Supreme Court Urged to Reject ACLU Attack on Mojave Desert Memorial

imagesbannerscp_120x215Reprinted by permission of the Christian Post

By Nathan Black
Christian Post Reporter
Tue, Jun. 09 2009 03:53 PM EDT

Three Christian legal firms filed amicus briefs on Monday asking the U.S. Supreme Court to reject the contention that the Mojave Desert Veterans Memorial is unconstitutional.

“This case impacts not just one veterans’ memorial in the desert, but thousands across the country. Tearing down the Mojave Desert Veterans’ Memorial, which has been there since 1934, would be unconscionable and it would also impact thousands of other memorials nationwide,” said Kelly Shackelford, chief counsel of Liberty Legal Institute, which filed a brief on behalf of 4 million veterans and the memorial’s caretakers.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a lawsuit in 2001 on behalf of Frank Buono, a former National Park Services employee, against the Mojave Desert memorial – a seven-foot-tall memorial cross erected more than 70 years ago by World War I veterans.

Congress made attempts to designate the cross as a national memorial and to transfer one acre of land that included the memorial to the Veterans of Foreign Wars. But the District Court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that the cross and the land transfer violated the Establishment Clause and ordered it removed.

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review the case, Salazar v. Buono. In the meantime, the cross has been covered in a plywood box.

Photo Credit: Alliance Defense Fund

Photo Credit: Alliance Defense Fund

“This case represents the most extreme example of a phenomenon that has plagued the federal courts for decades – ideologically motivated citizens and public interest groups search out alleged Establishment Clause violations, almost always in the form of a passive religious symbol or display of some sort, and turn it into a federal case because they are offended,” said Jay Sekulow, Chief Counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice, which filed a friend-of-the-court brief on behalf of 15 members of Congress.

“It’s time for the high court to put an end to this disturbing practice.”

Last month, veterans groups pleaded for the support of Americans to save the memorial cross and thousands like it. They made it clear that the cross was not erected as a religious symbol, but rather to honor those who sacrificed their lives for the country. They were disturbed that the ACLU would try to tear down a veterans memorial in their continued efforts to rid the country of religious symbols.

Tim Chandler, legal counsel of the Alliance Defense Fund, stated, “One person’s agenda shouldn’t diminish the sacrifice made by America’s veterans and families.”

“Americans want these memorials to be protected,” he added. “What is more important: the feelings of a single ‘offended’ person or honoring the memory of thousands of American heroes in a way that has been considered constitutional throughout our nation’s history? If the Mojave cross is not allowed to stand, then numerous other veterans’ memorials are vulnerable to legal attack.”

Copyright 2009 The Christian Post. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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  • Only God knows
    If this memorial is torn down GOD have mercy on us all...the ACLU is so wrong and always has been.
  • Baldeagle1949
    I'm a retired veteran, I'm ashamed it even went this far. This is a symbol of someones believe. This is the land of the free and home of the brave. California courts are a sorry bunch of people along with anybody else that tries to remove it. Send the sorry SOB from Oregon overseas and let him get shoot at and take the ACLU with him. They should be work to benefit others and make it a better place to live rather than disrespecting those that made their lifestyle possible. Most of these type have been giving everything and haven't worked or earned anything. I have no respect for these people and the one that follow in there footsteps. We have people in this country going hungry and no place to live. These people want waste our money in court rather than help people in need.
  • Becky
    The people that place those crosses - and those people that love them - they have rights to! How can one group have "rights" and another group have no rights! It is un-American to not allow those crosses to stand. And, when they are connected to memorials, they should never be disturbed.

    It isn't about what I want or like, it is about someone elses wants and needs. I don't care for body piercings and tattoes but it is none of my business and I don't have to look at them or get them myself!
    How hard is it to look the other way?
  • Gene K
    The supreme court can put an end to this nonsense by acknowledging two truths about the Constitution. 1. This cross is a veteran's memorial not a religious symbol Even if it were a religious symbol, the Constitution guarantees Freedom "OF" religion not freedom "FROM" religion. 2. Americans have a right to do whatever then want so long as it does not infringe on the rights of others. No where in the Contitution are we guaranteed the right to "Not be offended".
  • DCM
    "What is more important: the feelings of a single ‘offended’ person or honoring the memory of thousands of American heroes?" That says it all.

    You know the people who are "offended" by any public display that smacks of Christianity? They're the same ones who'll shove their worldview in people's faces and don't care who *they" offend. "Double standard" is hardly an adequate term.
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