A modern Pagan perspectivePosts RSS Comments RSS

"I Believe" Cross License Plates Ruled Unconstitutional

News broke yesterday that U.S. District  Judge Cameron McGowan Currie ruled that South Carolina’s controversial “I Believe” license plate violated the constitutional separation of church and state.

“In finding the sectarian plate unconstitutional, Judge Currie held, “Such a law amounts to state endorsement not only of religion in general, but of a specific sect in particular.” The judge noted that legislators and other state officials have unnecessarily drawn the state into an expensive lawsuit.”


I don’t see why non-Christians would have a problem with this.

This case had been a joint effort of local clergy and Americans United who felt the plate amounted to a state-sponsored endorsement of Christianity. This entire process has also been haunted by the Pagans in South Carolina and their own quest for equal treatment under the law. From the local politicians pushing the plates under the assumption that “any” religion could have their own tags, just so long as those tags weren’t from a Pagan faith, to the fact that the judge on this case also ruled in favor of Wiccan Darla Kaye Wynne during the Great Falls invocation saga. Our presence played a small part in reminding politicians, judges, lawyers, and journalists that  minority religions exist everywhere, even in the “Christian” South. That a Christian cross emblazoned on these plates sent a message of exclusion, not inclusion.

Of course the saga of Christian license plates is hardly over, the state of South Carolina could try to appeal the decision, and other states, most notably Florida, are engaging in the same shenanigans. But at least a message was sent today that America is not merely a “Christian” nation, but a nation of many religions, or of no religion at all, and you can’t raise one up in the government without pushing the others down in some fashion.

4 responses so far

  • http://witchesandscientists.blogspot.com Gene

    Amen

  • http://patheos.com/blogs/wildhunt/2009/11/more-on-the-pagan-angle-to-those-i-believe-plates.html The Wild Hunt » More on the Pagan Angle to those “I Believe” Plates

    [...] how I said a couple days ago that the entire process that led to South Carolina’s “I Believe” license plates being r…? It turns out that I’m not the only one who thinks so. South Carolina Attorney General Henry [...]

  • http://patheos.com/blogs/wildhunt/2009/11/citizen-journalists-and-other-pagan-news-of-note.html The Wild Hunt » Citizen Journalists and other Pagan News of Note

    [...] $4000 dollars to sponsor the specialty plate in the first place we wouldn’t have had to have an expensive court battle. But I suppose that would rob local politicians of some quality Christian pandering for [...]

  • http://patheos.com/blogs/wildhunt/2010/08/return-of-the-i-believe-plates.html The Wild Hunt » Return of the “I Believe” Plates

    [...] The original “I Believe” plates were ruled unconstitutional due to the fact that they were sponsored by the South Carolina legislature, creating the impression of a state-sponsored religion. The DMV has yet to decide if these new plates are indeed legal. [...]