Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Capitol clutter

Why not just keep the grounds clean?

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IT’S ALL set now , literally etched in stone and ready to join the garden of the gods now taking the place of the lush law n that once ran undisturbe­d down the Arkansas state Capitol’s hillside till it reached the curb. But that idyllic scene has disappeare­d over the years as one monumental mistake after another has obscured the view. You name the god and a graven image thereof may soon appear in his/ her/ its honor in this increasing­ly crowded tableau.

Next in the waiting line may be Baphomet, a goatlike satanic figure with wings. For once the constituti­onal separation of church and state is breached, all gods are created equal when it comes to vying for a place on our state Capitol’s fast disappeari­ng lawn. There’s now a proposal— from the Saline Atheist & Skeptic Society— to build still another structure on the Capitol grounds: a brick wall, that would hide such monuments from public view. Which might be the decent thing to do if it didn’t involve building still another structure on the grounds to hide earlier ones. So does one folly succeed and exceed another.

Now a 6- foot- tall stone monument etched with the Ten Commandmen­ts is to be installed on the state Capitol ’ s grounds next month, weather permitting. For the rain has been unrelentin­g of late. Two years of debate on the appropriat­eness of this replica of the Ten Commandmen­ts have come and gone since The Hon. Jason Rapert, that font of bad ideas, came up with his proposal to install a showy replica of the Big Ten as a kind of roadside attraction.

Has there ever been so much ado about a question that could have been resolved by just leaving beautiful enough alone? At latest count, some 700 comments have been phoned in by concerned citizens and 600 have arrived by snail mail. Having stood aside while the right to free speech was threatened by campus mobs calling themselves student protesters, the American Civil Liberties Union has been heard from, too. It’s threatenin­g to sue if the monument to the Ten Commandmen­ts goes up in this state. Talk about selective outrage.

A group styling itself the American Heritage and History Foundation says it has raised the money to pay for building this memorial to the Ten Commandmen­ts, so often observed only in the breach, and pay for laying a foundation for the 6,000- pound monument. Oh, yes, there are other impediment­s to erecting this monument on what may be the best known piece of real property We the People of Arkansas own. Consider the First Amendment to the Constituti­on of the United States, which unequivoca­lly states: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishm­ent of religion, or prohibitin­g the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.” That’s right: Even a law about an exercise of religion or forbidding its expression is constituti­onally dubious. Talk about a Keep off the Grass sign, this one is spelled out in no uncertain terms in the very first Amendment.

WHAT, the Hon. Jason Rapert worry? He’s the state senator from metropolit­an Bigelow who defends placing this monument to the Ten Commandmen­ts on the Capitol grounds not as an act of piety but as one motivated by purely historical reasons. After all, the U. S. Supreme Court has an engraving of the Ten Commandmen­ts on its building and elsewhere within it. Talk about the triumph of civil religion over the real thing, Senator Rapert’s rationaliz­ations sum it up. This is what comes of trying to downgrade an ac t of religious devotion to only an historical footnote.

This controvers­y is bound to be continued as other people with the very best of intentions produce the very worst of results. It was a German named Bismarck who said God protects fools, drunkards and the United States of America— but why tempt Him?

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