounds like an awful lot of trouble. You'd have to come up with new designs, print and mint all those replacements, get rid of all the old scrap. Maybe we should just do away with government currency altogether. That'd only be half as much work.

M-Rex
November 15, 2005, 07:59 PM
Two words.

Publicity

Stunt

fjolnirsson
November 15, 2005, 08:01 PM
Gimme a freakin' break....
Some people just have too much free time on their hands. How much taxpayer money would it take to remove the motto from all government property? Too much. Leave it alone. I'm not Christian, but I'm not afraid of all things Christian, either. This guy seems to have some sort of personal vendetta against god. Let it go, buddy...let it go.
Of all the darned silly things to take issue with...:barf:

javafiend
November 15, 2005, 08:01 PM
They should be replaced with the words "Don't kid yourself, this really is your G-d."

pax
November 15, 2005, 08:02 PM
Good topic for APS (www.armedpolitesociety.com).

pax

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