Stop
digging.
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Monday, June 06, 2005 3:55
PMTo: religionlaw@lists.ucla.eduSubject: Re: Rational
Basis v. Intermediate Scrutiny .:.
I think we're trying to make a science out of an a
Come
on. Are these tits and tats really what this list is for? A little
restraint goes a long way.
-Original Message-From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Newsom
MichaelSent: Wednesday, December 15, 2004 4:53 PMTo: Law
& Religion issues for Law
Title: RE: Wait, there's more: "Leading ID think tank calls Dover evolution policy "misguided, " calls for it to be withdrawn" .:.
If it's the seventh day shouldn't we all be resting? 7:30 pm and we're all still at our computers.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[E
Title: Re: Wait, there's more: "Leading ID think tank calls Dover evolution policy "misguided, " calls for it to be withdrawn" .:.
Evolution is an established fact? News to me.
Richard Menard
Sidley Austin Brown & Wood
202-736-8016 (office)
202-246-7408 (mobile)
-Original Message---
be as surprised as Richard that the piercings are religiously motivated), but
instead because of mainstream Western orthodoxy w/r/t such piercings (ok on
ears, not-so-ok on other parts of the face). I'm not sure how this would
or should cut under title VII, but I suspect
Yeah,
I believe it. That website raises an interesting question (not a new
one). One of the "ministers" says the piercing of his flesh was a
spiritual experience . . . fine, whatever. I'd wager the Church of Jim
Beam has a vastly wider membership. Anyone can dress up a hobby in
religiou
I've
seen that in RFRA and RLUIPA cases: an almost neurotic reluctance to call a
bogus "religion" a spade. Makes for messy jurisprudence, but by and large
the cases seem to come out right.
-Original Message-From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Marc
I
haven't read the opinion yet, but it sounds like a tacit judgment on the
sincerity of the belief. Church of Body Modification,
please.
-Original Message-From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Marc
SternSent: Monday, December 06, 2004 9:25 AMTo: La
Title: Re: "Religion of peace"? .:.
You say religion of peace. Perhaps you mean religion of pacifism (not the same, see Brish Quakers circa 1939). Thus rephrased, point taken.
Richard Menard
Sidley Austin Brown & Wood
202-736-8016 (office)
202-246-7408 (mobile)
-Original Message---
I guess that would count
for whatever weight the jury gives it. With the right (wrong) jury, it
might be evidence of redemption or whatever. Why withhold the information
whatever the sect?
-Original Message-From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of
[E
Title: Re: State RFRAs question .:.
I seem to recall Oregon had a bill pending. Don't know the status.
Richard Menard
Sidley Austin Brown & Wood
202-736-8016 (office)
202-246-7408 (mobile)
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EM
You
raise a lot of good points. In response only to point (5): The
notion that proselytizing is more suspect because it may be received as
"offensive and unwanted" (I agree with that premise) seems to me either to
ignore or to reject something at the heart of the endeavor. Proselytizing
Title: Re: Huntington in WSJ re "Under God"
I take his point to be simply that religious outsiders may feel like outsiders because they are outsiders. A pretty uncontroversial point as far as it goes, if not often said in polite company. More interesting is the tacit corollary, a challenge t
Could as likely result in cacophony, which is less
benign.
Doug's point is half-persuasive. Church bells do not
generally chime for a long stretch five times every day; if they did, you can
bet most residents, Christians included, would object.
-Original Message-From:
[EMAIL
The
district court's reasoning, which Virginia wisely disavowed, would preclude a
lot more than dietary allowances in state institutions. As noted in
the appellant's briefs in Madison, and as Judge Wilkinson
observed, "It would throw into question a wide variety
of religious accommodation
Title: RE: F--- The Draft and Axson-Flynn
Contempt is a strong word. Is it fair? One can perhaps imagine an orthodox Jewish writer who is called on to write out the name of God, and asks not to be forced to choose between his vocation and his religious scruples. (I welcome more graceful ill
religious institution
functions as a civil institution, an institution from which some people are
barred.
-Original
Message-----From: Menard,
Richard H. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, December 05, 2003 1:41
PMTo: 'Law & Religion
issues for Law Academics&
Title: RE: Talking across different world-views [Was: Civil unions and marriage]
Calling the alchemy dialectic a "subtlety" goes some way toward proving Professor Sisk's point.
-Original Message-
From: Mark Graber [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, December 06, 2003 5:03 PM
T
I
mean we have parallel systems of union, civil and religious. I think
you're saying there's overlap between them. Sure there is, but the civil
controls all legal incidents. That the one, in effect,
incorporates the other by reference doesn't change that, to my
mind.
-Original Mess
Exactly the system we have now.
-Original Message-From: Douglas Laycock
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Friday, December 05,
2003 1:30 PMTo: Law & Religion issues for Law
AcademicsSubject: RE: Civil unions and
marriageThe
legal civil union controls for all legal que
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