Saturday, April 16, 2011

Student reactions to the "Westphal v. Wagner" (prayer) settlement (VIDEO)

     I came across a video on something called the Mission Viejo Patch. It presents a series of Saddleback College student reactions to the recently announced settlement of “Westphal v. Wagner,” which yielded a mixed result. See: Video Reaction: Prayers at Saddleback College Cut at Two Ceremonies.

To see the video, click here

     CLUELESS. Contrary to what is implied by some (not all) of the video's interviewees, the settlement does not "ban" prayer at the colleges. It applies only to official college and district events, not private moments on campus.
     This was true, too, of the original lawsuit.
     According to the settlement, the district agrees to cease the practice of prayers/invocations at scholarship ceremonies and the Chancellor’s opening session. Invocations (or moments of silence), however, are permitted at commencement, but the decision whether to have such prayers/moments and who shall provide them is to be made by the college’s planning group, not the board of trustees.
     Further, any such invocations are to be non-sectarian. Etc.
     Read the settlement documents here. Here are excerpts:
     ...Beginning on the effective date of this Agreement, neither the SOCCCD nor its Colleges…shall include an invocation on the program at any future Scholarship Ceremony or Chancellor’s Opening Session....
     Within 30 days of the effective dates of this Agreement, the Board shall adopt the Resolution attached as Exhibit A to this Agreement….

The Resolution:
     The district desires to expand upon Resolution No. 09-23, and provide guidelines to the planners of important District and college events if they choose to invite a speaker to deliver brief , personal remarks in the form of an invocation, a moment of silence, or inspirational message…
     Whereas the purpose of these guidelines is to continue to allow the event planners to direct the form and content of their own events, including the selection of the speakers at those events…without monitoring or review by the Board of Trustees….
     …The decision on whether to select a speaker to deliver personal remarks in the form of an invocation, moment of silence, of opening and/or closing message, not to exceed two minutes, at important District and college events shall rest within the sole discretion of the event planners….
     …the person selected…shall be provided with a copy of this resolution…shall be informed of the District’s request that any personal remarks be non-sectarian; shall be informed that the opportunity to speak at a District or college event must not be exploited to proselytize or advance any one, or to disparage any other, faith or belief….
     The suit challenged the district's practices, arguing that some of them violated the First Amendment to the Constitution:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. 
     In a recent press release, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, which litigated the case, explained the suit as follows: “Plaintiffs asserted that school officials routinely sponsored official invocations at events for students and faculty at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo, including scholarship-award ceremonies, commencements and Chancellor's Opening Sessions (training programs for faculty). ¶ AU noted that attendance at some of these events is mandatory. For example, students [at Saddleback College] who are awarded scholarships must attend a public ceremony or forfeit the financial aid….”

ALSO IN THE NEWS:
Tea Party racism!?
The story still has legs. Furry ones.

O.C. Republican allegedly sent offensive Obama email (OC Reg)
..."It's just highly inappropriate, it's a despicable message, it drips with racism and I think [party central committee member & Tea Partier Marilyn Davenport] should step down from the committee," [local GOP chief Scott] Baugh said. “It undermines everything we are doing to reach out to ethnic communities.”....

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

ah, another OC Gop racist. I bet "some of her best friends" are "monkeys," right?

Anonymous said...

SNORE.. Maybe we should call liberals reverse-racist for doing the same type of photoshop to Bush. http://drivelocity.com/images/misc/bush_job_chimp.jpg

Roy Bauer said...

6:13, are you really that stupid? An aspect of historical anti-black racism was the comparison of blacks with apes. That context does not exist for whites.

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...