Archive for the ‘Communism’ Category

Louisiana’s ‘In God We Trust’ law tests limits of religion in public … – American Press

Published 1:28 pm Friday, November 10, 2023

By Frank S. Ravitch

When Louisiana passed a law in August 2023 requiring public schools to post In God We Trust in every classroom from elementary school to college the author of the bill claimedto be following a long-held tradition of displaying thenational motto, most notably on U.S. currency.

But even under recent Supreme Court precedents, the Louisiana law may violate theestablishment clause of the First Amendment, which prohibits the government from promoting religion. I make this observation as one who has researched andwritten extensively on issues of religionin the public schools.

The Louisiana law specifies that the motto shall be displayed on a poster or framed document that is at least 11 inches by 14 inches. The motto shall be the central focus and shall be printed in a large, easily readable font. The law also states that teachers should instruct students about the phrase as a way of teaching patriotic customs.

Similar bills are being promoted by groups like theCongressional Prayer Caucus Foundation, a nonprofit that supports members of Congress who meet regularly todefend the role of prayer in government. To date, 26 states have considered bills requiring public schools to display the national motto. Seven states, including Louisiana,have passed lawsin this regard.

Recent shift in the law

The Supreme Court has long treated public schools as an area where government-promoted religious messaging is unconstitutional under the First Amendmentsestablishment clause. For example, the Supreme Court held in1962,1963,1992and2000that prayer in public schools is unconstitutional either because it favored or endorsed religion or because it created coercive pressure to religiously conform. In1980, the court also struck down a Kentucky law requiring the Ten Commandments to be posted in classrooms.

At the same time, the court has protected private religious expression for individual students and teachers in public schools.

The Louisiana law comes at a time ofrising concerns about Christian nationalismand on the heels of a pivotal court case. In the 2022 caseKennedy v. Bremerton School District, the court overturned more than 60 years of precedent when it ruled that a public school football coachs on-field, postgame prayer did not violate the establishment clause. In doing so, the court rejected long-standing legal tests, holding instead that courts should look tohistory and tradition.

The problem with using history and tradition as a broad test is that it can change from one context to the next. People including lawmakers are apt to ignore the negative and troubling lessons of U.S. religious history. Prior to the Kennedy decision, history and tradition were used by a majority of the court to decide establishment clause cases only in specific contexts, such aslegislative prayerandwar memorials.

Now, states like Louisiana are trying to use history and tradition to bring religion into public school classrooms.

A history of In God We Trust

Contrary to what people often assume, the phrase In God We Trust has not always been the national motto. Itfirst appeared on coinsin 1864, during the Civil War, and in the following decades it sparked controversy. In 1907, President Theodore Roosevelt urged Congress todrop the phrase from new coins, saying it does positive harm, and is in effect irreverence, which comes dangerously close to sacrilege.

In 1956, amid the Cold War, In God we Trust became the national motto. The phrase first appeared on paper money the next year. It was a time of significant fear about communism and the Soviet Union, and atheism was viewed as part of the communist threat. Atheists weresubject to persecutionduring theRed Scareand afterward.

Since then, the motto has stuck. Over the years,legal challengesattempting to remove the phrase from money have failed. Courts have generally understood the term as a form ofceremonial deism or civic religion, meaning religious practices or expressions that are viewed as being merely customary cultural practices.

The future of the law

Even after the Kennedy ruling, the Louisiana law may still be unconstitutional because students are a captive audience in the classroom. Therefore, the mandate to hang the national motto in classrooms could be interpreted as a form of religious coercion.

But because the law requires a display rather than a religious exercise like school prayer, it may not violate what has come to be known as theindirect coercion test. This test prevents the government from conducting a formal religious exercise that places strong social or peer pressure on students to participate.

The outcome of any constitutional challenge to the Louisiana law is far from clear. Prior cases involving the Pledge of Allegiance offer one example. Though the Supreme Court dismissed on standing grounds theonly establishment clause challenge to the pledgeit has considered, lower courts have held that reciting the pledge in schools is constitutional for a variety of reasons.

These reasons include the idea that it is a form ofceremonial deismand the fact that since 1943 students have beenexempt from having to say the pledgeif it violates their faith to do so.

The Louisiana law, however, requires instruction about the national motto.

If the law is challenged in court and upheld, teachers could teach that the motto was adopted when the nation was emerging fromMcCarthyismand fear of communism was widespread. Moreover, they could teach that many people of faith throughout U.S. history would have viewed this sort of display as against U.S. ideals.

Division is likely

More than two centuries before Roosevelt argued that it was sacrilegious to put In God We Trust on coins, the Puritan minister and Colonist Roger Williams famously proclaimed that forced worship stinks in Gods nostrils. Williams founded the colony of Rhode Island, at least in part, to promote religious freedom.

Additionally, there is no prohibition on alternative designs for the national motto posters as long as the motto is the central focus of the poster. In Texas, a parent donated rainbow-colored In God We Trust signs and others written in Arabic, which were subsequentlyrejected by a local school board. This situation, which gained significant media attention, brought the exclusionary impact of these lawsinto public view.

It could be argued that accepting wall hangings that favor Christocentric viewpoints and rejecting those that reflect other religions or add symbols such as the rainbow isreligious discrimination by government. If so, schools might be required to post alternative motto designs that meet the letter of the new law in order to uphold free speech rights and prevent religious discrimination.

The Louisiana law would have been brazenly unconstitutional just two years ago. But after the Kennedy decision, the law may survive a potential legal challenge. Even if it does, one thing is for certain: It will be divisive.

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Louisiana's 'In God We Trust' law tests limits of religion in public ... - American Press

Czechast with Irena Kalhousov, Director of the Herzl Center for … – Radio Prague International

It is not the ambition of Czechast to provide you listeners with news and current affairs analysis on a regular basis. However, I thought it might be useful to give you some background information about this country and its peoples relationship with Israel and the Middle East in general, because its impossible to ignore whats been going on in Israel and the Gaza Strip since October 7th, 2023.

Irena Kalhousov is theDirector of the Herzl Center for Israeli Studies at Charles University in Prague. Among other things, we discuss thatCzechoslovakia was the only country willing to send arms to Israel when it was fighting for its survival in 1948. But as soon as the Communists consolidated their power after the coup d'etat of 1948, they made a ruthless U-turn in the official policy towards the Jewish state.

Irena Kalhousov|Photo: Michal Novotn, Charles University

Irena explainsthe Slnsk trial in 1952, which was a part of the Czechoslovak version of the Stalinist purges and trials in the Soviet Union. Just to explain briefly the context: Rudolf Slnsk who had been the General Secretary of the Communist Party, was arrested as the alleged leader of a conspiracy against Czechoslovakia. He and 13 other co defendants were also accused of Zionism, planning sabotage and it resulted in 14 executions, including Slnsk. Eleven of the executed were Jewish.

In February 1990, literally weeks after the fall of Communism, Czechoslovakia and Israel resumed diplomatic relations. Has it been a kind of smooth sailing ever since? Or were there some disagreements, quarrels? Those are some of the questions that Irena Kalhousov answers in this episode of Czechast.

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Czechast with Irena Kalhousov, Director of the Herzl Center for ... - Radio Prague International

Letter to the editor: We mustn’t forget communism’s many victims – Bozeman Daily Chronicle

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Letter to the editor: We mustn't forget communism's many victims - Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Writing triumphed over ‘hell of communism’, says Albania’s Kadare – Yahoo News

Acclaimed Albanian novelist Ismail Kadare has talked about being smothered by "the hell of communism" and how writing helped him survive one of the worst dictators in the old Eastern Bloc.

The veteran writer -- an eternal bridesmaid for a Nobel literature prize -- was awarded France's highest honour Monday.

Despite being branded a traitor by Albania's communist leaders when he defected to France in 1990, Kadare was accused by some of enjoying a privileged position under Enver Hoxha, who presided over Europe's most paranoid and isolated regime.

But the author of "Broken April" and "The General of the Dead Army" told AFP those years were "hell" -- a living nightmare from which he forged some of his greatest works.

"The hell of communism, like every other hell, was smothering in the worst sense of the term. But literature transformed that into a life force, a force which helped you survive and hold your head up and win out over dictatorship," said the 87-year-old.

Several writers and artists were imprisoned and even executed under Hoxha's murderous rule. Kadare -- who came from the same small town and was made a member of parliament -- escaped prison but was targeted by the secret police.

He was sent into internal exile in 1975 after publishing a satirical poem called "The Red Pasha", a clear reference to the dictator.

In her memoirs, Hoxha's widow Nexhmije claimed the tyrant -- who fancied himself as a man of letters -- protected Kadare from other hardline Stalinists who wanted the head of the "bourgeois" writer.

His defenders say Kadare's genius was using allegory and metaphor to depict the horrors of what was going on around him in almost impossible circumstances.

- 'Always been true' -

"Writing under a dictatorship is very difficult, almost impossible, because it is impossible to write as you want to write," he told AFP.

"Which is why I am so grateful for literature, because it gives me the chance to overcome the impossible.

"I have always been true to my writing," he insisted. "It was the absolute goal of my life and it helped me get over all the difficulties. When art survives it triumphs," he said.

Kadare, who was made a grand officer of France's Legion of Honour by President Emmanuel Macron, drew a comparison with the late dissident Czech writer Milan Kundera, who also had to deny allegations he collaborated with the communists who banned his work.

"As Kundera said, 'Art never triumphs with its head bowed.'"

Kadare previously said that his fame both protected him and made him suspect.

Files from Hoxha's feared secret police the Sigurimi showed that he and his family were continually followed and persecuted.

Indeed recently uncovered papers quote Hoxha as describing the writer as a cursed "raven of doom" who brought him bad luck.

- Haunted by Hoxha -

That has not stopped some critics dismissing him as the "official dissident" the regime tolerated.

Yet several of Kadare's works written under Hoxha took aim at authoritarianism, often through the oblique lens of the Ottoman empire, which occupied Albania for five centuries, or classical allusions.

"The Palace of Dreams", published four years before the dictator's death in 1985, was banned as a veiled attack on the Politburo but not before it had become a bestseller.

Kadare said writers "must serve freedom". "The truth is not in my acts but in my books, which are a real literary testament," he told AFP in 2019.

Hoxha's looming presence haunts several of the writer's works, mostly notoriously "The Successor" which delved into the murky death of the dictator's closest ally, Mehmet Shehu, who was later denounced as a "foreign agent".

"Literature is my great and only love," Kadare told AFP in his Tirana apartment. "It has given sense to my life, given me courage to resist, happiness and the hope to overcome everything."

And he said he has never lost his appetite for storytelling.

"I write all the time. I write down ideas, little stories... Every time something is published it is like being born again, and it has always been like that for me.

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Writing triumphed over 'hell of communism', says Albania's Kadare - Yahoo News

Opinion Showing anti-communism the red card – Morning Star Online

THE first English language translation of Marx and Engelss Manifesto of the Communist Party opened with the following: A frightful hobgoblin stalks throughout Europe. We are haunted by a ghost, the ghost of Communism. All the powers of the Past have joined in a holy crusade to lay this ghost to rest the Pope and the Czar, Metternich and Guizot, French Radicals and German police agents.

So we see that anti-communism has a long and sordid history. Indeed, Yanis Varoufakiss preface to a recent edition of the Communist Manifesto is an anti-communist and inaccurate diatribe, with phrases like card-carrying Stalinists and now defunct Communist regimes. He also claimed that the Communist Manifesto was commissioned by English revolutionaries which is blatantly untrue.

By contrast, AJP Taylors introduction to the 1967 Penguin edition states: Anti-communism causes more trouble in the world than ever communism does or did.

Anti-communism is a terrible form of bigotry with tragic consequences for humankind and it needs to be recognised as such. Other forms of bigotry like racism, sexism, and homophobia really start their transition from respectable, normal, acceptable and even policy, to being clearly understood to be out of order when the victims make a clear challenge. So far, we in Britain have not really called out home-grown anti-communism.

Addressing a World Marxist Review symposium in the late 1980s, the late Bert Ramelson, legendary former industrial organiser of the Communist Party said this: Anti-communism is often referred to as a subjective phenomenon but it is an objective factor in todays world. Anti-communist hysteria has been with us for four generations and it would be unrealistic to believe that anti-communism in the West has not struck deep roots in politics, ideology and consciousness.

Anti-communism is also anti-humanity, for it impedes the development or progress of society to its full potential and keeps us in a dystopian rat race. The last sentence of Chapter 2 of the Communist Manifesto reads: In place of the old bourgeois society, with its classes and antagonisms, we shall have an association, in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all.

Anti-communism blocks our goal of achieving what John Lennon sings about in his classic track Imagine.

We call it out in other countries but not here, it seems. We demonstrated outside the Ukranian embassy in 2014 when that regime had banned the Communist Party. We need to do more of that sort of thing.

New members of Nato and the EU feel no shame in outlawing communist symbols, the most recent being Finland, that exemplar of social democracy. Anti-communist legislation is still on the statute books of a number of states in the US; Texas forbids members of the CPUSA from standing in elections to its local and state legislatures.

It was only in 1991 that Communist Party members were no longer denied jobs in Britains Civil Service departments.

In this country, the first place to tackle anti-communism is the labour movement. Officialdom within the Labour Party and trade unions, with notable exceptions, carried on a crusade against the Communist Party from its formation.

The Communist Party History Group, in the Appendix to Noreen Branson and Bill Moores July 1990 pamphlet Labour-Communist Relations 1920-1951, listed 71 organisations on the proscribed list, of which only two were fascist the rest were the sort that Communist Party members were or might be part of.

In 1933, Labour proscribed the European Anti-fascist Congress and in 1934 the Relief Committee for Victims of German and Austrian Fascism and in 1941 it proscribed the Anti-Fascist Relief Committee and in 1950 the League for Democracy in Greece. Aside from banning organisations which opposed fascism, it also banned 41 peace and solidarity organisations, although CND was too big to ban.

The post-war Labour government led by Clement Attlee was involved in fighting communism in Greece and Malaya, and during the McCarthy era, he wrote in the US quarterly review Foreign Affairs: We are pardonably annoyed at being instructed by a beginner like McCarthy. The British Labour Party has had nearly 40 years of fighting communism in Britain.

In the Chicago Daily Tribune he wrote, The British Labour Party and I myself have been vigorously opposing the Communist Party in this country ever since its formation long before Senator McCarthy was ever heard of.

Instead of being ashamed of his anti-communism, he proclaimed it. This was despite British communists having held up a banner saying British Battalion Major Attlee Company International Brigade. He dishonoured those who had honoured him.

Let us make clear our rejection of and contempt for anti-communism wherever it rears its ugly head.

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Opinion Showing anti-communism the red card - Morning Star Online