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trotsky

(49,533 posts)
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 10:24 AM Feb 2019

Supreme Court to decide if giant cross is religious symbol or secular memorial to war dead

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/supreme-court-decide-if-giant-cross-religious-symbol-or-secular-n975826

For more than 90 years, a huge concrete cross has dominated part of Bladensburg, Maryland, a Washington, D.C. suburb. On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court will be asked to decide whether it stays, raising a question that has vexed the justices for decades: What is the proper place for religion in American public life?

To its defenders, which include the state and the American Legion, the 40-foot-tall Peace Cross is a secular monument, a memorial to area war dead. To its detractors, it's an unconstitutional government endorsement of religion invoking Christianity's most potent symbol.

Completed in 1925, it was built to commemorate 49 servicemen who died in World War I. Their names are on a bronze plaque at the base. Private funds paid for the cross, but a state commission took it over in 1961 as well as the land it sits on, which is now in a busy traffic interchange.

In 2012, the American Humanist Association filed a lawsuit, claiming that its presence on public land violates the Constitution, amounting to a government establishment of religion. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in Virginia agreed, saying it could not ignore that "for thousands of years the Latin cross has represented Christianity."
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unblock

(52,188 posts)
1. this is the sort of question that only some christians find challenging.
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 10:38 AM
Feb 2019

to this jewish atheist, "is this giant cross secular?" is a pretty easy to answer.


the best argument the "sure, it's secular, mm hmm" people have is that for some time, christians have put crosses on the graves of non-christians in callous disregard for the religion (or non-religion) of the deceased or the wishes of their families.

so, having done that enough, they feel it's ok to pretend that it's normal and proper.


next, they'll say jesus is a secular figure because, hey, jesus is everywhere and he loves all of us, right?

trotsky

(49,533 posts)
2. Otherwise-reasonable Christians understand that it's clearly a violation...
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 10:45 AM
Feb 2019

so instead of trying to defend it on its merits, they'll often just say that it's been there so long it has lost the religious meaning, blah blah blah. Well part of the reason it went up and stayed up for so long was that religious minorities (particularly non-believers) knew they would have risked repercussions if they complained.

I doubt anyone is against honoring war dead. I doubt anyone is against honoring Christian war dead with a cross. The problem is honoring them with a cross on public land. The best solution would just be to relocate it to private property.

unblock

(52,188 posts)
3. yeah, the same people who don't see it as a problem would balk at an equally giant star of david....
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 10:51 AM
Feb 2019

so somehow the christian symbol gets to double as secular but the jewish symbol is purely religious.


you're right, and what i'm guessing will happen is that the courts will say it's not ok, then the cross and the land it exactly sits on (plus maybe an inch or two of grass around it) will be sold to some private interest, and nothing will really change but it will all be legal....

Cartoonist

(7,314 posts)
4. Supreme Court to decide if Earth is flat or round
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 10:54 AM
Feb 2019

This vote will tell us who should not be a judge in any capacity.

MineralMan

(146,284 posts)
5. Some Christians will argue this way: "Why does it matter?"
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 10:59 AM
Feb 2019

It's their symbol, so it is innocuous in their own eyes. They simply don't see the issue. They've become blind to the symbolism that cross represents. It's just another part of their lives.

They don't understand why it bothers others. They think nobody should be bothered by it, so what's the big deal?

Sadly, that argument has worked many times. Christians are in the majority, when it comes to religion, so they think they can force their symbolism onto the rest of us.

trotsky

(49,533 posts)
6. Yes, this is a significant problem.
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 11:30 AM
Feb 2019

We see the same reaction for other questionable things, like the religious slogan on our money, or having a paid chaplain for Congress. "What's the big deal?" It's a big deal because these things enable much bigger violations. Idiots looking to post the 10 commandments in a school will say, "Our national motto is 'In God We Trust' - so why can't I do this?" Etc.

MineralMan

(146,284 posts)
8. It is their central argument, really.
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 11:40 AM
Feb 2019

The campaign to insert Christianity into our government has been going on since the 1950s. First, they got "under god" into the Pledge of Allegiance. Then they got "in God we trust" on our currency. Those successes have emboldened the fundamentalist Christians into attempting to do more and more at every opportunity. More liberal Christians go along with it because, "What harm can that do?"

When I was a teenager, in the early 1960s, I saw the impact of religion in an odd place. The Roman Catholic Church had successfully convinced the State of California that condoms were an evil thing and should be tightly controlled. At that time, every package of even a single condom had printed on it, "FOR PREVENTION OF DISEASE ONLY!" They could be purchased only at the pharmacy counter, and only by people over the age of 21. Why was this? Because the RCC opposed contraception. That was the only reason. Cross the border into Arizona, and there were condom machines in every gas station restroom.

Abortion? Same-sex marriage? Marriages performed by non-religious officiants? Organized Christians officially fought against all those things. And they won most of the time for years and years, because "Why does that even matter?" was the question other Christians thoughtlessly asked.

And it continues today in backwards states. The push is still on to return to religious rule of everyday life. If we turn away and lose our focus, we lose yet another battle with the religionists.

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
7. A number of people here on DU share in that sentiment.
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 11:36 AM
Feb 2019

I encountered them when the topic of the cross over La Jolla came up several years back.

MineralMan

(146,284 posts)
9. Yes, I remember.
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 11:41 AM
Feb 2019

It's amazing how blind people can be, based on their religious beliefs. They simply cannot see past the "Why does it matter?" question.

rsdsharp

(9,162 posts)
10. In Lynch v. Donnelly The Supreme Court
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 11:50 AM
Feb 2019

held that a city's display of a creche as part of a Christmas display had a secular purpose because Christmas is a national holiday.

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
11. If taxpayer money is used to support and maintain the monument,
Tue Feb 26, 2019, 01:22 PM
Feb 2019

which it clearly is, I would vote that it is an unconstitutional infringement and should be removed.

But, I am not on the SCOTUS.

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