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Merry Chr- … Hol- … Solstice?
 
Update on the Christmas ‘culture wars’
 
Arguing about religious symbols in public places is never out of season in America, especially during the Christmas holidays. The yuletide “culture wars” have produced a steady stream of news flashes this year:
  • In Santa Monica, Calif., the traditional holiday nativity displays in Palisades Park have been largely replaced by atheist slogans and secular messages, such as “Happy Solstice” and “Religions are all alike – founded upon fables.”  Every Christmas season for almost 60 years, a local church coalition filled the park with life-size nativity dioramas. But this year the city implemented a new lottery system for allocation of space in the park. The atheists won most of the 21 slots, leaving only two spaces for the nativity story.
     
  • At a post office in Silver Spring, Md., a postal manager reportedly silenced three Christmas carolers, telling the trio that their activities were prohibited on government property. A Postal Service spokesman later clarified that the carolers violated USPS rules on “public assembly and public address.”
  • In a broader issue, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit recently declined to rehear the case of Trunk v. City of San Diego – in which the Court ruled that a 43-foot cross atop Mt. Soledad is an unconstitutional government endorsement of religion. The Court’s decision will likely result in an appeal to the Supreme Court.
  • And in Montana, a statue of Jesus overlooking the Whitefish Mountain Resort has caught the attention of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, which is fighting for its removal. Opposition to the Jesus monument has sparked counter-opposition: Supporters of the statue organized an “Occupy Big Mountain” rally, and Congressman Denny Rehberg, a Montana Republican, is campaigning to keep the statue.
These developments are part of the larger, longstanding “culture wars” in America, pitting those who favor greater inclusion of religious expression in public life against those who favor secularization and a strict separation of church and state. Although some of the current controversies may seem trivial or even silly, the stakes in the broader struggle are high: Whose religion, values or ideology will dominate the national culture?
 
Read more about Christmas and the culture wars on SageLaw, and see the SageLaw news digest on religion and the First Amendment.
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