184. Everson v. Board Of Education (1947) : The Underground History of
American Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
Everson
v. Board Of Education (1947)
The Supreme Court decision Everson v. Board of
Education 330 U.S. 1. (1947) prepared
the dismissal of religion from American public schools. We are hidden by
more than a half-century from the
shock and numbness this new doctrine of
"separation of church and state" occasioned, a great
bewilderment caused in part by the absence of any hint of such a separation doctrine in the
Declaration, Constitution, or the Bill of Rights.
The Court, which
erected the wall of separation, went on to radically change the entire face of American jurisprudence,
establishing firmly a principle which had only operated spottily in the past, the
"judicial review" power which made the judiciary final arbiter
of which laws were legal. No
longer could the people's representatives expect that by working for legislation, their will
would be honored by the courts. A new and higher power had spoken, a power with the ability to dispense with
religion in government facilities,
including schools and the towns and villages of America where public
property was concerned.
Everson was no simple coup d'etat, but
an act of Counter- Reformation warfare aimed at the independent and dissenting Protestant-Christian
traditions of America. To understand
the scope of this campaign, you have to look at a selection of court
decisions to appreciate the range
of targets Everson was intended to hit:
Item: A verbal prayer offered in a
school is unconstitutional, even if it is both denominationally neutral and voluntarily participated in.
Engel v. Vitale, 1962; Abington v.
Schempp, 1963; Commissioner of Ed. v. School Committee ofLeyden, 1971.
Item: Freedom of speech and press is
guaranteed to students unless the topic is religious, at which time such speech becomes unconstitutional. Stein v.
Oshinsky, 1965; Collins v.
Chandler Unified School District, 1981.
Item: If a student
prays over lunch, it is unconstitutional for him to pray aloud. Reed v. van Hoven, 1965.
Item: It is unconstitutional for
kindergarten students to recite: "We thank you for the birds that sing; We thank you [God] for
everything," even though the word "God" is not uttered. DeSpain v. DeKalb County
Community School District, 1967 '.
Item: It is unconstitutional for a war
memorial to be erected in the shape of a cross. Lowe v. City of Eugene, 1969.
Item: It is unconstitutional for
students to arrive at school early to hear a student volunteer read prayers. State Board of Ed. v. Board of Ed.
ofNetcong, 1970.
Item: It is
unconstitutional for a Board of Education to use or refer to the word
"God" in any of its
official writings. State v. Whisner, 1976.
Item: It is
unconstitutional for a kindergarten class to ask during a school assembly
whose birthday is celebrated by
Christmas. Florey v. Sioux Falls School District, 1979.
Item: It is
unconstitutional for the Ten Commandments to hang on the walls of a classroom. Stone v. Graham, 1980; Ring
v. Grand Forks Public School District, 19^; Lannerv. Wimmer, 1981.
Item: A bill becomes
unconstitutional even though the wording may be constitutionally acceptable, if the legislator who
introduced the bill had a religious activity in his mind when he authored it. Wallace v.
Jaffree, 1984.
Item: It is
unconstitutional for a kindergarten class to recite: "God is great, God is
good, let us thank Him for our
food." Wallace v. Jaffree, 1984.
Item: It is unconstitutional for a
graduation ceremony to contain an opening or closing prayer. Graham v. Central Community School District, 1985;
Disselbrett v. Douglas School
District, 1986.
Item: In the Alaska public schools in
1987, students were told that they could not use the word "Christmas" in school because it had the word
"Christ" in it.
Item: In Virginia, a
federal court ruled in 1987 that homosexual newspapers may be distributed on a high school campus,
but religious newspapers may not be.
Item: In 1987, a 185-year-old symbol of
a Nevada city had to be changed because of its "religious significance."
Item: In 1988, an elementary school
principal in Denver removed the Bible from the school library.
Item: In Colorado Springs, 1993, an
elementary school music teacher was prevented from teaching Christmas carols because of alleged violations of
the separation of church and
state.
Item: In 1996,
ten-year-old James Gierke, of Omaha, was prohibited from reading his Bible silently during free time in the
Omaha schools.
Item: In 1996, the
chief administrative judge of Passaic County, New Jersey, ruled juries could no longer be sworn in using the
Bible.
Item: In 2000, Ohio's
state motto, "With God, all things are possible," was ruled unconstitutional by the 6th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals because it expressed "a uniquely Christian thought."
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