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A
Peasant Stand Up Thus?
In
Shakespeare's monumental tragedy, King Lear, a series of appalling
crimes are committed in a context of betrayal, torture, war
and invasion. In Act III, the Earl of Gloucester is brought
forward so his eyes can be put out, but suddenly, a servant
objects and draws his sword to try to stop it. Astonished,
Lear's daughter Regan cries "A peasant stand up thus?"
and kills this unnamed common person, little above the level
of a slave or serf. Professor Carroll Edwards, who taught
me Shakespeare's plays at the University of Kansas sagely
observed that this is the moment when resistance to tyranny
begins in the play.
The
very week George W. Bush was being re-elected President of
the United States, in large part through the frenzied support
of the Christian Right, a young high school student in the
little town of Webb City in southwest Missouri, began our
Resistance. Only 16 years old, and almost completely isolated
in the local community, except for his mother, Brad Mathewson
wore a T-shirt to school that proclaimed "Gay/Straight
Alliance," but administrations told him to take it off
and turn it inside out so these "disruptive" words
could not be seen. At first, Mathewson complied, but then
decided to take a stand for Constitutionally guaranteed Freedom
of Speech. The American Civil Liberties Union, which historically
defends our Bill of Rights, quickly took his case.
Fanatic
reactionaries are emboldened now, everywhere in America, but
they can never prevail as long as we have young people like
Brad Mathewson in our midst. He will have many, many allies
from all sectors, straight, Gay, Lesbian, etc. The fundamentalists
have attempted, with some initial success, to make homosexuals
scapegoats. We remember, we remember well, how the Nazis condemned
them to the concentration camps, where they were forced to
wear a Pink Triangle, and eventually were sent to the ovens
like everyone else who resisted, or was "different."
It
is true that, within our borders, we now do not usually have
physical torture, imprisonment, or execution for Freethinkers
or dissidents. But there are many other ways of repressing
us, such as dismissal from employment, suspension from school,
etc.
Similarly
to the Mathewson case in Missouri, students in other states
like Mississippi and even in Wisconsin in the North have resisted
forced school prayers, or recital of the Pledge of Allegiance
to the Flag, which includes the phrase "Under God."
In the latter, 13-year old Rachel Morris refused to stand
and to recite the Pledge in early September, even though rulings
of the U.S. Supreme Court held for decades that no one can
be forced
against his or her will to recite the Pledge. In this case,
the Freedom from Religion Foundation came to her aid, and
got the school administration to tell students they did not
have to stand or recite the Pledge.
A
physician and attorney, Michael Newdow, objected to the "Under
God" part of the Pledge, on behalf of his daughter, and
took the case all the way to the Supreme Court, which, however,
declined to take the matter up on the grounds that Newdow
had not actually married the mother of his daughter. Most
observers agreed that Newdow's argument before the Court was
eloquent and impossible to deny, yet the Court did deny it.
Newdow, along with others, is planning further legal challenges
to the Pledge.
The
crux here, is that the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
states "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment
of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."
Thus, to insert "Under God" into the Pledge, as
Congress did in 1954, establishes "religion" and
is un-Constitutional on its face.
Noticeably,
many Freethinkers now making a stand, not only in the U.S.
but in Iran, etc. are very young, in their teen age years.
Certainly in the U.S., many schools are operated on "discipline"
similar to prisons. One critical issue here is: "who
will defend student rights"-their parents, the schools,
the State? Indeed, who will defend them if they have to go
against all three? The answer is: the I.C.P.F and kindred
organizations. A hearty salute to our young comrades-believe
and know that we will never desert you!
In
1943, Justice Robert H. Jackson wrote the opinion of the Supreme
Court in the Barnette case, confirming the right of school
children to refuse to recite the Pledge. (The case involved
Jehovah's Witness children in West Virginia.) "If there
is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation,"
wrote Jackson, "it is that no official, high or petty,
can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism,
religion, or other matters of opinion or force citizens to
confess by word or act their faith therein. If there are any
circumstances which permit an exception, they do not now occur
to us."
Justice
Jackson went on to represent the United States in the Nuremberg
trials of Nazi war criminals. Such is the spirit of character
in the real United States of America.
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Reprinted from Brave Minds: Journal of the International Committee
to Protect Freethinkers
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