A moment of silence, please
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Mark D. Bixby
I’m disappointed that Mayor Cathy Green’s first official act
(reinstating the invocation) was one of exclusion rather than
inclusion.
Green was quoted as saying that if anybody is bothered by an
invocation, then the solution is for that person to leave the council
chambers until the invocation has concluded. Well, that sounds more
like a problem than a solution to me.
The last thing that City Hall should ever do is exclude people
from participating in any facet of local government simply because
they pray to the wrong god or to no god at all.
Supposedly the invocation will be delivered by representatives of
various faiths. But will any Buddhists be included? Wiccans?
Tongvans? Zoroastrians? Baha’is? Hindus? Will there be an occasional
moment of silence to include the atheist point of view? Or will we
only hear from representatives of the most common Judeo-Christian
religions in keeping with the outdated stereotype of a homogenous
Orange County? Only time will tell.
Invocation proponents are fond of citing the religious roots of
our country’s founders. But they always neglect to mention that many
of those founders fled their homelands because their governments had
deemed certain religions to be acceptable and others to be
unacceptable.
By choosing who gets to deliver the reinstated invocation, this
city will be going down the road of implicitly deciding which
religions are the acceptable religions.
The July 2003 issue of Western City Magazine published by the
League of California Cities has a good article about some of the
legal pitfalls that cities can experience when they get involved with
invocations. The court case of Rubin vs. City of Burbank makes it
clear that sectarian invocations are not permitted.
Furthermore, potential mine fields await in the areas of
previewing invocation content and what to do if an invocation speaker
gives a sectarian speech anyway in violation of the rules. If there
is anybody on the City Council who has not read this article, I
strongly recommend that they do so.
The old system of an official moment of silence adroitly avoided
all of those legal issues. Nobody was advised to exclude themselves
from the council chambers. Anybody in need of divine guidance was
free to pray to the god or gods of their choosing. Any resident
wanting to give a verbal invocation was free to do so during public
comments. In short, everybody won.
I sincerely hope that in the future more council members will
eventually see the wisdom in the “moment of silence” approach.
* MARK D. BIXBY is a Huntington Beach resident. To contribute to
“Sounding Off” e-mail us at hbindy@ latimes.com or fax us at (714)
965-7174.
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