Archive for the ‘December 8 banquet’ Category

Illumination, Colloboration and Litigation on December 8

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

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The ArchAngel Institute celebrated this special day in all three divisions.

The Raphael Division, with very much help from Mike and Cathy Butler at Diskey Sign, lit up the southern wall of the Institute with nine beautiful classic Christian art representations.  Drive by the Institute after dark to see this fine work of public art that is our response to Pope Benedict XVI’s call here.  More details to follow.  This post shows one of the works of art now gracing the building.

The Gabriel Division communicated our Executive Director’s long climb toward the Indiana bar and thanked so many who have meant so much to us at our first ever banquet tonight.  Terry Clancy and the crew helped us put on a first rate first effort.  Many, many thanks to those who braved the weather to attend — you are special friends, one and all!

The Michael Division entered federal court at 2:00 pm today and filed a lawsuit against the Judges and Lawyers Assistance Program, Dr. Elizabeth Bowman, Dr. Steven Ross and Chief Judge of the Indiana Supreme Court Randall Shepard seeking to have three laws enjoined for due process reasons and documenting a psychological waterboarding that is alleged to have violated both the federal and state constitutions in many, many ways.

The federal lawsuit brings 27 separate legal claims, most of them sounding in constitutional law.  More on it later.

Tonight we close with these fine quotes from President Harry S. Truman that seem to sum up today’s filing …

Once a government is committed to the principle of silencing the voice of opposition, it has only one way to go, and that is down the path of increasingly repressive measures, until it becomes a source of terror to all its citizens and creates a country where everyone lives in fear.

When even one American — who has done nothing wrong — is forced by fear to shut his mind and close his mouth, then all Americans are in peril.”  Harry S. Truman.

THE ARCHANGEL INSTITUTE : BUILDING THE CULTURE OF LIFE ON THE RUINS OF THE CULTURE OF DEATH –  AND NOT WITH OUR MINDS SHUT OR MOUTHS CLOSED!

To serve and protect #2: Release the hounds

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

See the previous post for the first in this series.

All that is in red below is from the United States Supreme Court (“SCOTUS”).  This case was the culmination of a series of challenges brought by alleged communists in the 1950-1970 era that broke down the walls keeping them out of the state bars.

It is ironic.  At our nation’s founding one could not hold office or testify in court without belief in the Almighty.  It is widely held that such beleif was necessary to become an attorney in any of the first 48 states as the time of their birth.

We were a moral and religious people.  Were.

By 1971 one could be an atheist advocating the overthrow of the United States Constitution by violence and force and, if willing to stand mute when asked your views, become an attorney.  And from there … well the sky is the limit in America.   Maybe even the POTUS.

small_133_woman_with_a_russian_wolf_houndThe red font is the ever so elite and sophisticated SCOTUS releasing  Marxist hounds upon America.  Blue font are highlights that are quite pertinent to issues now being handled by the ArchAngel Institute.  Comments in {brackets} and italic black font are food for thought for our December 8 banquet.  If you enjoy this series then you will love our banquet.  Here are instructions if you wish to join us at table and help advance the thoughts and actions of  The ArchAngel Institute. We welcome all persons of good will who are concerned about perserving our constitutional order and our Christian heritage (not necesarily in that order).

Baird v. State Bar of Arizona, 401 U.S. 1 (1971)

MR. JUSTICE BLACK announced the judgment of the Court and delivered an opinion in which MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, and MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL join.  {i.e. the far left side of the aisle at that time}

This is one of two cases now before us from two different States in which applicants have been denied admission to practice law solely because they refused to answer questions about their personal beliefs or their affiliations with organizations that advocate certain ideas about government. Sharp conflicts and close divisions have arisen in this Court concerning the power of  States to refuse to permit applicants to practice law in cases where bar examiners have been suspicious about applicants’ loyalties and their views on Communism and revolution. This has been an increasingly divisive and bitter issue for some years, especially since Senator Joseph McCarthy from Wisconsin stirred up anti-Communist feelings and fears by his “investigations” in the early 1950’s.  {Few SCOTUS decisions are this openly political.}

One applicant named Raphael Konigsberg was denied admission in California, and this Court reversed. Konigsberg v. State Bar, 353 U. S. 252 (1957). The State nevertheless denied him admission a second time, and this Court then affirmed by a 5-to-4 decision. 366 U. S. 366 U.S. 36 (1961). An applicant named Rudolph Schware was denied admission in New Mexico, and this Court reversed, with five Justices agreeing on one opinion, three Justices on another opinion, and one not participating. Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners, 353 U. S. 232 (1957). In another case, an applicant named George Anastaplo was denied admission in Illinois on grounds similar to those involved in Konigsberg and Schware, and the denial was affirmed by a 5-to-4 margin. In re Anastaplo, 366 U. S. 82 (1961). See also In re Summers, 325 U. S. 561 (1945). With sharp divisions in this Court, our docket and those of the Courts of Appeals have been filled for years with litigation involving inquisitions about beliefs and associations and refusals to let people practice law and hold public or even private jobs solely because public authorities have been suspicious of their ideas. Usually these denials of employment have not been based on any overt acts of misconduct or lawlessness, and the litigation has continued to raise serious questions of alleged violations of the First Amendment and other guarantees of the Bill of Rights.  {i.e., due process and equal protection under the 14th Amendment and possibly privacy under the 9th, since this is the far left writing}

The foregoing cases and others contain thousands of pages of confusing formulas, refined reasonings, and puzzling holdings that touch on the same suspicions and fears about citizenship and loyalty. However we have concluded the best way to handle this case is to narrate its simple facts and then relate them to the 45 words that make up the First Amendment.

These are the facts.

The petitioner, Sara Baird, [**facts of her good academic record and citizenship excerpted**]  was asked to state whether she had ever been a member of the Communist Party or any organization “that advocates overthrow of the United States Government by force or violence.” When she refused to answer this question, the Committee declined to process her application further or recommend her admission to the bar. The Arizona Supreme Court then denied her petition for an order to the Committee to show cause why she should not be admitted to practice law. We granted certiorari. 394 U.S. 957.

***

That [45 word] Amendment, made applicable to the States by the Fourteenth, forbids any

“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. . . .”

Mr. Justice Roberts, in referring to the First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of religion, said:

“Thus, the Amendment embraces two concepts, — freedom to believe and freedom to act. The first is absolute but, in the nature of things, the second cannot be. Conduct remains subject to regulation for the protection of society.”

Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U. S. 296, 310 U. S. 303-304 (1940).

See also Schneider v. State, 308 U. S. 147, 308 U. S. 160-161 (1939); West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U. S. 624, 319 U. S. 642 (1943). And we have made it clear that:

“This conjunction of liberties is not peculiar to religious activity and institutions alone. The First Amendment gives freedom of mind the same security as freedom of conscience.”

Thomas v. Collins, 323 U. S. 516, 323 U. S. 531 (1945). The protection of the First Amendment also extends to the right of association. As we said in Schneider v. Smith, 390 U. S. 17, 390 U. S. 25 (1968):

“The First Amendment’s ban against Congress ‘abridging’ freedom of speech, the right peaceably to assemble and to petition, and the ‘associational freedom’ . . . that goes with those rights create a preserve where the views of the individual are made inviolate.”

See also Shelton v. Tucker, 364 U. S. 479, 364 U. S. 485-487 (1960); Bates v. Little Rock, 361 U. S. 516 (1960); NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U. S. 449 (1958).

The First Amendment’s protection of association prohibits a State from excluding a person from a profession or punishing him solely because he is a member of a particular political organization or because he holds certain beliefs. United Statesv. Robel, 389 U. S. 258, 389 U. S. 266 (1967); Keyishian v. Board of Regents, 385 U. S. 589, 385 U. S. 607 (1967). Similarly, when a State attempts to make inquiries about a person’s beliefs or associations, its power is limited by the First Amendment. Broad and sweeping state inquiries into these protected areas, as Arizona has engaged in here, discourage citizens from exercising rights protected by the Constitution. Shelton v. Tucker, supra; Gibson v. Florida Legislative Investigation Committee, 372 U. S. 539 (1963); Cf. Speiser v. Randall, 357 U. S. 513 (1958).

When a State seeks to inquire about an individual’s beliefs and associations, a heavy burden lies upon it to show that the inquiry is necessary to protect a legitimate state interest. Gibson v. Florida Legislative Investigation Committee, supra, at 372 U. S. 546. Of course, Arizona has a legitimate interest in determining whether petitioner has the qualities of character and the professional competence requisite to the practice of law. But, here, petitioner has already supplied the Committee with extensive personal and professional information to assist its determination. By her answers to questions other than No. 25, and her listing of former employers, law school professors, and other references, she has made available to the Committee the information relevant to her fitness to practice law.  And whatever justification may be offered, a State may not inquire about a man’s views or associations solely for the purpose of withholding a right or benefit because of what he believes.

Much has been written about the application of the First Amendment to cases where penalties have been imposed on people because of their beliefs. Some of what has been written is reconcilable with what we have said here, and some of it is not. Without detailed reference to all prior cases, it is sufficient to say we hold that views and beliefs are immune from bar association inquisitions designed to lay a foundation for barring an applicant from the practice of law. Clearly Arizona has engaged in such questioning here.

The practice of law is not a matter of grace, but of right for one who is qualified by his learning and his moral character. See Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners, supra, and Ex parte Garland, 4 Wall. 333 (1867). This record is wholly barren of one word, sentence, or paragraph that tends to show this lady is not morally and professionally fit to serve honorably and well as a member of the legal profession. It was error not to process her application and not to admit her to the Arizona Bar. The judgment of the Arizona Supreme Court is reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

It is so ordered.

{And so Ms. Baird became an attorney in the State of Arizona without ever having to discuss her alleged communist views about the violent overthrow of our constitutional order.}

Given this ruling, can one be refused admission for being a pro-life Christian who affirms what the Church has taught about its role in judging man’s law since the days of the Roman Coliseum?

If you reflexively say “no” then you need to come to our December 8 banquet. If you sadly answer “yes” they you are reading the Zeitgeist correctly, friend. Come to our banquet to hear more about the chilly, early winds of a potentially new Kristallnacht that are blowing through our social order.

To Serve and Protect #3 — And now a word from the loyal opposition

Sunday, December 6th, 2009
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THEIR OFFICIAL LOGO. M FOR MAN, b for boy. Very Sick

Representing the Unpopular Client

This article appears in the Fall 2001 edition of Liberties, the newsletter of the ACLU of Eastern Missouri.

By Denise Lieberman  ACLU/EM Legal Director

                  When people learn that I am an ACLU lawyer I am often asked how I come to grips with our defense of morally reprehensible groups like the Ku Klux Klan. Many cannot reconcile their belief in freedom of speech with their repugnance towards the client. I respond that we don’t advocate the client’s viewpoints, but the broader legal issue. The ACLU has stood up for everyone from Oliver North to the National Socialist Party, represented a fundamentalist Christian church, a Santerian church, and the International Society of Krishna Consciousness. Yet the ACLU has never advocated Christianity or Krishna beliefs, socialism or arms trading. What the ACLU has advocated is freedom of speech and the protection of civil liberties. While most people understand this on an intellectual level, many have difficulty internalizing our representation on a personal level, and a good number condemn it altogether. 

                  There are mixed messages about the representation of unpopular clients. We think itís a good idea in theory, but tend to pass judgment when the actual clients become too distasteful for our sensibilities. Retaliation often befalls attorneys who undertake unpopular causes. Anthony Griffin was terminated from his role as general counsel for the NAACP after he served as a cooperating attorney for the ACLU representing the KKK against efforts by the state of Texas to compel the group to turn over its membership list. An entire website, called the ACLU Rage Page, has been dedicated to condemning ACLU lawyers for the Massachusetts affiliateís representation of NAMBLA (North American Man-Boy Love Association) last year. After the ACLUís litigation locally to remove a government-sponsored crËche in Florissant several years ago, the public response was so threatening that a new security system had to be installed in our St. Louis office and the FBI were called to monitor our safety.

                  Why? People associate lawyers with their clients. We see this in many ACLU cases, — our stance defending the offensive and the politically incorrect from burdensome censorship laws[I.E. expanding access to the most vile pornography]

defending the religiously and politically outcast, advocating in opposition to the death penalty for those convicted of ghastly crimes,  fighting for expanded rights for gays and lesbians, [I.E., the normalization of that, along with adotions and marriage]

and fighting laws enacted to restrict offensive material on the internet.  [I.E., porno once again -- it is big business and great for destroying a stable moral order]

In St. Louis, the ACLU affiliate has been accused of being anti-police for defending a police officerís right to speak out about racism on the police force and for our efforts to combat racial profiling; and for being anti-Christian for our litigation to remove nativity scenes from government buildings, and for being anti-safe schools for defending students’ free speech rights.

NOT A BAD ARTICLE, DENISE.

NOW, IF YOU THINK THA T “Retaliation often befalls attorneys who undertake unpopular causes” YOU SHOULD EXPERIENCE SOMETIME THE RETALIATION THAT CAN BEFALL AN ATTORNEY WHO TAKES ON THE CULTURE OF DEATH DIRECTLY.

I CAN ASSURE YOU THAT YOU HAVE NOT SEEN ANYTHING QUITE LIKE IT, AS THAT ACLU ATTORNEYS ARE NEVER AS REJECTED IN THE CORRIDORS OF POWER AND SMOKEFILLED BACK ROOMS AS ARE PRO-LIFE ATTORNEYS.

MORE DETAILS TO FOLLOW ….

Need a brochure for our Dec 8 program?  Page down and print or email us and we will send you one:  archangelinstitute@gmail.com

Call us if questions:  423-1771

To Serve and Protect #4 — And now more from the loyal opposition

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

Representing the Unpopular Client

This article appears in the Fall 2001 edition of Liberties, the newsletter of the ACLU of Eastern Missouri.

By Denise Lieberman  ACLU/EM Legal Director

(Her copy in black and red, AI Exec Director’s comments in blue)

During a McCarthy-era American Bar Association convention, the ABA declared that any attorney representing a person associated with the Communist party was unworthy of membership in the bar, and even demanded that lawyers take loyalty oaths.

For the record, all attorneys must take oaths. This is a hold over from the days of yore, when oaths meant something due to honor and the nearly universal belief in a Divine Lawgiver.  The oath in Indiana, as in most states, ends with “So help me God.”

Some in the legal profession now demand oaths of Christians that will cause them to have to choose between Faith or compromise.

Subsequently, when the civil rights movement highlighted that racial and political minorities were denied equal access to the courts, the bar promulgated rules stating that a lawyer’s representation does not constitute endorsement of a client. But the concept is better applied in theory than in practice. Despite the bar’s response that an advocate does not vouch for the justness of a client’s cause but only for its legal merit, lawyers frequently consider the impact their association with the unpopular client will have on their law practice, and generally it is only public interest organizations like the ACLU that can take on unpopular clients without risking their livelihood, and even groups like the ACLU face many repercussions from these cases.

Actually the guiding principle in the profession is less about whether the client is unpopular and more about whether the client has access to mammon. Of course, unpopular people tend to be people with little money, and popular people tend to be people with much money.  The Golden Rule.

But without organizations like the ACLU and lawyers willing to take on these causes many of civil liberties cases would not be taken at all.

Not ture.  As long as 42 USC 1983, a federal statute, allows for fee shifting under 42 USC 1988, and as long as other federal and state statutes ensure that civil rights attorneys are paid you will find attoreys willing to sue for valid civil rights claims.

A legal system that affirms rights for all of its citizens but then effectively denies the unpopular the ability to assert those rights is unjust and counterproductive to the ideals of justice.

RIGHT ON SISTER!  Now, what happens when a legal system denies the unpopular the ability to become attorneys in the first place?   Is that not the best path to ensuring that those like them end up without representation?  Had Blacks been kept out of the state bars then civil rights litigation would not have been as successful, as that Brown v. Board of Topeka was a team of Black attorneys.  So, what if pro-lifer and conservative Christians could be culled out and kept out of the state bars?  No more Scalias  or Thomas  or Alitos — a dream come true for the Left.

The inevitable, but unfortunate, result is a compromise of . . . constitutional rights.  … And who we consider unpopular is but a reflection of societal bias and the existing flaws of the justice system. The mainstream litigant is not rejected as an unpopular client; it is those whose actions, speech, viewpoints or agendas are outside the mainstream. It is not those with resources; it is the poor. And, it is disproportionately people of color. It is precisely those we reject as unpopular clients who are most likely to face bias and suffer injustice in our imperfect legal system. … The protection of civil rights and civil liberties will be achieved only through representation of the unpopular client.

RIGHT ON ONCE AGAIN! And so who will stand up for the unpopular bar applicant who is denied admission due to his religion, or political views, or belief in Higher Laws doctrine?aaisword.JPG

THE ARCHANGEL INSTITUTE WILL.


Sacred art a path to sacred mysteries

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

The ArchAngel Institute has been working on a project that we think Pope Benedict XVI would fully bless.  It will be rolled out during our December 8 banquet.

We base our opinion on the Pope’s likely blessing of our meager effort on the following article in red.  If you want to join Diskey Sign and electrician George Strack (GTech Electric, 609-9835) in aiding us in this noble quest then you are more that welcome to do just that!  This week we need sheets of clear or slightly defused acrylic panels of a size greater than 6′ x 3′.

By Daniel Flynn

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Pope Benedict met artists from around the world in the Sistine Chapel on Saturday and urged them to inject spirituality into their work, saying contemporary beauty was often “illusory and deceitful.”

The Pope told the gathering of hundreds of painters, sculptors, architects, poets and directors, held beneath the vaulted ceiling of the chapel painted by Michelangelo, that he wanted to “renew the Church’s friendship with the world of art.”

“Beauty … can become a path toward the transcendent, toward the ultimate Mystery, toward God,” Benedict said.

small_Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel detail1 -1508-12

The Vatican said it invited some 500 artists to the event, regardless of religious, political or stylistic allegiances.

More than 250 accepted, mostly from Italy, including singer Andrea Bocelli and award-winning film composer Ennio Morricone.

Amongst the other guests were Iraqi-born British architect Zaha Hadid, whose Maxxi modern art museum has just opened in Rome, and F. Murray Abraham, the American actor who won an Oscar for his role as Salieri in the Mozart film, Amadeus, in 1985.

The Pope told them that in a world lacking in hope, with increasing signs of aggression and despair, there was an ever greater need for a return to spirituality in art.

“Too often … the beauty thrust upon us is illusory and deceitful … it imprisons man within himself and further enslaves him, depriving him of hope and joy,” he said.

Against the backdrop of Michelangelo’s vast fresco of the Last Judgment, which adorns the chapel’s altar wall, Benedict lamented that the once-close cooperation between the Church and the artistic community had weakened.

“Faith takes nothing away from your genius or art,” he said. “On the contrary, it exalts them and nourishes them.”

Saturday’s event marked both the 10th anniversary of Pope John Paul II’s ‘Letter to Artists’ in 1999 in which he spoke of the Church’s “need for art,” and the 45th anniversary of Pope Paul VI’s original meeting with artists in 1964.

A word of caution

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

If you are an Indiana attorney or ever think you would like to become one then you should take the time to pray and reflect before signing the Manhattan Declaration, which you can go to by clicking here.

That fine work of Christian Resistance ends on this high (as in Higher Law) note:

As Christians, we take seriously the Biblical admonition to respect and obey those in authority. We believe in law and in the rule of law. We recognize the duty to comply with laws whether we happen to like them or not, unless the laws are gravely unjust or require those subject to them to do something unjust or otherwise immoral. The biblical purpose of law is to preserve order and serve justice and the common good; yet laws that are unjust—and especially laws that purport to compel citizens to do what is unjust—undermine the common good, rather than serve it.

 

Going back to the earliest days of the church, Christians have refused to compromise their proclamation of the gospel. In Acts 4, Peter and John were ordered to stop preaching. Their answer was, “Judge for yourselves whether it is right in God’s sight to obey you rather than God. For we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard.” Through the centuries, Christianity has taught that civil disobedience is not only permitted, but sometimes required. There is no more eloquent defense of the rights and duties of religious conscience than the one offered by Martin Luther King, Jr., in his Letter from a Birmingham Jail. Writing from an explicitly Christian perspective, and citing Christian writers such as Augustine and Aquinas, King taught that just laws elevate and ennoble human beings because they are rooted in the moral law whose ultimate source is God Himself. Unjust laws degrade human beings. Inasmuch as they can claim no authority beyond sheer human will, they lack any power to bind in conscience. King’s willingness to go to jail, rather than comply with legal injustice, was exemplary and inspiring.

 

Because we honor justice and the common good, we will not comply with any edict that purports to compel our institutions to participate in abortions, embryo-destructive research, assisted suicide and euthanasia, or any other anti-life act; nor will we bend to any rule purporting to force us to bless immoral sexual partnerships, treat them as marriages or the equivalent, or refrain from proclaiming the truth, as we know it, about morality and immorality and marriage and the family.

We will fully and ungrudgingly render to Caesar what is Caesar’s. But under no circumstances will we render to Caesar what is God’s.

ONCE AGAIN, A WORD OF WARNING.  SIGNING THIS PLEDGE MAY GET A PERSON DISBARRED IN INDIANA. 

WANT PROOF?  STAY TUNED.   AND COME TO OUR DECEMBER 8 BANQUET.

DECEMBER 8 ANNOUNCEMENTS BEGIN NOW

Friday, November 13th, 2009

aaiFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                              

November 13, 2009

CONTACT: Bryan J. Brown (260) 423-1771

 FILE: ArchAngel Institute // Christian Persecution // Legal Studies // Civil Dissidents

THE ARCHANGEL INSTITUTE ANNOUNCES BANQUET AND PRESENTATION ADDRESSING CIVIL DISSENT AND OFFICIAL MISCONDUCT

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8 at 6:30 PM the ArchAngel Institute’s first annual banquet will roll out an ambitious flight plan for 2010 and present compelling evidence of Christian persecution.

This event will take place at the Classic Café on Hillegas Road in northwest Fort Wayne.

Tickets to attend are $25 per plate.

Dinner will be accompanied by Executive Director Bryan J. Brown’s presentation entitled Climbing the Mountain to get in the Bar.”

 The ArchAngel Institute directors will be introduced.

Programs (past and future) will be detailed throughout the evening.

All interested in the work ongoing at 827 Webster Street and/or the subjects of Christian persecution, the natural law, solidarity or civil dissent are invited to attend this fundraising event.

More details, including a map and the instructions for purchasing advance tickets will soon be posted at www.archangelinstitute.org.