As I and others have said repeatedly, there is no censorship or suppression.  
No exclusion. Those are not the facts of this case
In any event, I was speaking about the larger picture. I am interested in 
dis-covering the taboo that forbids us from discussing the obvious fact that 
religious groups are a part of the culture.  And that they change.   And that 
change can be good for religious groups. 

Marci   
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-----Original Message-----
From: Rick Duncan <nebraskalawp...@yahoo.com>
Date: Thu, 13 May 2010 06:34:38 
To: <hamilto...@aol.com>; Law & Religion issues for Law 
Academics<religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu>
Subject: Re: A real-life on-campus example

 Marci says: "Groups thrive and shrivel and respond to and interact with the 
culture 
and if they cannot adapt to broadbased moral and social changes by 
changing their beliefs and practices, they become marginalized."


I have no further questions of this witness.

Marci's admission--that groups like the CLS must "adapt to broadbased moral and 
social changes by 
changing their beliefs"--demonstrates the important purpose of freedom of 
expressive association.

That core purpose is that Government should not use its coercive power 
(including its power over public fora) to coerce expressive groups into 
"changing their beliefs." Government has no business telling expressive groups 
which beliefs are acceptable and which are unacceptable. 

Hastings can create a public forum and allow the marketplace to decide which 
ideas are marginal and which are not. Or it can close the forum and allow only 
school-sponsored groups to meet. But it cannot engage the fiction of 
maintaining a marketplace of ideas, while at the same time using its power to 
suppress ideas and beliefs that reject established versions of the truth.

Rick Duncan 
Welpton Professor of Law 
University of Nebraska College of Law 
Lincoln, NE 68583-0902


"And against the constitution I have never raised a storm,It's the scoundrels 
who've corrupted it that I want to reform" --Dick Gaughan (from the song, 
Thomas Muir of Huntershill)



      

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