Lancaster, California to Vote Tuesday on Prayer Policy at City Meetings
source: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-lancaster-ballot11-2010apr11,0,758995.story
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Lancaster to vote Tuesday on prayer policy at city meetings
The measure, which asks residents to weigh in on the city's practice of selecting clergy from different faiths to deliver the invocation at council meetings, has polarized voters.
By Ann M. Simmons
April 11, 2010
To pray to Jesus, or not?
That is the question that Lancaster voters are being asked to decide in Tuesday's municipal election.
Ballot Measure I asks whether the city should continue its policy of randomly selecting clergy from different faiths to deliver the invocation at council meetings, "without restricting the content based on their beliefs, including references to Jesus Christ."
Other Lancaster ballot measures include whether to change the mayor's term limit from two to four years and whether Lancaster should become a charter city. But it is Measure I that has by far polarized the most voters.
The issue of praying before city meetings came to a head in Lancaster last August when the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California sent a letter to city officials stating that the group had received "a number of complaints" about council members and commissioners opening their meetings with invocations given in "the name of Jesus," or containing other explicitly sectarian religious references.
The ACLU deemed the policy "divisive" and "unconstitutional" and warned Lancaster to quit the practice or risk facing legal action.
The California cities of Lodi, Turlock, Tracy and Tehachapi have been threatened in the last several months with lawsuits claiming that prayer at meetings breaches the separation of church and state.
In 2002, Burbank was ordered by courts to cease "knowingly and intentionally allowing sectarian prayer at City Council meetings," according to the ACLU. The city petitioned the California and U.S. supreme courts to review its case but was denied.
Lancaster -- which is home to Muslims, Jews, Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists and Christians of various denominations -- has responded to the ACLU's legal threats by placing the issue on Tuesday's ballot.
"If the vast majority of the community is in favor of this," said Mayor R. Rex Parris, "I think the court should know that."
Vice Mayor Ron Smith, who wrote the ballot measure, has said that the policy of randomly selecting someone to deliver the invocation allows citizens "the opportunity of freedom of speech, to be able to pray the way they want to pray."
Many residents and religious leaders have voiced their support for praying at council meetings.
"All through our history, even in recent years, our leaders have offered public prayers seeking the hand of God's blessing," Paul Chappell, pastor of the Lancaster Baptist Church, recently wrote in his blog, "The Pastor's Perspective." "The current movement to erase our Christian heritage and deny the right to public prayers is not an issue concerning the separation of church and state; it is an attempt to remove God from hearts and minds."
But others oppose the practice.
"I am strongly against the measure," said Kamal Al-Khatib, president of the American Islamic Institute of Antelope Valley. "When they give an invocation in the name of Jesus Christ, they are basically promoting Christianity, which is a violation of church and state."
Tensions over religion were further ignited in Lancaster earlier this year when Councilwoman Sherry Marquez posted anti-Islam comments on her Facebook page. During his State of the City address, Parris told an audience of mostly Christian ministers that he was "growing a Christian community."
The two officials later apologized. But some people were not satisfied.
"If [Parris'] apology was sincere, he would have abandoned his support of Measure I," Al-Khatib said.
http://lstcccme.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/parris.jpg
Photo: Bigot
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freecrack
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i love how they fail to notice by creating a mandate to pray they remove the reverence and meaning from thier prayers. its no longer because you have a spiritual need that you desire to fullfill but a social one.
- 2 years ago
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freecrack
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EthicalVegan
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April 14 2010 UPDATES on the voters' disappointing outcome...
http://current.com/news/92379457_lancaster-californians-voted-yesterday-to-legal...
- 2 years ago
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EthicalVegan
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We are living in the dark ages - with people holding onto their little notions of self-importance. Thinking the ideas they personally think are as important and equal to the creation of this universe. Or that they and their notions have a greater importance than the Universe.
This is entirely the truth of their mentalities. People having little cartoon thoughts and suffering to believe those little ideas and contrivances are equal to God.
- 2 years ago
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02
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Kurta
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I don't understand why these people have to sneak prayers in whenever possible. Let's keep the laws in the courtroom and the prayers in church. We can all pray when we want to whom/what we want. It should not be dictated to us. Maybe the DOT should make us all get out and pray while we are sitting in traffic.
- 2 years ago
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Kurta
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artemis6
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Go unitarian . Problem solved .
- 2 years ago
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artemis6
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EthicalVegan
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artemis6:
I became a Unitarian when I was about ten, but since I'm such a heavy-duty atheist, it's not often I find a fellowship that steers completely away from dogma of some sort or another. For instance, there are some UUs's fellowships that still refer to themselves as "churches." Yikes.
But Unitarianism was useful for my son, since he's a conscientious objector... and also an atheist.
You might appreciate the following:
http://current.com/entertainment/comedy/92097984_mr-deity-and-the-really-hard-ti...
- 2 years ago
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EthicalVegan
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artemis6
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EthicalVegan:
It's the only organized religion (buddhism is a philosophy ) I can stand .
- 2 years ago
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artemis6
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artemis6
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EthicalVegan:
Thanks !
- 2 years ago
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artemis6
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EthicalVegan
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artemis6:
Oh, but it is not a religion. If it were, I wouldn't have been a part of Unitarianism for so many, many years.
- 2 years ago
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EthicalVegan
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artemis6
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EthicalVegan:
How do you define it ? It seem s a bit to organized to me .
- 2 years ago
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artemis6
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EthicalVegan
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Here's the whole damn background story on this 18th century city and its bigoted mayor.
http://current.com/news/92030838_mayor-wants-jesus-prayers-and-christian-communi...
- 2 years ago
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EthicalVegan
