The Special Favors for Fundamentalists Act of 2005


Before you read further, browse the Carnival of the Godless. It’ll salve the pain when you read about the new conservative perfidy.

Our Republican overlords have taken one more step on the road to theocracy with the approval of H.R. 2679, the Public Expression of Religion Act. You can read the full text of the bill, but here’s the gist:

Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a court shall not award reasonable fees and expenses of attorneys to the prevailing party on a claim of injury consisting of the violation of a prohibition in the Constitution against the establishment of religion brought against the United States or any agency or any official of the United States acting in his or her official capacity in any court having jurisdiction over such claim, and the remedies with respect to such a claim shall be limited to injunctive and declaratory relief.

What this does is give religious organizations a special privilege, bestowing on them a small measure of impunity in breaking the law, all with the intent of discouraging citizens from seeking relief from violations of the prohibition against establishment of religion. It’s a curious thing: it’s basically saying that someone can be found guilty of law-breaking, but if they are carrying out their criminal activity in the name of religion, there is a whole class of punishments that cannot be applied to them, and specifically, lawyers working to prevent violations of church and state will not be rewarded for their efforts if successful. They are legislating to support violations of the Constitution.

Nice and sneaky. The religious bigots know they want to break the law, so the solution is to put hurdles in place to inhibit attempts to make them accountable.

My local representative, Collin Peterson, voted for it. I’ve got one of his signs in my yard right now, and I’m going to rip it out and throw it away. I’ve already sent him a letter telling him that I think he’s done a vile and Republican thing, and that I don’t vote for Republicans.

It’s funny how, in the name of fighting against the mythical War on Christmas, conservative morons have declared war on the Constitution…and the dupes in the Democratic party are going along with them.

Comments

  1. Caledonian says

    Making the word ‘Republican’ helps absolutely no one – except people who campaign under the arbitrary label ‘Democrat’.

    It’s time for you people to wake up: there really isn’t any difference between the two parties, excepting only that one has people that are better at manipulating public opinion than the other. Neither party has anything to do with their historical roots, even going back as little as twenty years ago, and neither has anything to do with what until recently they claimed they supported.

    Tell your representative that you won’t vote for theocratic, tyrranous attacks on our freedoms. Don’t say you won’t support him because he acted ‘Republican’, because when you get right down to it it wouldn’t make any difference if he acted ‘Democrat’.

  2. Russell says

    Parties aren’t about historical roots. They are about current politics. In the last few years, the GOP has become the party of the religious right. Dick Armey recognizes that. Jack Danforth has written a book about it. Frist and Santorum exemplify it.

    Americans who support civil liberty, who favor separation of church and state, who believe in traditional Constitutional separation of powers, and who want science respected need to face that reality. That doesn’t mean the Democratic Party is particularly strong in standing up for those values. Or unified. On those issues, or any others.

    But it does mean that the GOP is the enemy, in a way that the Democractic Party is not. And yes, it means that it is quite appropriate, when a Democratic Congressman panders to the religious right, to accuse them of behaving like a Republican.

  3. Russell says

    On the substance of the issue, this provision seems in violation of the 14th amendment. I guess there is an argument to be made that in this case it is the federal government, and not a state, that is creating unequal protection of the law, so the 14th wouldn’t apply.

  4. says


    I think you have the chronology wrong. The War on the Constitution long preceded the phony War on Christmas. This is merely the latest expression of a long campaign … one the Enlightenment is losing.

  5. Caledonian says

    But it does mean that the GOP is the enemy, in a way that the Democractic Party is not.

    No, no, no! The GOP contains the highest concentration of your enemy. The party itself is a meaningless, arbitrary category – some of your enemies use the label ‘Democrat’, others ‘Republican’. This is ultimately an advertising gimmick, nothing more.

    One of the root problems in American politics, if it’s not the root problem, is the obsession with style and shadow over substance. Don’t attack the shadow, attack the substance. It’s the people who have invested a great deal in the brand ‘Democrat’ who want to vilify the brand ‘Republican’, but it’s the product they’re selling that matters, and associating ‘Republican’ with all of the things you *should* be concerned about – tyranny, loss of rights, unlimited dictatorial power – is what those people think will give their brand an edge.

    Ignore the advertising, and attack the unethical, amoral, tyrranical, theocratic politicians! Attack them whatever party they claim to be a part of! Otherwise you’ll just replace a cruel master with a slightly gentler one, and be just as enslaved.

  6. Asher says

    what next? Who must we kill?

    Seriously, I think I’m going to move to canada. That will buy me a few years before the U.S decides to go expansionest and conquers the mythical land north of the border.

  7. Mark says

    I got hit with one of the DNCs fundraising calls the other day. I refused to donate any (more) money, citing the increasing number of Democrats who are trying to out-God God’s Own Party. Gave the poor guy on the other end of it holy hell for it, too.

  8. says

    Collin Peterson is one of the most conservative Northern Democrats (a blue dog).

    Minnesota’s seventh district is one of the most rural of all Congressional districts (Moorhead, its largest city, just barely breaks the urban threshold at 32,000 — 3,000 smaller and the 7th district would be 100% rural).

    It’s also a poor district, possibly the poorest white northern district. Parts of the district (e.g. Todd County) have Alabama-level average income.

  9. Heinrich says

    Doesn’t it go both ways?
    If the prevailing party is the US agency, it’s the agency who has to pay the bill for its lawyers. Their problem!
    How would an agency like the Dover school board explain to their tax payers if they hire expensive lawyers?

  10. lockean says

    Caledonian’s claim that there is no real difference between the political parties is absolute nonsense:

    3% of Republicans voted against this bill
    87% of Democrats voted against this bill

    Do I wish the latter number were 100%? Sure. And I wish I had a pony. But those who oppose the Religious Right and Authoritarian Conservatism must become politically savvy enough to see the difference between 3% and 87%.

    I don’t think the bill has yet gone to the Senate.

  11. says

    Hopefully, even if gets signed into law, it could be overturned if it can be shown it violates the “equal protection under the law” clause.

  12. Caledonian says

    Caledonian’s claim that there is no real difference between the political parties is absolute nonsense:

    3% of Republicans voted against this bill
    87% of Democrats voted against this bill

    The Republicans are currently exercising a voting bloc. The Democrats have previously exercised voting blocs when they had the capacity to do so.

    Voting blocs aren’t inherently ‘Republican’. Nor is abuse of power. Nor is a disregard for our inherent rights. So don’t call them ‘Republican’!

    This “my team vs. your team” mentality needs to stop.

  13. says

    I’m way ahead of you here. It’s making its way through the Senate now.

    Heinrich, in civil trials, if the defense wins, the prosecution doesn’t always have to pay its expenses. Only when the lawsuit is frivolous or ridiculous is the prosecution compelled to pay both sides’ expenses.

    Besides, PERA means that people who can’t afford to sue have no civil liberties. The government’s in no danger of not being able to afford defending itself in court.

  14. Russell says

    Caledonian writes, “The GOP contains the highest concentration of your enemy.”

    Exactly. During the Civil War, the Confederate Army contained the highest concentration of the Union’s active enemy. Grant didn’t worry overly much that there were Confederate sympathizers in Cambridge, some of whom might take up arms. He focused where the enemy was concentrated. Good thing, too.

    “The party itself is a meaningless, arbitrary category.”

    The GOP is not a category. It is not a brand. It is an organization, a political party. It is as real as the Confederate Army was. And today it is the organization that is the single greatest threat to American civil liberty. True, the GOP wasn’t always the party of the religious right. And it might morph into the future into a party that isn’t based in the religious right. But today it is.

  15. G. Tingey says

    dogscratcher has a point?

    Is this “law” actually constitutional, under the US’s constitution?

    Because they have just passed a law regarding the (preferential) establishment of a religion, have they not?

    I notice they have not specified which religion (or have they, elsewhere?)

  16. Phaedrus says

    How do you find out how your congressman voted on a particular bill – is there a URL that keeps tally?

  17. Caledonian says

    Exactly. During the Civil War, the Confederate Army contained the highest concentration of the Union’s active enemy.

    Um… no. Your statement is quite correct, but the argument you’re making is utterly wrong. The Union and the Confederacy were two military forces engaged in a military conflict, in which each side struggled to annihilate the other as an independent force. All’s fair in war, and the two sides sought to undermine the other by whatever means possible.

    Regardless of what you think about any of the factions involved in US politics, if you think the conflicts between the Republican and Democratic brands are equivalent to the Civil War in any meaningful sense, you’re completely out of your mind.

    The GOP is not a category. It is not a brand. It is an organization, a political party. It is as real as the Confederate Army was.

    People often vote for candidates, not because of the policies that they personally support or oppose, and not because of their voting records or platforms, but because of their party affiliation. Those affiliations are first and foremost brands. It’s an advertising gimmick, pure and simple.

    Don’t concern yourself with the gimmicks, go for the substance. The politicians who will vote to take away our liberties are the threat – it doesn’t matter what label they use. Concepts are threats, ideologies are threats. Fight the threats, not the labels they hide under – some of the threat comes from people using the label ‘Democrat’. Fight them!

  18. lockean says

    What sort of abstract cloud do you live on, Caledonia, that you cannot see the different effects on American life that come from…

    …the use of a ‘voting block’ to allow torture versus the use of a ‘voting block’ to prevent torture?

    …the use of a ‘voting block’ to establish religion versus the use of a ‘voting block’ to preserve reglious freedom?

    …the use of a ‘voting block’ to suppress habeas corpus versus the use of a ‘voting block’ to secure trial by jury with the right of the accused to confront evidence against them?

    Is the use of a knife to cut celery no different to you than the use of a knife to kill someone? Is all you care about that they are both uses of knives?

    My team is the Minnesota Vikings. The Democratic Party, on the other hand, is a political organization whose candidates I will be voting for this November, partly in hopes that they will take control of the House of Representatives and perhaps even the Senate. If they do, I hope they will use ‘voting blocks’ and use them wisely, efficiently, even ruthlessly, to break the power of Bush & Co. At the very least, their ‘voting blocks’ will slow, even prevent, the further slide of our country into authoritarian hell.

    Not because they are my team or anyone else’s team, but because that’s how politics works.

  19. says

    …the use of a ‘voting block’ to suppress habeas corpus versus the use of a ‘voting block’ to secure trial by jury with the right of the accused to confront evidence against them?

    You mean a voting bloc that wants everyone to be stripped of civil liberties, versus a voting bloc that wants 4.6% of the world’s population to be exempt?

  20. Russell says

    Caledonian, again: “People often vote for candidates, not because of the policies that they personally support or oppose, and not because of their voting records or platforms, but because of their party affiliation. Those affiliations are first and foremost brands. It’s an advertising gimmick, pure and simple.”

    No. Those affiliations are first and foremost a political alliance, that determines among other things how committees are organized in the US Congress. That’s why it was so important when Jeffords left the Republican Party. It didn’t change who he was. It wasn’t an advertising gimmick. It had a real impact on political power and what legislation was and wasn’t passed that term of Congress.

  21. George says

    Barney Frank stood up for atheists during the debate:

    “I want to address this notion, too, well, you have freedom of religion, not freedom from religion. That is a fundamental misunderstanding of the Constitution and history. People who came to this country, some of them were objecting to being forced to profess other religions or support other religions. Religious freedom means that your religious practice, whether it exists or does not exist, is none of the government’s business. The notion that your right not to be religious does not exist is appalling to me.

    The gentleman from Georgia said you have freedom of religion, not from religion. Agnostics, atheists, people whose religion you may not think worthy, they do not have freedom in this country? What kind of a distortion of the principle of freedom is that?

    The notion that you do not have freedom from religion means, literally, I guess, that you can be told, okay, look, you have got to pick a religion, pick one; you cannot have none whatsoever. That is not the American Constitution.”

    http://www.govtrack.us/congress/record.xpd?id=109-h20060926-34&bill=h109-2679#sMonoElementm12m0m0m

    Thank you, Barney. The Republican party is willing to destroy the Constitution to satisfy a bunch of religious fanatics.

    Fuck them.

  22. lockean says

    Alon Levy, the torture legislation would have never come to a vote in the Senate if the dems were the majority party, so their timid, confused, and dissapointing tactics for trying to defeat it, and/or trying to ‘frame’ themselves for the coming election–including offering several feeble amendments–aren’t germane to the question of the effects on American life of a dem majority versus a repub majority.

    Similiarly Calidonian (Sorry that I’ve been calling you Caledonia), a handful of pro-life dems in a dem-controlled congress is not threat to abortion rights. A handful of pro-choice repubs in a repub-controlled congress still contributes to the erosion of abortion rights. The same is true of most issues.

    It would be wonderful if we could vote for the candidate and not worry about the party affiliation, but if you care about the issues in question, you must consider the effects of which party has majority status. That determines committee chairs, the legislative calendar, rules for how bills are debated, and how congressional oversight of the executive branch functions or doesn’t.

  23. xyjm says

    >Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a court shall not award reasonable fees and expenses of attorneys to the prevailing party on a claim of injury consisting of the violation of a prohibition in the Constitution against the establishment of religion brought against the United State

    WTF! I got that far. What are you people doing to your country? Words fail me. Everyone else has said it already.

    A – no, *the* – beacon of the Enlightenment is falling apart in front of our eyes.

    Vote (and I know anyone reading this will), vote you b@#$@#$.

    Failing that (and I never thought I’d say this) viva la 2nd amendment.

  24. flame821 says

    about that Constitutionality thing?

    Alberto Gonzalez has already come out swinging against the supreme court, warning them not to ‘second guess’ a wartime president….

    Silly me, I apparently missed Congress declaring a war, but I guess that’s just another little detail that Bush doesn’t need to worry about.

  25. Caledonian says

    No. Those affiliations are first and foremost a political alliance, that determines among other things how committees are organized in the US Congress. That’s why it was so important when Jeffords left the Republican Party. It didn’t change who he was. It wasn’t an advertising gimmick. It had a real impact on political power and what legislation was and wasn’t passed that term of Congress.

    Arguing that political blocs are powerful because Congress is controlled by political blocs is stupid. At a time when people need to be rallying around the defense of freedom, you’re concerned with what alliances people have joined. This is why our system has fallen as far as it has!

  26. Caledonian says

    It would be wonderful if we could vote for the candidate and not worry about the party affiliation, but if you care about the issues in question, you must consider the effects of which party has majority status. That determines committee chairs, the legislative calendar, rules for how bills are debated, and how congressional oversight of the executive branch functions or doesn’t.

    Certain factions currently residing under the umbrella of the Republican party realized that, and so they managed to cow sensible Republican party members into supporting their policies – otherwise the organized power bloc would cripple their attempts to do pretty much of anything.

    If you vote for people who support taking away your rights just because of the party they belong to, you’re out of your mind. If a Republican who refused to support this Administration’s and this Congress’ actions ran for President, you’re telling me that you wouldn’t elect him because he’s from the wrong party?

  27. JJR says

    I’m not voting for any pro-war Democrats; not now, not ever.
    I’m voting Green, voting Socialist, and screw everybody else.
    No more compromises, no more lesser-evilism, screw all that.
    I don’t want kinder, gentler imperialists, I want real f*cking ANTI-IMPERIALISTS in office.

    I’m not voting for anyone that panders to religion and treats atheists like me as 2nd class citizens, either.

    xyjim, I hear you about the 2nd Amendment, bro:
    http://www.liberalswithguns.com

    It’s funny how all those nutty right-wing militia slogans from the 1990s I used to laugh at suddenly don’t seem quite so nutty anymore.

  28. lockean says

    Caledonian, how is it stupid to observe a fact? Political blocs are in fact powerful because they in fact control how Congress operates. Are you saying you wish they didn’t? I do too. So what? Are you saying if liberals don’t act in a factional way, then by some sort of magic, repubs will cease to operate in a factional way? That is stupid.

    Rallying around an abstract defense of freedom gets you nowhere. Bush & Co. can claim–and do claim–that they’re defending our freedoms. They can say so just as vociferously as those who are actually trying to.

    To contend with an organized faction you must build a larger or better organized faction. We may wish this were not so, but it is so. Which is why political parties have been part of our ‘system’ from nearly its inception.

  29. Caledonian says

    Caledonian, how is it stupid to observe a fact? Political blocs are in fact powerful because they in fact control how Congress operates.

    So don’t vote for people who play into power politics. If a candidate does thing like vote to eliminate civil liberties, withdraw your support and insist that your party cull him. If they won’t, leave the party and start a new one if necessary.

    This “lesser evil” crap is what’s driving the slide into evil. If people don’t start applying non-relative standards to politicians things will get worse.

    Don’t complain about how we’re now living in a dictatorship, then say that you’re considering maybe not voting for a Democrat who supported the takeover. Power structures work because no one person who abandons the system benefits, and so no one wants to be the first. If a sufficient number of people don’t break with the established system, the system will continue as it has been.

  30. txjak says

    The Dover ID case was brought about because teaching “intelligent design” alongside Darwinian Theory violated the Establishment Clause.

    Even though the attorneys waived their fees in the Kitzmiller case, the legal expenses were still over $1 million and paid by the settlement. If PERA were law at the time, would there have been any parents who could afford to pay these kind of legal expenses to sue the Dover School Board?.

    I haven’t been following Phil Johnson, Wild Bill Dembski, or the rest of the DI on this, but they’re undoubtedly looking at PERA as a boost to their Wedge strategy.

  31. Russell says

    Caledonian writes, “At a time when people need to be rallying around the defense of freedom, you’re concerned with what alliances people have joined.”

    Of course. Because that will determine whether and to what extent we are successful in defending those freedoms. Just as the competition between factions have always determined political outcomes in this nation.

    “This is why our system has fallen as far as it has!”

    Nonsense. That has been the nature of our system from its inception. Even earlier. The creation of the Constitution was the capstone for the political faction then called the Federalists, which morphed into one of the first political parties after the Constitution was ratified. Now, you might dream of some political system that doesn’t include parties or factions as a central part of the political struggle. But (a) that certainly is not part of the US political system, and never has been part of it, and (b) given the way political systems work, it’s hard to imagine what kind of system would not exhibit such, especially if it is the least bit representative.

  32. Herb West says

    PZ – Instead of calling people “dupes” and “morons”, try searching the Constitution for the phrase “loser pays.” You won’t find it…

  33. colluvial says

    How do you find out how your congressman voted on a particular bill – is there a URL that keeps tally?

    Try: GovTrak. Select your state and when the page showing the representatives for that state comes, click on the representative you’re interested. Then, at the bottom of the left panel on the page for that representative, click on “Browse so-and-so’s voting record”.

  34. Russell says

    Herb West writes, “PZ – Instead of calling people “dupes” and “morons”, try searching the Constitution for the phrase “loser pays.” You won’t find it…”

    No, but you will find the phrases “equal protection.” Note that the legislation in question doesn’t eliminate the principle of “loser pays” generally, but only for a certain class of defendants. A student suing a school because it wrongly disallows religious clubs, while allowing other kinds of student clubs, would get his lawyer fees paid. A student suing a school because it wrongly mandates morning prayers would not. Do you really think that discrimination raises no first amendment or fourteenth amendment question? What about a law that removes “loser pays,” but only for suits in which racial discrimination is at issue?

  35. Caledonian says

    Nonsense. That has been the nature of our system from its inception.

    Yeah, and it’s been sliding downhill for a very long time. The latest outrages are just that – the latest outrages. Just because the pace has picked up recently doesn’t change the fact that this trend has been progressing since the Jacksonian era.

    But it’s not whether the government is getting worse, because worse is relative. What matters is whether there is the necessary minimum level of good governance, and as far as I can tell, there isn’t.

    Christ, how can you all be so blind? Like any other selection and perpetuation system, it’s the Law of the Minimum that applies: the lowest standards of the selection agents determines the population quality. If you’ll vote for any corrupt idiot because he’s slightly better than the opponent, you’ll find yourself represented by corrupt idiots anyway.

    The people who have hijacked the Republican party managed it because they convinced a threshhold number of people that standing up to them would entail a loss of access to the power system. What are you going to do, beat them at their own game? This isn’t even about defeating Republicans – it’s about Democratic candidate selection. If you lend your support to any fool because you’re afraid of becoming ‘irrelevant’ the candidate pool will become worse and worse. Being corrupt has a whole lot of advantages over honesty and integrity. If you don’t reward honesty and integrity, and seek to uproot corruption when it starts to spread, the corruption will eventually dominate.

    There have got to be *some* people willing to draw a line in the sand. *Those* people should be your candidates, and they should hit the issue as often as possible. Every soundbite, every campaign speech, every public appearance not devoted to countering the neoconservative agenda is lost ground – you’re wasting time attacking the puppet instead of the puppet master.

  36. Russell says

    Caledonian writes, “But it’s not whether the government is getting worse, because worse is relative.”

    Huh? Imagine a physician who says, “don’t worry about how well your heart is pumping, since that is relative.”

    “What matters is whether there is the necessary minimum level of good governance.”

    Which means what? You seem wont to say that everyone else is doing it wrong, but I haven’t heard you explain how your political tactics are better. Better, in the real world, not in some fantasized one.

  37. Herb West says

    Russel, I don’t agree. Here is why. This bill applies to *violations* not *classes of people*.

    Read the bill: the revision applies to “violations of a prohibition in the Constitution against the establishment of religion”

    It is Congress’s prerogative to adjust criminal penalties as is done in this bill.

    “Loser pays” is meant to disuade frivolous lawsuits. The instances that Congress is addressing in this bill are instances in which “loser pays” is being used to bully potential defendants (particluarly, to bully potential defendants into removing religious imagery from veterans memorials and into banning Boy Scouts from public buildings). Exempting the defendants in such lawsuits is consistent with the spirit of loser pays and unobjectionable. If, however, the plaintiffs were exempted that would run counter to “loser pays”.

    The bill is Constitutional and, IMO, a good idea.

  38. says

    If those attempts to “bully potential defendants into removing religious imagery” are groundless, then the fact that the secularists would lose the court cases ought to be defense against frivolous suits. The fact that the Republicans are concerned that they would not win such suits, and must therefore change the law to make it prohibitively difficult for people in the right to seek legal redress, is the problem here.

    BAD idea. This is giving special protection to people seeking to insert religion into government.

  39. lockean says

    Caledonian,

    I wish power politics was unnecessary in the way that I wish the floors of my apartment would clean themselves, but cleaning floors is not evil, just unpleasant. Party politics is a necessary part of democratic regimes–as Russell notes–and so far as I know, democratic regimes are better than all the other regimes. I do not oppose the repubs b/c they use party politics–why wouldn’t they? I oppose their policies and the effects of their policies.

    I want to defeat republican policies. The best way to do that is to vote into power a democratic majority. I do not view this as the lesser of two evils. The democratic leadership is often craven and unprincipled, but elections are not melodramas where I root for the good guys; elections are not personal statements of who I am or what I believe–there is no essay portion on the ballot; elections are a process for determining who rules. Who will have power over my life, liberty and prosperity? Someone is going to. Who will that be? I am more than happy to compromise with people I disagree with in order to defeat people whose policies are detrimental (IMO) to my country.

    Moreover, I have no objection to ‘relative standards’ in politics. It is entirely reasonable to challenge a dem candidate in a liberal state like CT for opinions which I would welcome in a dem candidate from TN.

    I want the democrats to play power politics to the hilt, as Roosevelt did, to split, weaken, and bury the republicans. Not b/c the republicans are the other guys, but b/c the republican party is organizationally dependent on the religious right and authoritarianism and therefore do and will favor authoritarianism and the religious-right in their policies.

  40. says

    Caledonian’s comments show that he really doesn’t grasp (or just refuses to admit) the factional nature of our political system.

    Like it or not, America has precisely two viable political parties, and except in very rare circumstances, a vote not cast for one of them is by default a vote for the other. The two parties do hold to identifiably different standards and governing philosophies. Not every Democrat is good, just as not every Republican is bad, but in both cases every politician in office who belongs to one party gives power to other politicians from that party and therefore assists in advancing their party’s agenda.

    And like it or not, politics is about making compromises. If you hold out for perfection and withdraw from a party or a candidate because they don’t perfectly represent your ideals, you’re just assisting someone who probably opposes those ideals even more. On the other hand, if you work to get a candidate elected, even if they don’t agree with you 100%, once that person is in office you have more leverage to encourage them to do the right thing.

  41. Caledonian says

    Like it or not, America has precisely two viable political parties, and except in very rare circumstances, a vote not cast for one of them is by default a vote for the other.

    But that’s why there are only two viable parties in the first place – the system reinforces itself. Other democratic systems have problems, but they’re not usually “winner takes all”, which leads to whomever is most willing to compromise themselves having the power.

    I’m optimistic enough to think that if they’re presented with truly principled candidates who won’t make ethical compromises on basic, fundamental concepts, people will vote for them. Voting for the lesser of two evils, if there aren’t standards that puts lower limits on the quality of candidates and if it goes on for long enough, results in a steady slide into increasing incompetence.

    Either you’re willing to stop that slide, or you aren’t. If you won’t challenge the system that produces the slide, I suppose there’s nothing more to be said. You’ll get the government you deserve, and I’ll just have to find another place to live.

  42. says

    i am very unhappy with actions on the part of some Democrats as well. most significantly, i cannot believe any of them supporting the Military Commissions Act recently passed, nor can i believe when Ted Kennedy was at Harvard recently he praised the McCain amendment modifying it.

    we were originally not going to support Democrats financially at all. but with the Bush junta and their Lead Elephant Party indulging in travesty, we couldn’t see supporting the opposition at all. thus, we gave.

    i think a lot of people are so fed up with Congress that many of them have don’t-vote sympathies or third party sympathies. i think that’s a bad mistake. the Republican Inquisition has to go. in our politics, the only means are electing Democrats. they are riddled with problems, but not One Big Problem.

    while i cannot excuse some of this behavior, there are parliamentary maneuvers which force Democrats hands. for instance, the attachment in conference committee (from which Democrats were banned) of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act to the Ports Security Act was the biggest railroad i’ve seen recently. the bill trotted out, no amendments were permitted, it was the 11th hour before Congress adjourned, and only an up/down vote was allowed. that Internet gambling act would never have passed by open vote. Democrats opposed to it, however, were faced with voting down the Ports Security legislation, which is okay (but not great) by itself in order to prevent the Internet gambling thing, or allowing both.

    now, i know such bundling is something Democrats have done before. indeed, there have been conference insertions trying to kill Cape Wind moved by Kennedy.

    i don’t know how to convince some people that the Bush junta is evil and simply needs to be contained anyway we can.

  43. Russell says

    Herb West writes, “This bill applies to *violations* not *classes of people*.”

    You’re ignoring the fact that it applies to violations of one particular type. Establishment suits are directed at different branches or agencies of the government, when the plaintiff thinks there is excessive government entanglement with religion. Why should these and these alone be exempted from “loser pays”? If anything, the fact that it is solely the government that can violate the establishment clause, and the government by definition is the 800 lb. gorilla in such actions, means we should not be stacking the deck against individuals who seek their Constitutional rights.

    I’m also unconvinced by your argument that it is about violations rather than classes of defendants. The purpose and effect of the legislation clearly is to favor people who want government support of religion, against those who don’t. I suspect the former includes almost wholy the religious.

    “The instances that Congress is addressing in this bill are instances in which “loser pays” is being used to bully potential defendants (particluarly, to bully potential defendants into removing religious imagery from veterans memorials and into banning Boy Scouts from public buildings)”

    Has anyone ever sued to ban the Boy Scouts from public buildings? That sounds like a wingnut myth to me.

    “Exempting the defendants in such lawsuits is consistent with the spirit of loser pays and unobjectionable.”

    The Boy Scouts can’t establish religion. Government agencies can. How is exempting government agencies for this unobjectionable?

  44. David Harmon says

    Caledonian: “There have got to be *some* people willing to draw a line in the sand. *Those* people should be your candidates, …”

    Oh you mean like Gore? Kerry? Clinton? Dean? The Republicans have established an SOP of politically destroying anyone who could have challenged their power. That’s how come the appeasers and quislings are in control of the Democrats — because the real candidates have been neutered. But you know something? Even though one party has intimidated the other into submission, that doesn’t mean there’s no difference between them. It means we’re losing. And trying to ignore the political landscape is not going to change that. (“Only a flesh wound!”) If you’re not willing or able to recognize that there is a real difference between the parties, then you’re blowing off both the fight to defeat the neocons, and the equally important fight to reclaim and rearm the Democrats.

  45. says

    Caledonian:

    I’m optimistic enough to think that if they’re presented with truly principled candidates who won’t make ethical compromises on basic, fundamental concepts, people will vote for them.

    No, they won’t. You’re not optimistic, Cally, you’re naïve.

    The vast, overwhelming majority of Americans vote their party line, period. The individual candidates and their stated platforms are not relevant in any meaningful sense.

  46. Caledonian says

    I *know* that’s the case. I’ve said as much, before. My optimism lies with the idea that given the opportunity, they’ll vote for a qualified candidate. Qualified candidates haven’t made it through the primary selection process, on either the federal or state level (at least the ones I was in) in my living memory, so in a very real sense the hypothesis has not been tested.

    If my hope is misplaced, and people won’t break out of the partisan system even to save themselves, then frankly I don’t think you’re collectively worth saving.

  47. lockean says

    The laws and policies of the current U.S. government were brought into being by republicans. They in fact control all three branches of government. Caledonian’s claim that those who oppose this situation are somehow responsible for it, is as factually incorrect as it is maddeningly self-righteous.

    The reason the democratic beltway establishment went along with so much of the repub rise to power is not that they were extremely partisan but that they were not. Democrats in the 80s and 90s were as unpartisan as political parties in the U.S. have ever been. They lacked (due partly to their own misplaced efforts) a national party structure to give them both the impetus and the power to fight.

    A return to the partisan democratic party of Jefferson or Roosevelt will defend liberalism while we wait for the ‘truly principled candidates who won’t make ethical compromises on basic, fundamental concepts.’ We might need to wait for quite some time.

  48. Caledonian says

    Caledonian’s claim that those who oppose this situation are somehow responsible for it, is as factually incorrect as it is maddeningly self-righteous.

    No, the claim was that people who are willing to sacrifice political principles in exchange for political power are responsible for that. The subset of those people hiding within the Republican party are simply better at it than those hiding with the Democratic party.

    I must say that I’m not particularly impressed with the quality of your analysis, lockean.

  49. Michael "Sotek" Ralston says

    Caledonian, if you’re aware that principled candidates rarely make it through the primary selection process … why don’t you talk about changing that?

    If I have a choice between voting for someone who will do bad things 70% of the time, and someone who will do bad things 99% of the time – and that may well be what my choices are in the general election – I still categorically refuse to vote for the one who does bad things more often. And yes, a vote for someone who can’t win is functionally equivalent to not voting at all. If I can prevent the person who almost exclusively does evil from having power, even if that’s only by giving power to the person who mostly does evil … I still have to do it.

    I can vote differently in the primaries. I have in the past, too. In the primaries, I can vote for the best choice – because in the primaries, I do not face the choice I am forced to confront in the generals.

    In the generals, if I do not vote for the Democrat, about 95% of the time, my alternative is worse. I’d love to see the system change – but as long as it remains the way it is, it is simple idiocy to place a vote that I know will harm my interests more than another vote I could make.

    It is as simple as that. And if you do not vote for the “least bad” candidate who has a chance at winning, you are voting for the worst candidate.

  50. Lettuce says

    It’s time for you people to wake up: there really isn’t any difference between the two parties,

    Nonesense.

    Puerile nonsense.

    There isn’t any difference? Not much of an adult, are you?

  51. lockean says

    I’m not trying to impress you, Caldeonian. I’m stating that you’re wrong.

    You’re wrong to assume that building a party base sufficient to govern involves the sacrifice of anyone’s political principles but your own.

    You’re wrong to possit some ineffable and historically unattested decline in American politics due to political parties.

    You’re very very wrong to allow your distaste for power politics to become a filter for the viewing of events, like the rise of the current GOP. You’re like a theologian thinking wars are caused by greed or pride or lust, so you speak out against this cause, accomplishing nothing while the war goes on, and thinking anyone who does join your abstract crusade is contributing to the war.

    Partisanship has been essential to every political reform accomplished on this planet. Every single one.

  52. Caledonian says

    Caledonian, if you’re aware that principled candidates rarely make it through the primary selection process … why don’t you talk about changing that?

    That’s what I’ve been talking about! I can hold out hope for the idea that people will choose quality candidates precisely because those sorts of candidates never seem to run. Everyone has always been in a rush to compromise – not by finding common ground, but by violating their integrity. As such candidates are the only options available, people are demonstrably unwilling to give up the tiny amount of influence they have by choosing between them. I can still hold onto the idea that if some brave soul stands up and says “these things are important, and cannot afford to lose them, and so we will not compromise our support for them”, people will respond.

    The reason most people don’t vote is because they know very well that their vote is fairly pointless. The options are limited and narrow, and they’ll be presented with the same sort of thing from all sides. More people came out in the ’06 elections precisely because there was more difference between the two candidates. Not enough difference, but more than usual. The structure of our system creates the conditions that lead to quite reasonable apathy, and that reinforces itself because it is then difficult for idealists to carry out reform. It’s quite possible for demagogues to exploit the system, and they do, and now demagogues who lack the insight to govern in ways even slightly in their own best interests have taken over… and all you people want to to is stick to the old broken pattern.

    I simply don’t understanding such thinking. Why haven’t you cast out the Democratic politicians who voted to remove essential civil rights? Why don’t the sane and decent Republicans abandon their party – for that matter, why don’t the sane and decent Democrats abandon theirs, if it will not reject petty tyrants and power-hungry manipulation?

    Perhaps it’s simply time for America to die.

  53. says

    Caledonian:

    No, the claim was that people who are willing to sacrifice political principles in exchange for political power are responsible for that.

    A willingness to sacrifice principles for power is, last I checked, a non-negotiable pre-requisite for entering American politics in the first place.

    I can hold out hope for the idea that people will choose quality candidates precisely because those sorts of candidates never seem to run.

    The sane among us, on the other hand, know that those candidates don’t actually exist anymore (if they ever did), so we no longer hold out hope that they will run.

    Why haven’t you cast out the Democratic politicians who voted to remove essential civil rights?

    Because there isn’t anyone better who’s willing to take their places. And anyway, the majority of Americans don’t really seem to mind when their essential civil rights are taken away.

    Why don’t the sane and decent Republicans abandon their party – for that matter, why don’t the sane and decent Democrats abandon theirs, if it will not reject petty tyrants and power-hungry manipulation?

    Because they’re just as petty and power-hungry as the insane and indecent ones, and they need their parties’ support to get what they want.

    Perhaps it’s simply time for America to die.

    America — the America you’re talking about, anyway — died a long time ago. We’re well into the self-destructive imperial phase of the political superpower life-cycle, now.

  54. Herb West says

    Hey Russell, there is federal law prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, and national origin. Please note that ‘people bringing lawsuits against violations of the establishment of religion’ are not a legally protected class of people.

    Think of it this way: it is not unlawful discrimination to legislate that people found guilty of murder may get life imprisonment but that people found guilty of shoplifting may not. Shoplifters and murderers are not legally protected classes; they don’t have to be sentenced identically. It would be unlawful to legislate one penalty for black shoplifters and a different penalty for white shoplifters because discrimination on the basis of race is forbidden.

    I understand your point that the people who would benefit would be “almost wholly the religious”. Similarly, some have argued that federal cocaine sentencing laws are unlawfully discriminatory because penalties for dealing crack cocaine are harsher than penalties for dealing powder cocaine and that most crack cocaine offenders are black. That argument has not overturned federal cocaine sentencing guidelines. I don’t think your analogous argument should upset this House bill either.

    Lawsuits against the Boy Scouts are no myth. Such lawsuits are cited in the house bill at the top of this thread. The ACLU argues that Boy Scouts may not use public land or buildings because they disciminate against atheists and gays. The ACLU brought the lawsuit Barnes-Wallace v Boy Scouts and won. http://www.aclu.org/lgbt/discrim/12115prs20040414.html

  55. Caledonian says

    That’s a little like saying we’re legally responsible for the consequences if we falsely yell “Fire!” in a crowded theater, so criticism of the government isn’t immune from punitive government responses.

  56. says

    Herb West:

    Please note that ‘people bringing lawsuits against violations of the establishment of religion’ are not a legally protected class of people.

    Plaintiffs in religious establishment cases are entitled to just as much legal protection as a plaintiff in any other kind of statutory case (or at least they will be, until this bill passes). Any law that says otherwise is, by definition, a “law respecting an establishment of religion.”

    Think of it this way: it is not unlawful discrimination to legislate that people found guilty of murder may get life imprisonment but that people found guilty of shoplifting may not. Shoplifters and murderers are not legally protected classes; they don’t have to be sentenced identically.

    If you read the Eighth Amendment, you’ll find that it is, in fact, “unlawful discrimination,” pursuant to the “cruel and unusual punishment” clause, to give a shoplifter the same sentence as a murderer.

  57. says

    George: That attitude of Mr. Frank is remarkable. I haven’t seen that sort of attitude from US politicians very often recently.

    Cairnarvon: There are apparently Vermont seperatists, so why not? :)

  58. Russell says

    Herb West writes, “Lawsuits against the Boy Scouts are no myth. Such lawsuits are cited in the house bill at the top of this thread. The ACLU argues that Boy Scouts may not use public land or buildings because they disciminate against atheists and gays.”

    No, they do not. And the specific case you cite is an example otherwise. The ACLU argues something quite different: that the government must treat the Boy Scouts like any other organization, rather than granting them preferential treatment.

    Across the nation, thousands of religious groups use public buildings, from Bible clubs in public buildings to churches that rent rooms in town halls. The ACLU thinks this is fine. The only thing the ACLU insists is that the government entities involved not make preferential rules for such things, such preference being a form of establishment.

    One of the most dishonest tacts taken by the religious right today is to view the liberal insistence that religious groups are treated the same, by the government as non-religious groups as some form of discrimination against religion. It’s not. Equality is not discrimination. The problem is that the religious, the traditionally religious, are so accustomed to preference that mere equality seems a step down to them.

  59. Keanus says

    Herb West, in stating “‘Loser pays’ is meant to disuade [sic] frivolous lawsuits,” you’re confusing two different meanings of loser pays. In private action civil suits in Europe, the loser normally pays the court costs and the winning side’s legal costs. (In the US they do not, although I think it should be instituted here to discourage US ambulance chasers.) In this instance neither Congress nor we are talking about private action civil suits. We’re talking about civil suits over violations of either the establishment clause or the free exercise clause of the First Amendment. The defendant in such suits is always a government agency. Long standing legal precedent supports that, when such suits are won by the plaintiff, the government agency has to pay all court costs and legal expenses of the plaintiff. Such a rule encourages equal access; it doesn’t really penalize anyone, least of all the government. Only by maintaining that practice can any citizen hope to challenge the government when it is in the wrong. Were the odds of winning for a plaintiff to be very poor, they would in all likelihood be unable to hire an attorney; ergo no suit. That condition strongly discourages frivolous suits. And it’s what has applied until now.

    Congress in its mean spirited ignorance has tried to turn the tables and make it nigh impossible for lone individuals to sue–petition is the more accurate term–the government on religious grounds, unless they are extraordinarily wealthy or capable of representing themselves, like the plaintiff on the pledge of allegiance did recently. Congress is not seeking to equalize the ground rules but tilt them heavily toward government and those who would use it to promote religion. That violates of the equal protection clause of the Constitution and, if passed into law by the Senate, is almost certain to be struck down by the courts. PERA, the proposed law in question, in fact would deprive the vast majority of citizens the right to petition their government, vitiating a key element in the First Amendment. Herb West’s opining that “The bill is Constitutional and, IMO, a good idea” is certain to be proven wrong in the first federal district court in which the law is challenged–and, if passed, it will be challenged within weeks.

    As for the Senates position on the bill, it didn’t take it up before adjourning until after the elections. It may take it up in the lame duck session after the elections, but with nine major appropriations bills in the hopper, most analysts consider its likelihood of passing the Senate very small. It will probably not even make it out of committee, something that hasn’t happened in the four (or is it five?) years that Rep. Hostettler (an Indiana Rep from Evansville who’s running behind his challenger at the moment and getting farther and farther behind) has pushed this execrable bill.

    And as for the Boy Scouts, to my knowledge the ACLU has not sued the Boy Scouts at all. What the ACLU has done is sue government agencies that give preferential treatment to the Boy Scouts, despite their open discrimination against gays, atheists, agnostics and followers of non-traditional religions. And in some cases, where the government has the spine to enforce its own laws, the ACLU isn’t even involved. In Philadelphia the City of Philadelphia has given the Boy Scouts a lovely city building rent free since before WWII. The City has negotiated with the Boy Scouts over their discriminatory policies for at least five or six years, seeking to change them, but the Scouts have stood firm for discrimination. Thus the City has given notice that the Scouts must vacate the building within a year, unless they change their policies. Recently the Scouts ejected an Eagle Scout who came out of the closet, so I think they’re not likely to change their policies. As a private voluntary organization the Scouts have a perfect right to choose their members, but if they discriminate in violation of federal, state or local law, they have no right to the free use of public facilities.

  60. says

    I think that Collin Peterson could use a primary challenger in 2008. How ’bout you, PZ?

    I wish he were electable in a country where half the people wouldn’t vote for an atheist.

  61. Chris says

    Herb West can be refuted much more simply than that: if this were such a fair idea, why protect violators of the Establishment Clause but not protect violators of the Free Exercise Clause?

    Because the law is intended to encourage breaking the Constitution only in ways its drafters agree with. Simple.

    None of these cases would get brought at all unless the plaintiffs’ attorneys thought they had a real case with a good chance of winning. Attorneys have a professional obligation not to bring meritless suits, and on top of that, they often only get paid if they win, which makes an obvious loser case a big waste of the attorney’s time *and* a professional embarrassment. If this law passes, the attorney won’t get paid even if he *does* win (since the plaintiff is usually too poor to afford it).

    As for the Boy Scouts, my brother is an ex-Eagle Scout who left over the national organization’s anti-gay stance. There are (or at least were) some good individual troops, but the national organization is pretty rotten and encourages all sorts of sectarianism and backwards religious attitudes (not just limited to gay-bashing).

  62. says

    Caledonian:
    Your ideas have been, rightly, attacked from a number of angles, but I’m goign to point out one thing that nobody else has (that I’ve noticed).

    THERE ARE MORE OF “THEM” THAN THERE ARE OF “US.”

    We wouldn’t be a majority in any district I can imagine — and the few where we might be able to form a coalition already have pretty good representatives. And that is assuming that “us” is a unified group, and I doubt if it would be. We’d have so much infighting over ‘ideological purity’ that ‘us’ would break apart into a half-dozen different parties that would get even fewer votes, while the religious rightists would be unified — and we are scattered geographically, they tend to be in certain areas.
    We’d lose most of the blacks from our coalition in this sort of multi-party system because they tend to be MORE religious (and sadly, frequently more homophobic) than whites. We’d lose the ‘liberal Christians’ (who actually outnumber the Religious Right) if we pushed for atheism. We’d lose people who are truly scared about Islamic terrorism or we’d lose the Muslims.

    The fact is that multi-party systems don’t usually work, and when they do, they favor the RIGHT, not the left. (Take a look at Israel. Most israelis are secular and HATE the ultra-Orthodox, but the religious parties have power far beyond their numbers because of the need to form a coalition to govern.) For that matter, look at India, Pakistan, France between the wars — where there kept on being parties with ever stronger ‘left-wing’ names that immediately became centrists, so that the “Radical Socialists” were about the equivalent of moderate Republicans. Look at Yugoslavia between the wars, where ethnic grouping and special interest parties so paralyzed the government that a ‘constitutional monarchy’ had to become a functioning, even slightly authoritarian monarchy so that anything could be done.

    Finally, remember that the glory of our system is that, except in organizing the congress, party discipline is NOT enforced. (This is a very exceptional time when the Republicans, since Gingrich, HAVE been tightly controlled, but there are cracks forming even now, and the Foley case will be VERY important.) This gives the chance for mavericks and independents in both parties to slowly take positions and swing their parties their way — something much harder in parliamentary systems.

    Read some history. Find out about George Norris and Robert LaFollette. Find out that it was the lack of party discipline that let enough republicans join with the Democrats to bring McCarthy down (Arthur V. Watkins was a VERY Conservative Mormon Republican from Utah, but he brought out the censure resolution) that it was the fact that a whole series of Republicans were free to break with their party that brought Nixon down.

    One final story to emphasize ‘more of them.’ The only election I can remember voting Republican in was the 1970 Philly mayoral election. The Democrats nominated the “Tough Cop” Frank Rizzo, who was pro-war, racist, homophobic, etc. I, and EVERY liberal Democrat i know of, all backed Thatcher Longstreth, the very rich, very liberal Republican (and Longstreth was truly liberal, not just ‘liberal for a Republican.’).
    Rizzo won in a landslide. People WANTED him, they WERE afraid of crime, they thought his toughness was good.
    They weren’t being manipulated, conned, the one thing you can say about Rizzo was that he was out front in his positions. (He wasn’t as honest about his own honesty, which came out a few years later, but that was a different thing).
    And, of course, it WAS the people who said ‘the parties are all alike, I’ll vote for Nader’ who won the election for Bush in 2000 — because if it weren’t for them, the Florida mess would never have been relevant.

  63. Caledonian says

    I wish he were electable in a country where half the people wouldn’t vote for an atheist.

    It seems half the people won’t vote for a Democrat, either. Yet you keep forwarding them.

  64. Caledonian says

    And, of course, it WAS the people who said ‘the parties are all alike, I’ll vote for Nader’ who won the election for Bush in 2000 — because if it weren’t for them, the Florida mess would never have been relevant.

    So you do favor rule by those willing to compromise all principles in exchange for power. Check.

    So, of course, it WAS those people who said ‘sticks tightly bound are stronger than sticks apart’ and ‘we have to vote within party lines or risk becoming irrelevant’ who were responsible for the Bush mess in 2000 – and the Bush mess in 2004. You’ve also been responsible for the state of our government for the last fifty years.

    You go to Hell, sir.

  65. says

    No, sir, I am not a fascist — though I am enough of a historian to recognize your reference. I am a believer in a system of government that, the more you speak, the less you seem to understand. It is called ‘Democracy.” More precisely it is ‘liberal Democracy.”

    That means that what is needed is to create majorities on specific issues, majorities composed of people who might disagree with me on other, equally important issues, to oppose groups who threaten the principles I do believe in — and, as in the current case,threaten the principle of democracy itself.

    I am an atheist, yet I will work with and support people whose principles are motivated by belief in a god, even if the god they believe in doesn’t exist, and the motivation is, to me, silly, if they are someone like a Martin Luther King. I am a believer that government is a positive good, overall, yet I will work with a libertarian who thinks it may be more of a danger than a blessing, like Ed Brayton, and will, when government does infringe on principles of liberty I hold dear, will join him in attacking it. I wil even work with people who will vote for the good things, even if they are, in other ways, corrupt, and i can name many of those. I will even, when the choice NEEDS to be made, vote for a cowardly fence-straddling person who tries to support my issues in the quietest way possible, because I KNOW he is better than a person who will attack those principles.
    And yes, i do believe in ‘party government’ though, as I have also said, the glory of the American system is that it leaves room for the maverick, the idealist who will bolt his party if it is wrong. (And may I never be like a famous Congressman of my youth, my Representative, technically, when I attended Columbia, named William Fitts Ryan, who seemed to believe that any time he had more than twenty-five votes supporting his position he was probably compromising his ‘high ideals,’ yet i welcomed those ideals that caused him to be the first congressman — long before Stonewall — to support gay rights, though he was not himself gay.)

    Sacrifice ‘principle’ for power? How dare you suggest that? I have believed in certain principles all my life, and I have seen them supported by most Democrats, and opposed by most Republicans this entire time — admittedly, during the earliest part of the period, I’d have to make that ‘supported by most Northern Democrats,’ until Thurmond and Nixon pulled the racists into their own stinking amalgam.

    But maybe I have a great ‘weakness.’ I’d much rather see those principles applied imperfectly and those ideas I support grow slowly to become a majority opinion than to seal myself off in a cocoon of ‘principled rigidity.’ I’d rather live to enjoy those principles and the country they are capable of creating than to ‘die nobly’ in my pristine righteousness.

    And I know one other thing. Perhaps you are too young, too ignorant of history to know this, but the greatest weapon of the conservatives — who cannot EVER win a majority on their own principles — and the true fascists as well, is to convince people that democracy is a failure, that the parties are ‘all the same’ and equally corrupt or weak. Even I am too young to remember the 30s, when the great argument was that ‘now Democracy has proven incompetent, shall we, the wise and forward looking, choose fascism or communism.’ But I have read the arguments, read the dispute, and seen the result. Democracy still lives, always threatened, always under attack, but always surviving even the cynicism you represent so well.

    You tell me to go to hell. I don’t believe in an afterlife, but were I to follow your lead and abdicate my duty to work for democracy, to speak for it when i can, I wouldn’t have to go there. It would come to me, and you would be the one making its way smooth by your abdication.