Judge Agrees, Patriotic Banner OK for Classroom
-By Warner Todd Huston

A Federal judge said that it was OK for a Poway, California school teacher to sue his school district for forcing him to remove a banner that featured well known, patriotic American references to God in an early September ruling.
Math teacher Brad Johnson who teachers at Westview High in San Diego County, California, had the banner on his classroom wall for the last 20 years but only last year was told by school administrators that the banner was supposedly an affront to the principles of separation of Church and State. After two decades without complaint, Johnson was told his banner suddenly offended his students because the banners “were an impermissible attempt to make a Judeo-Christian statement to his students.”
The suddenly banned banner included the phrases “In God We Trust,” “One Nation Under God,” “God Bless America,” and “God Shed His Grace on Thee.”
Teacher Johnson decided to take his school district to court to restore to his classroom wall the common American slogans while the school system sought to have the suit tossed out claiming that Johnson, as a public employee, had only limited 1st Amendment rights and that the principal had authority over what appeared on the walls of the classroom.
Judge Roger T. Benitez sided with the patriotic-minded teacher.
In a blistering 23-page decision, U.S. District Judge Roger T. Benitez rejected the district’s motion as legally faulty and blasted its “brash” attempt to take down the banners. The jurist noted that the district allowed other teachers to put up posters with Buddhist and Islamic messages, posters of rock bands including Nirvana and the Clash, and Tibetan prayer rugs… Johnson’s banners, Benitez wrote, were patriotic expressions deeply rooted in American history.
Judge Benitez also said, “By squelching only Johnson’s patriotic expression, the school district does a disservice to the students of Westview High School, and the federal and state constitutions do not permit such one-sided censorship.”
For his part, the school district’s attorney, Jack M. Sleeth Jr., wondered “What do these banners have to do with mathematics?”
I would ask of this shyster what “Tibetan prayer rugs” have to do with anything that need be taught in an American classroom? And, why is a Tibetan’s religious artifact permissible and somehow NOT an “impermissible religious statement” while common American slogans somehow are?
Let me school this school on the founding American document, a little thing we like to call the Declaration of Independence.
Need we remind these “educators” that the document with which we introduced ourselves to the rest of the civilized world is based on the rights of man as bestowed upon us by God? We lay our basic entreaty to independence upon the “Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God” asserting that these laws entitled us to the respect due a free people.
There’s that pesky “God” thing to which the Poway School District so objects.
Then came some of the most famous words ever penned by man:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
Then after enumerating our grievances we ended with one more assertion of our belief in God.
And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.
These are founding principles that God was looking down upon this country with favor. That God had assured each of us a set of rights that man cannot tear asunder. That we trust in God to sustain these rights. And, from that time forward, our politicians have invoked God’s grace on U.S. From George Washington to George W. Bush, presidents have had day of thanks to God and have invoked his name.
For this school to attempt to remove God from its classrooms, yet allow the recognition of religious artifacts and principles from religions alien to our founding is as unAmerican is it gets. It’s good that this judge recognized the anti-Americanism of it all.
Let freedom ring and “may God shed his grace” on us all.
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September 15th, 2008 at 2:56 pm
WTH,
In your article about patriotic banner you cite Judge’s 23 page decision protecting patriotic expression such as “In God We Trust”,”One Nation Under God” etc.
Since the genesis of God as a “chosen people” is in Israel, do you thing we should follow their example to demonstrate our patriotisim?
Israel has military draft for both men and women. Also, The Jerusalem Post reports that police has been instructed
to crack down on those Internet sites and people who give instuctions on how to avoid the draft.
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1221489039505&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
September 15th, 2008 at 3:03 pm
WTH,
One of the websites listed in The Jerusalem Post article.
http://www.newprofile.org/default.asp?language=en
September 16th, 2008 at 1:56 am
I’m sorry, but I fail to see what one has to do with the other? So, no, I see no reason to suggest that because we have a tradition of certain types of religious expression in the USA that we should adopt anything that the Israelis do in their country with their traditions. In fact, I find it rather daft to suggest we should.
September 16th, 2008 at 5:48 am
WTH,
Perhps you see as daft to ask if Israel was the land where the docukents were located and places where God spoke to profets.Also, our taditions were transported to
this continent after Christopher Columbus and the conversion with the cross and the sword.
You parse words very well. Like editorial writers motto
“Often wrong but seldom in doubt”.
September 17th, 2008 at 12:27 am
Um… exactly what planet ARE you from, anyway?
September 17th, 2008 at 7:19 am
WTH,
I had asumed that you were a religious man who would debate without using insults. But aparently I was wrong.
Therefore, like the “bridge to nowhere” for my part this dialogue ends with this post.
September 18th, 2008 at 8:09 am
Good article Warner!
AAG, I’m not sure just what you are getting at, but many or most Americans believe that Jesus was God, and we all know that the Jews rejected him. So I don’t think anyone will get too far with the the argument that Americans should look to Israel as the religious standard. Most Americans are not Jews.
September 19th, 2008 at 4:05 am
Anti-ArmChair General,
I am glad our “dialog” stops here. I have little civil to say to a Jew hater.
Zoirk,
Thanks for the kind words… and the whole “Jooze” angle won;t mean much especially since this country wasn’t founded on a Jewish basis.