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Home Front
Commandments Marker Placed at City Hall in N.C.
2004-01-19
A city council member who said he was inspired by Alabama’s ousted chief justice placed a one-ton granite monument to the Ten Commandments in front of City Hall on Monday while it was closed for the King Day holiday. Vernon Robinson said he and four others acted on the holiday because the empty parking lot allowed room for a truck and crane, which they used to position the monument at dawn. The 4-foot-tall, blue-granite block is inscribed on one side with the Ten Commandments and on the other side with the Bill of Rights.
Can’t remove the 10 commandments without removing the bill of rights. Is there a message here?
"This display is intended to acknowledge the undeniable role that the Ten Commandments and Bill of Rights have played in developing the American legal tradition," said Robinson, a Republican who has been on the city council since 1998 and is running for a U.S. House seat. "These are the ideas on which society has been built and these works encapsulate the belief system on which the republic was founded."

Mayor Allen Joines did not immediately return calls seeking comment on the city’s response. Robinson said he had no authorization to place the monument on public property. The $2,000 cost of buying and moving the monument was entirely his own, Robinson said. Robinson said he was inspired to act by former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore, who ordered a 2-ton Ten Commandments monument placed in the rotunda of the Alabama Judicial Building in 2001. A federal judge found the monument to be an unconstitutional promotion of religion by government. Moore was ousted from office last year for violating ethics rules by not obeying the federal court order to remove the monument. He is pursuing an appeal.
Let the seething and ’wailing and gnashing of teeth’ begin....
Posted by:CrazyFool

#5  CF, I did see one quote from Daschle. I think they are letting him take the fore on all unpopular causes. He said that he was disapointed that the president would stoop to using a procedural vehicle to get what he wanted. It looked more like Daschle was using a procedural vehicle to block confirmation. Maybe Bush won the procedural limbo challenge.
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-1-19 9:48:01 PM  

#4  I love JC Watts. I hope he runs for state office at home where he can be with his family.
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-1-19 9:43:06 PM  

#3  I don't think anyone is commenting on this but I believe Robinson is an African American. (I'm sure he's the one that I recently got mail from wanting my vote and the one touted to replace JC Watts). If I'm right, he's won the council seat in Winston with a huge portion of the white population backing him. He has a good chance of winning the congressional seat being vacated by Richard Burr who is running for John Edwards (The Breck Boy) senate seat.
Posted by: AF Lady   2004-1-19 7:04:23 PM  

#2  SH I noticed on the News Friday night that the democrats were - -well-uh- seething about Pickering.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2004-1-19 6:44:29 PM  

#1  The American Taliban Civil Liberties Union must be scrambling to respond to this sneak attack. It would be interesting to see whether commandment poliferation saps their resources at all.

I have not heard any more about the recess appointment of Pickering. I thought that move was perpetrated late Friday to try to eclipse Iowa or steer the debate their towards a topic that would divide Christian elements in the the Midwest from the candidates that expressed abhorrence of the appointment.
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-1-19 5:49:46 PM  

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