Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Supreme Court RIPS ITSELF APART with DECISION
Episode Date: June 22, 20242 years ago the MAGA right wing of the Supreme Court sent out an invitation to states to tear down the wall separating church and state and to ignore the Establishment Clause of the 1st Amendment. The... result: states like Louisiana forcing that the Judea-Christian 10 Commandments be taught in public schools with taxpayer dollars. Michael Popok explains how we got here and the hypocrisy of the MAGA 6-3 majority. Head to https://TryFum.com/legalaf and get a FREE GIFT with the JOURNEY PACK today when you use code LEGALAF Visit https://meidastouch.com for more! Visit https://meidastouch.com for more! Join us on Patreon: https://patreon.com/legalaf Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown Lights On with Jessica Denson: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/lights-on-with-jessica-denson On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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So Michael Popak, Legal AF, you've heard about the Louisiana law forcing the 10 commandments to be
installed and taught in public schools, but where did that come from? Where did the attempt to
establish a theocracy in America come from? It came on the back of two United States Supreme
Court decisions from June 2022 that were issued about six days apart. We reported on those
decisions on Legal AF at the time, but now we see the
ramifications. That was an invitation by the right-wing MAGA led by Gorsuch and Alito and Thomas
and Amy Coney Barrett and the rest. It was an invitation to completely ignore and destroy the
Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. James Madison's ideal that there not be religion in the public life in America,
especially in education. That went out the window in 2022 with the destruction of a major super,
super precedent that was taken off the books by Gorsuch and the right-wing MAGA,
and now it's a free-for-all. And we have the attempts by states like Louisiana
to reestablish and establish this country
as a Christian country, whether you like it or not.
That's what we're seeing with the United States
Supreme Court with the six to three majority.
The only reason they're ripping these super precedents
off the books and pointing instead to history and tradition.
Let's go back to old timey times.
Let's go back to the 1800s.
Let's go back to the 1700s.
Let's ignore the fact that during the 1800s and 1700s,
women were second class citizens
as they have rapidly become under the Trump administration
and this court again,
that slaves were slaves and not even Black citizens, that women were treated
as chattel, that they didn't have the right to vote, nor did Black Americans who were
barely Americans. But forget all that. What is this country's history and tradition as
it relates to fill in the blank? And when you hear the Supreme Court majority, supermajority
like Gorsuch and Alito and Thomas start talking about history, run for the hills.
That is their tell.
They're telling you that they're about to rip down 40, 50,
60 years of constitutional protections
around your and my civil rights.
And they're going to, now that they have the numbers,
and for no other reason,
they're gonna shove Christianity down our throats. Not just religion in the going to shove Christianity down our throats.
Not just religion in the public place, Christianity down our throats and states are listening.
Especially, I'm surprised it's taken states like Louisiana this long.
Now the two cases that we talked about at length at the time but it's important now
that are the foundation for everything we're about to see. And again, James Madison, who's the primary framer
of the First Amendment, including its establishment clause,
is spinning like a rotisserie in his grave, I assure you.
He made it known in all of his writing,
including the Federalist Papers,
that there should be no religion suffused and infused
within our civics,
within our politics, within our federal government, right?
You're free to worship as you choose,
but the government should not be helping
to establish a religion.
The two cases I'm talking about,
Carson versus Macon, a six to three decision,
and then Kennedy versus Bremerton. In both, Justice Sotomayor
wrote scathing, scathing dissents about the destruction of the wall between the church and
state, not chipping away at the complete wholesale assault on and destruction of that by the right
wing majority. In fact, her opinion in Kennedy versus Bremerton, 35 pages, was longer than Gorsuch's majority decision.
I'm gonna read to you from it
because she was so right on point.
Here's what Judge Sotomayor warned us
in the summer of 2022.
She said,
the decision, and I'll just tell you what the decision was, Joe Kennedy, not related.
Joe Kennedy was a football coach who for years forced his team, his football team, public high school football team, to pray.
He would do prayer stretches. They'd be stretching for their football game and he'd be doing prayers. And then he got sideways with the school board
because he kept going to the 50 yard line
and doing what effectively was compelled mandatory prayer
with his players in a public setting.
And the school board said, enough is enough.
You can go do your private exercise
of your religion somewhere else.
I mean, think of it this way.
If somebody who practices,
who's a Muslim, who worshiped Islam, took their prayer shawl, prayer rug, in the middle of,
you know, football practice, but also forced the rest of the team to go by, or he would hand out
prayer rugs and do their prayers with him, there would be an outcry.
And do you think this United States Supreme Court
would be like, that's okay, that seems all right with us.
Doesn't seem compelled.
No, no, but because he's Christian and he's praying
and they basically threw away the entire factual record
and ignored the complete entire factual record,
which is totally bogus, totally made up.
Joe Kennedy lied during his testimony and that came out in the appellate record, which is totally bogus, totally made up. Joe Kennedy lied during his
testimony and that came out in the appellate record, but they ignored it because they wanted
to make new law. And they wanted to throw away a test that had been on the books for over 40 years,
which we used to refer to as the lemon test, which is a test to see to make sure that government
doesn't get too entangled with religion. It was as important of a test as in the Dobbs decision
in terms of precedent, throwing away 50 years
of a constitutional right of a woman to choose
by throwing away the Dobbs decision,
like it was the morning trash.
They did the same thing in the Lemon Test
and they did the same analysis under history and tradition.
Let's not use the Lemon Test that served as well
for 40 years,
named after a case. Let's just use what we now sitting here in 2022, 2023, we think history
says about a certain thing, religion in life, religion in public life. And Justice Sotomayor
had enough in her 35 page decision at the time. And she said, this decision about Joe Kennedy
forcing people to kneel at the 50 yard line
does a disservice to schools
and the young citizens they serve,
as well as to our nation's longstanding commitment
to the separation of church and state.
And then listen to this part.
In doing so, the court set us further down a perilous path
in forcing states to entangle themselves with religion, with all of our rights
hanging in the balance. Well, states like Louisiana, and they won't be the last, have decided to take
and stand on the precedent of Kennedy vs. Bremerton and Carlson vs. Macon, and force
religion down the throats and purposefully actively entangle themselves in religion
using public dollars.
There's no other way to put it.
If that's not a violation of the establishment clause
of the First Amendment, I don't know what is.
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In fact, I side of course with Sotomayor, there is no clearer
violation of the Establishment Clause than that.
The First Amendment's Establishment Clause prohibits the government from making any law respecting an establishment of religion.
Right? It prohibits government actions that unduly favor
one religion over another.
And the government can't establish an official religion.
Well, what are they doing here?
Listen, I'm a 10 Commandment guy.
I'm a Judeo-Christian person.
You know, I have a Bible. It stops after the first part, but the first chapters, but I have a Bible,
but it's not about me and my personal beliefs and my ability to worship as I please in this country.
But I shouldn't, if I don't practice that religion or I practice no religion, I shouldn't walk into
a school and see the Ten Commandments. We already had Supreme Court precedent about the 10 commandments being established
in a public square, right?
And the use of it.
It's okay to me, it's not okay to somebody who's Muslim,
who's Hindu, who's Baha'i, fill in the blank
or no religion at all, or agnostic, or atheist,
and they shouldn't have that, or their children shouldn't have that shoved down their throat.
Pardon me, by the United States government or any state. In the Carson versus Bacon case, which was also a 63 decision, these were like a week apart, you know, they gang up on us as a Supreme Court, they shove down our throat in two big helpings, these
cases destroying the wall between church and state. And we said at the time, uh-oh,
we had a more elaborate legal analysis than that, but it was uh-oh. Carlson
Carlson versus Macon was a case in which Maine was using public dollars or people
were, religious families were trying to force Maine
to use public dollars to supply
and provide religious instruction in rural areas
where there was no public high school.
So where there was no public high school,
they had to like get on a bus and go somewhere
or they had to do home instruction.
And there was, oh, a parochial school nearby,
a Christian school, Catholic school, fill in the blank school nearby. They wanted the state to pay home instruction. And there was, oh, a parochial school nearby, a Christian school,
Catholic school, fill in the blank school nearby. They wanted the state to pay for that. Well,
that's our education of choice. Well, if it's your education of choice, you should go do home
instruction or go figure out a way to pay for it. The state shouldn't pay for your religious
exercise. But not to that six to three majority of the United States Supreme Court. And they
basically said, bye-bye, James Madison, bye-bye establishment clause and founding of religion
and forcing religion into the public square and into education in particular, because
we're going to force Maine to pay for Christian studies in rural areas. And we thought that
was breathtaking.
And then the sucker punch to the solar plexus came in with the Kennedy versus
Bremerton decision six or seven days later. And then we saw the new change landscape and
all the Christian nationalists in this country who I am not against, not against any body's
particular religion. You want to live your gospel, whatever it is,
more power to you.
Just don't do it in a way that makes me feel bad about me,
my personal choices about religion one way or the other,
or my children.
And that's where we're at.
So I wanted to kind of do like a little X-ray exam,
like how did we get here with Louisiana
and other states that are going to be coming
with a long line of precedent about the Ten Commandments, by the way, about the Ten Commandments,
which prior Supreme Court precedent would have barred from being installed in public schools,
but not under this right-wing majority. And every time, again, I'm going to leave you with this,
I'm going to give you a special decoder ring. Every time the United States Supreme Court
says history and tradition,
we need to look to history, tradition.
We're not gonna establish a judge made test,
which is what was paid to do as judges.
We're gonna look to history, we're gonna become historians.
We're gonna be Mr. Peabody in the way back machine
and go back to our version of history,
our distorted version of history without any context, completely
unmoored, untethered, without recognition of other people in that society that were
second, third, and fourth class citizens, including half the society in the form of
women.
Well, ignore all that.
How did they treat religion?
What would they have done with the Ten Commandments?
Who cares?
What do I care what some old timey guy,
or yeah, it would be a guy,
old timey white guy in 1800s
would think about the Ten Commandments?
What about gun control?
I'm sure he couldn't fathom, you know,
driverless cars running around China
and people being able to have military grade weapons
in their backyard.
I thought when I was in law school,
and they're one of the reasons I went into this profession,
is that the constitution as I was taught
was a living breathing document,
whose precepts and principles guide us,
but evolve with time based on the mores
of our particular culture.
I thought that was the document,
not this brittle, rigid owner's manual.
It's not an owner's manual.
That's the problem with the United States Supreme Court.
The United States Constitution,
it's not an owner's manual, right?
It's not like, oh, here we go,
carburetor gets connected and then what do we do?
You can't run a car from it.
It's precepts, it's principles, it's guiding principles. There's
some requirements and restrictions and there's the way that the federal government is arranged
and its relationship with the people and its relationship with the states. Yeah, sure,
that's all there, but it's supposed to be interpreted appropriately through the United
States Supreme Court. I mean, the United States Supreme Court isn't, didn't even have those
interpretive powers under the very constitution that it's interpreting.
Let me repeat that.
The United States Constitution does not have,
by way of the Constitution itself,
the powers to interpret the Constitution.
It came from a series of interpretations
of the Constitution by judges like Chief Justice Marshall
by judges like Chief Justice Marshall in 1807,
and Marbury versus Madison. If we didn't have a case called Marbury versus Madison,
there would be no modern Supreme Court.
Isn't that ironic?
The interpretation of the then relatively young
10, 20 year old document laid the foundation
for a Supreme Court to make its decisions because it's
not in the literal text of the Constitution. That should be a head-exploder for those that are
originalists and textualists because their own position, their own function is not in the literal
text of the constitution.
Try that on for size.
We'll continue to follow everything related
to the United States Constitution
and this United States Supreme Court
right here on the Midas Touch Network and on Legal AF.
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So until my next hot take, until my next Legal AF,
this is Michael Popok reporting.
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