Michael Medved: A war on memory

What shocking visual image inspires so much fear, disgust and outrage that even in this era of unfettered free expression, federal courts feel compelled to take drastic steps to cover it up?

(Judges will rarely use their power to hide public sculptures depicting sadistic brutality, or to obscure billboards peddling sex and nudity, but in the California desert they’ve ordered the concealment of a simple white cross that has honored the nation’s war dead for more than 70 years.

In 1934, the Veterans of Foreign Wars erected a monument on a barren hilltop known as “Sunrise Rock” in the Mojave National Preserve to commemorate “the dead of all wars.” More than a half-century later, the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California challenged the memorial, claiming that it violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment because the cross (recognized by the government as a war memorial) stood on public land. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the dismantling of the monument, but Congress took action in 2004 to authorize the transfer of the ground surrounding the cross to private parties.

A federal district judge invalidated that transaction, even as officials responsible for the desert refuge took steps to hide the cross while the legal wrangling continued. Government agents covered the offending crossbeam with boards, making it look like a crude screen, or a shallow box, perched incongruously on a stick in the middle of the California desert.

The absurd status of this ongoing struggle shouldn’t obscure its serious and alarming undercurrents including a common attitude among militant “separationists” that treats Christian symbols with more hostility and less tolerance than those of any other religious tradition.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Religion News & Commentary, Church-State Issues, Law & Legal Issues, Religion & Culture

4 comments on “Michael Medved: A war on memory

  1. Chris says:

    it’s amazing how well a Jewish guy (like Medved, or Prager) can articulate injustice against Christians far better than most Christians themselves. Which of course says a lot more about Christians than it does about Medved or Prager…..

  2. Steven in Falls Church says:

    This (from the ACLU press release linked to in Medved’s column) sounds like legally vulnerable reasoning to me:

    Judge Robert J. Timlin, who held in July 2002 that the cross situated on a prominent rock in the preserve violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, ruled that an obscure section of the Department of Defense Appropriations Act of 2004 Act designed to facilitate the exchange of the land on which the cross sits to the Veterans of Foreign Wars “violates (the) court’s judgment ordering a permanent injunction” to remove the cross.

    “The judge’s decision sends a clear message that the federal government should not endorse one religion over another,” said Peter Eliasberg, managing attorney for the ACLU of Southern California. “The courts have consistently held that the cross in the Mojave National Preserve violates the First Amendment.”

    In his ruling, Judge Timlin wrote: “It is evident to the court that the government has engaged in herculean efforts to preserve the Latin cross on federal land and that the proposed transfer of the subject property can only be viewed as an attempt to keep the Latin cross atop Sunrise Rock without actually curing the continuing Establishment Clause violation by Defendants.”

    The Federal Government has virtually unfettered discretion to decide how to dispose of its property. The transfer of the land to private hands cures the constitutional violation, and should therefore moot any further proceedings in Judge Timlin’s court. This is no different than if an earthquake had knocked the cross over, thereby rendering enforcement of the injunction an impossibility.

  3. Dcn. Michael D. Harmon says:

    You know, the last time I visited a military cemetary (“federal land”) it was covered in crosses. And Stars of David. And even a few Muslim moon symbols. Isn’t that showing a preference for religion over atheism? Clearly, something must be done.
    I suggest impeaching the judge.

  4. Wilfred says:

    #3- Dcn. Harmon: Good idea. Impeachment of judges who legislate from the bench, needs to become much, much more common in the U.S., if we are to remain a free nation.