EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK I I \-taShern your Go d, You shalt not ree- God Help Us a nize the gods ot others in My presence. shaft not make a carved image or any l ness. for t am 1-1aShem Y our God. the :t3. You shaft not take r 6. you shall not murder! 7. You shall not commit adultery! 8. You shall not steal' You shall not bear false witness against Your fellow! 10• You shall not covet your fellow's house. ov. Jennifer Granholm stirred up a hor- In March, the U.S. net's nest when she said she wouldn't Supreme Court is expected , y ou Panne of BaSheth object to a display of the Ten to rule on governmental God, WI va:tn. Commandments in the Capitol Rotunda in display of the Ten Day of 4.. Ftemehtei the Lansing, but then hastily retreated, insisting that Commandments. The high Shaehat to sanctihl it. such a move would be unconstitutional. tatrer court already has ruled that tic 1c J . ,_ mother. u,1 Critics say the Democratic governor flip-flopped. the commandments cannot 'Jo • They say she caved in after a conservative family be posted in public schools. group asked her to help clear the way for such a dis- — Source: 0 rthodox Union Ironically, a sculpture of play. Worse, she was being divisive, they say. Moses holding the Ten I say she was just being honest. Commandments adorns the U.S. Supreme Court Building Our nation was built with a faith in God alongside carvings of Mohammed, Confucius, Caesar ... period. As a nation, we don't condemn Augustus and Napoleon. This broad, historical context makes atheism or promote religion. We don't have a the artwork palatable to most observers. national god. But at our core, we're not god- Incidentally, to declare the court in session, the Supreme less. Major symbols of the freedoms we hold Court marshal utters, "God save the United States and this dear cite God, including our money ("In honorable court." God We Trust"), the Great Seal of the United Like judges, governors also have no right to skirt the law of States (the Latin phrase Annuit coeptis, which the land. Moore was forced off the Alabama Supreme Court means "God has favored our undertakings") in 2003 when he defied a federal judge's order to remove the ROBERT A. and the Washington Monument (Exodus ., granite monument of the Ten Commandments from display S KLAR 28:36 "Holy to the Lord"). in the Alabama State Judicial Building Rotunda in Editor Francis Scott Key's The Star Spangled Montgomery The U.S. Supreme Court upheld his ouster. Banner is our national anthem. But Irving Berlin's God Bless America is just as uplifting for all who call Be True America home. The Ten Commandments aren't rooted in Hindu, Buddhist or The public fuss notwithstanding, Granholm was refreshing- Islamic thought. So Granholm's claim that they are "universal ly open in telling Tim Skubick of public television's Off The values" is suspect. But they are woven into the historical tapes- Record program that she knew she'd "make some people mad" try that is America. So in talking universal values, the Ten in not opposing the hypothetical Decalogue display. Commandments are at least a good starting point to begin a "But I think they are universal values," she said on the show, debate or discussion. taped Feb. 11 for airing this month. U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., took some heat on It's not government's role to promote religion, she the presidential campaign trail, but he made a lot of Jews and told Skubick, but the Ten Commandments promote non-Jews alike proud that somebody high up in politics wasn't "a universal desire for people to behave with dignity and afraid to share non-binding religious values in a less intrusive honor God." That's a fair statement. way than the far Christian right. "This is not promoting a particular religion," the governor President George W. Bush has stretched the separation of went on to say. "That is just recognizing some universal val- church and state with some of his faith-based social service ues." On that, she's wrong. The Ten Commandments are programs. But it's the American way to speak up if you object. Judeo-Christian in orientation with most public interpreta- The outrage over Granholm's innocent two-step bothered tions following the Protestant tradition. Moses, on behalf of me as much as the outcry last year over the phrase "one the Jewish people, ascended Mount Sinai to receive the Tablets nation, under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance. The Pledge of the Covenant from God. validates the role of God in American history and forming our Rethinking In an Associated Press interview three days after the taping, Granholm clarified that she was speaking personally and wouldn't support violating the U.S. Constitution. I thought that clarification was sound. Her personal feelings about a governmental display of the Ten Commandments in Lansing notwithstanding, she rightfully sides with the American Civil Liberties Union in opposing it on constitutional grounds. The flip-flop charge, silly as it was, was amplified when the American Family Association of Michigan declared following the taping that it would ask Granholm to co-sponsor a tern- porary display of former Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Ray Moore's Ten Commandments monument at the Michigan Capitol. Last week, Rep. Robert Gosselin, R-Troy, introduced a Michigan House resolution that seeks a perma- nent display of the Ten Commandments inside the Capitol. Granholm's support of the Constitution is unequivocal, which helps neutralize both of those initiatives. Thank God for that. Moore's monument, now on national tour, is the more immediate concern. federal government. Editing it because of a generic reference to God seems political correctness gone wild. The Pledge aptly captures the spirit of our nation's founders. It affirms God's lasting imprint on America and our historic documents, mon- uments and buildings. Would-be revisionists overlook that public schools may require teachers to lead only willing stu- dents in reciting the Pledge; no student must take part. Sure, Granholm was wrong to initially infer that a display of the Decalogue in the Michigan Capitol would go unchal- lenged. But she was not wrong in speaking from her heart about what the commandments mean to her. She's Catholic, but also American. And U.S. freedoms include individual reli- gious expression. Her God is different than my God, but she wasn't trying to impose her beliefs through government-spon- sored religious expression. Michigan's attorney general before being elected governor in 2002, Granholm obviously knows the difference between these two fundamental forms of public expression. Jennifer Granholm was taking part in a talk show, for God's sake. Since when did being candid become off limits in that kind of open forum? If it ever does, I fear for our nation. ❑ JEFFREY CHOW FOR 271 WEST MAPLE DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM :TN 2/24 2005 5