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- What would have happened if the Founding Fathers had tried
- to draft the declaration of Independence with the advice of
- an ACLU lawyer?
-
- John Adams: Gentlemen, let us pray that the Almighty would
- grant us wisdom in the wording of this document and in
- determining the direction this new nation should take.
-
- ACLU: I object! Your prayer would be an unconstitutional
- invasion of my right to freedom from religion!
-
- Adams: Freedom from religion? Are you mad?
-
- ACLU: Mr. Adams, your attempts to censor me are
- unconstitutional.
-
- Benjamin Franklin: Sir, Americans must have the right to
- worship God as they please. To forbid the rightful
- acknowledgement of God in the affairs of state would be an
- abridgement of the religious freedom we came to this country
- to enjoy.
-
- ACLU: Freedom from religion must be protected--and
- interpreted to mean that spiritual and ethical
- considerations must not affect any aspect of public life.
-
- Adams: But that is the opposite of what we believe! If we
- hold to that interpretation, our prayers at public functions
- would violate the laws we draft at these very meetings.
-
- ACLU: Precisely.
-
- Thomas Jefferson: Religion is the foundation of a just
- government. Our laws derive their authority form the Bible.
-
- ACLU: That's the view of a religious fanatic, Mr. Jefferson.
- You could not have already forgotten that it was abuses by a
- state religion, in part, that brought us to separate from
- England.
-
- Jefferson: The church must be protected from the state, just
- as much as the state must be protected from the church. But
- we cannot erase religious influence on the state.
-
- ACLU: By providing the church access to government, you're
- imposing your religious beliefs on others! I'm an atheist,
- and you're impossible on me!
-
- Adams: Your atheism does not affect the fact of God's
- existence. But we'll accommodate you. Those who wish to do
- so may privately and individually acknowledge God's ruling
- in our lives.
- Now, Mr. Jefferson, read us the Declaration of
- Independence.
-
- Jefferson: Here's what I've written so far. "We hold these
- truths to be self-evident, that all men are equal..."
-
- ACLU: Objection! Creation is a religious concept!
-
- Adams: Very well, let us amend that sentence to read, 'We
- hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are
- equal..."
-
- ACLU: Objection! "Truth" could be construed as a religious
- reference to moral absolutes! Perhaps you use the word
- "facts".
-
- Jefferson: "We hold these facts to be self-evident, that
- all men are equal..."
-
- ACLU: Objection! Sexist language! "All men are equal" could
- be construed to mean that only white, Anglo-Saxon male
- property owners are granted rights.
-
- Jefferson: Would you prefer "all people are equal?"
-
- ACLU: Better. But suggest "all lifestyles are equal..."
-
- Jefferson: Lifestyles? What do you mean?
-
- ACLU: Homosexuality, pedophilia, adultery, prostitution,
- abortion, active euthanasia, wrongful life, pornography...
-
- JEfferson: I pray that our nation never comes to that!
-
- ACLU: If you persist in your references to "prayer," Mr.
- Jefferson, I'll seek a court injunction! And I know just the
- judge who'll grant it!
-
- Adams: Order! Order! Gentlemen! Mr. Jefferson, please make
- the changes the lawyer suggests.
-
- Jefferson:'..that all lifestyles are equal and that all
- people are endowed'......on second thought, perhaps it
- should read, "that people find themselves possessing certain
- inalienable rights, that among these are life..."
-
- ACLU: Objection! "Life" may be construed as the basis for
- infringement on a a woman's reproductive freedom!
-
- Jefferson: "..liberty and the pursuit of happiness..."
-
- ACLU: OK, but i prefer "license" over "liberty" and "pursuit
- of self-realization" over "happiness."
-
- Franklin: Go no further! These revisions make no sense. I move that we
- reject this lawyer from the meeting. He's nuisance!
-
- ACLU: Objection! Violation of free speech! We must not silence
- political dissidents, even those who seek to destroy what we are now
- attempting to build.
-
- Franklin: If that's how you see it, I pray we stop before we do any
- more damage.
-
- Adams: We seem to be deadlocked. The revolution is hereby postponed.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
- Adapted from a column by Jessica Shaver, a freelance writer in Long
- Beach, Ca.
-