Soul Food -- Michele Marr
Last Thursday morning I was sitting with my coffee thinking of
fireworks, in particular the ones that look like huge electric
chrysanthemums and dandelions high in a garden of sky.
They bloom, then fade, then fall like luminous rain. They can make
children gleeful and make the most hard-boiled grown-ups childlike again.
I was absorbed in thoughts of the fireworks display I would see on the
Fourth of July not realizing I was about to see some fireworks of another
kind.
I picked up the morning paper. I read the headlines: “Pledge of
Allegiance Violates Constitution, Court Declares.”
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals panel had decided in the case of
Newdow vs. United States that the phrase “under God,” violates the
Establishment Clause of the 1st Amendment. I wasn’t surprised.
For 62 years, from the time the pledge was first said in 1892 to honor
Columbus Day, until 1954 when the phrase was added, it had served our
patriotism well without those words.
Maybe Michael A. Newdow was making much ado about nothing. But that
wasn’t, I figured, for me to decide.
Since the Supreme Court first stepped up to interpret the
Establishment Clause in 1947, the tensions between it and its compliment,
the Free Exercise Clause, have given rise to many a lawsuit and to as
many controversial opinions.
Newdow vs. United States, I figured, wasn’t the first and wouldn’t be
the last.
I didn’t consider giving it another thought. Until I picked up my
e-mail.
Dozens of messages filled my mailbox, all with the same subject line
-- “Pledge of Allegiance.”
“This is getting out of hand,” one said.
“The father who didn’t want his daughter to have to stand and listen
to the Pledge of Allegiance being recited should take himself and his
daughter to another country,” said the next.
“What do you expect from godless Commies,” asked another.
“If the mere mention of God or providence or a higher being
constitutes state-supported religion, then the original Constitution is
also unconstitutional,” one woman wrote.
I countered: It’s the nature of our government to tolerate dissent.
The last time I checked, these 9th Circuit judges were one moderate
Republican and one liberal Democrat. Though the Declaration of
Independence does, the Constitution doesn’t mention God or providence or
a higher being.
As much as anything I was playing the devil’s advocate. I like our
pledge the way it is. I have no quarrel with the phrase “under God,” in
the pledge.
In fact, I agree with Judge Ferdinand F. Fernandez, who wrote in
dissent in the court’s decision, “The danger that phrase presents to our
1st Amendment freedoms is picayune at most.”
Yet I also support Newdow’s right to challenge it. And I think the
opinion of Fernandez’s fellow judges is reasoned, if perhaps it is
flawed.
Newdow claims to have spent more than 4,000 hours preparing his
argument for the courts. I wish his detractors would spend even four
preparing their case against him.
Tom Daschle thinks the court’s decision is “just nuts.” George Bush
found it “ridiculous.” The governor was “extremely disappointed.”
I’m still waiting for someone to tell me -- based on the 1st Amendment
issues the 9th Circuit Court judges considered in this case -- why?
Until then, have a blessed Fourth of July and enjoy the fireworks.
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer and graphic designer from
Huntington Beach. She has been interested in religion and ethics for as
long as she can remember. She can be reached at o7
michele@soulfoodfiles.com.f7
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