Friday, May 1, 2009

Gosh, Tom, are you sorry?

The OC Reg reports that, according to a federal court, Mission Viejo history teacher James Corbett violated the First Amendment when making comments in his history class disparaging Christians and Christianity.
…Corbett, a 20-year teacher at Capistrano Valley High School, was found guilty of referring to Creationism as “religious, superstitious nonsense” during a 2007 classroom lecture, denigrating his former Advanced Placement European history student, Chad Farnan.

"Corbett states an unequivocal belief that Creationism is 'superstitious nonsense,'" U.S. District Court Judge James Selna said in a 37-page ruling released from his Santa Ana courtroom. "The court cannot discern a legitimate secular purpose in this statement, even when considered in context."

The establishment clause prohibits the government from making any law "respecting an establishment of religion" and has been interpreted by U.S. courts to also prohibit government employees from displaying religious hostility. (See High school teacher guilty of insulting Christians.)

Naturally Farnan’s attorney (of Advocates for Faith & Freedom) was thrilled.

Still to be determined is whether Corbett (or his school district) will be required to pay damages and attorney’s fees.

SEE ALSO: Judge swings both ways (OC Weekly)

According to the Reg, Irvine cops are asking citizens to identify a thief. (See Police ask public’s help in search for Irvine office thief.)

Apparently, the guy (see pic of suspect at left) has taken wallets, cash, and credit cards in office buildings near the 405 and Jamboree.

He looks pretty dapper for a guy who steals wallets for a living.

The OC Weekly’s Matt Coker notes that OC Reg editorialist Steven Greenhut is taking former Sheriff Carona’s big Republican supporters to task for their fair-weather friendship and silence, now that the Mikester is headed for the Big House. (See Greenhut Praises Moxley, Blasts Carona's Disappeared Defenders.)

Writes Greenhut,
It would be nice to read what Carona's staunchest GOP defenders have to say now about the conviction and sentencing. Were they duped? Are they sorry? Is this merely a case of prosecutorial abuse? Do they still think Carona epitomizes GOP values? Did they just not see the other side of Mike? Did they know about how he was running the department? Were they simply doing the bidding of the party?

Among the Mikester’s staunchest supporters has been our own Trustee Tom Fuentes, who made sure that “America’s sheriff” made Irvine Valley College his second home.

Gosh, Tom, were you duped? Are you sorry?

In particular, are you sorry that you have once again tarnished the image of Irvine Valley College and the SOCCCD?


5 comments:

Anonymous said...

What do we know about Selna? How does someone that stupid get to be a judge?

Anonymous said...

Corbett is the stupid one, 11:45. But I suppose you won't recognize this for obvious reasons.

Anonymous said...

Wow: I hope that Fuentes won the *national* ugly-face contest. Yikes! An accurate reflection of what passes for the man's soul, I suppose.

MAH

Anonymous said...

It may not be that Selna is "stupid". The ruling does not in and of itself indicate that Selna is pro religion by any means. Just because he ruled that there was no secular justification for Corbett's comments (the particular ones in question) in the classroom does not mean that a point has been scored for religion on the classroom battleground.

This is not a zero sum game.

I do not know enough of the specifics to know if his ruling is correct, but I have not read any evidence yet that Selna's ruling was NOT impartial. I believe that all parties had agreed to the standard that Selna would apply to evaluating the comments. Has Corbett's attorney cried foul? If there is a chance that the ruling does not uphold accepted interpretation of the establishment clause, Corbett's attorney will surely be the first to point that out.
ES

Anonymous said...

Well, 5:08. Selna held that "an unequivocal belief that Creationism is superstitious nonsense" violates the First Amendment.

Please inform us as to how this is not simply a statement of fact. What if he said the Arapaho Giant Turtle Sneeze is "superstitious nonsense." Would he be sued for that, too?

This decision is just another anti-science take that is embarrassing.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...