Slate's most excellent Dahlia Lithwick had a great article yesterday
explaining why in fact that US Supreme Court decision was not ducking
the issue, but in fact made the correct decision:

 http://slate.msn.com/id/2102381/


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Even if you believe the words "under God" violate the Constitution,
as I do�or at least violate the court's line of cases in this area,
as does Clarence Thomas�it's reasonable to say that Elk Grove Unified
School District v. Newdow just wasn't the right case to test that
proposition.

Too many other things were at stake. You can call
them "technicalities." I like to call them "children."

Ask a divorced or unmarried parent with primary custody of a child
what was at stake in this case, and you'll get an answer that differs
profoundly from the headlines: The lawyer's trick here came from
Michael Newdow, who wanted to override the religious decisions made
by his daughter's mother. (The two never married.) Allocating the
duties and obligations of custodial and noncustodial parents has
always been the province of state courts. It's a hideous job, and no
one should have to do it. But the simple fact is that judges decide
on a primary parent, and the other parent can either try to change
that arrangement or learn to live with it. Initially, Newdow went for
door No. 3. He tried to use a backdoor to force the issue first and
only tried to modify the custody agreement later.

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JDG



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