Courts, Even Liberal Ones, Growing Weary Of Michael Newdow
Professional schmuck, Michael Newdow, wearing out his welcome.
Atheist activist Michael Newdow, a controversial lawyer who once received significant media attention, may have worn out his welcome at the U.S. Supreme Court this week.
Derrrrrrrrrrrrrrp
Although many lawyers who argue before the Supreme Court only do so once, a select group of perhaps 20 elite lawyers repeatedly appear before the court. The court often welcomes cases offered by these top-shelf attorneys, knowing that the justices will read polished briefs and hear well-reasoned arguments, which assist the court in reaching the correct result.
Newdows name appears in petitions before the court so often that you might mistake him for one of these appellate powerhouses. Newdow is best known for convincing the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit that the Pledge of Allegiance is unconstitutional because it mentions one nation under God. This case became Newdows debut before the Supreme Court in 2004, where the court dismissed his case because he lacked standing.
Since then, Newdow has brought a series of lawsuits, trying to challenge every aspect of expressions of faith in public settings or events nationwide. If he loses in the lower courts, he appeals, until finally he petitions the Supreme Court to take the case.
This week, the court rejected Newdows latest gambit in his crusade to completely secularize society. It arose from the 9th Circuits decision in Newdows recent case arguing that it violates the Establishment Clause to print our national motto In God We Trust on U.S. currency.
This case, Newdow v. Lefevre, was argued before the 9th Circuit back in 2007, and was decided in March 2010 after an extraordinarily long wait. The appellate court noted that Newdow has now formed his own church, the First Amendmist Church of the True Science (FACTS for short). He argues that it violates the teaching of his church to use money bearing the national motto.
This proved too much even for the most liberal appeals court in America. The 9th Circuit had upheld the constitutionality of the national motto in 1970, where the court held, It is quite obvious that the national motto has nothing whatsoever to do with the establishment of religion. Its use is of a patriotic or ceremonial character and bears no true resemblance to a governmental sponsorship of a religious exercise. Reasoning that the 1970 case had not been overruled during the intervening 40 years, the court dismissed Newdows case.
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