God Bless Judge Roy Moore!
by Maj. Gen. William A. Flatt
All I will say is that there are still a few good men and women in public service throughout this nation. Justice Roy Moore is one. He knows the Supreme Law of the Universe as well as the Constitution, and upholds both. This stands in direct contrast to the nine monkeys in black robes who legalized The Crime Against Nature this past month when two sodomites were given the blessing of SCOTUS for their crime. But that's another issue...
God bless Judge Moore for standing in the gap against the NWO agenda for a godless Amerika! He exemplifies much of what is still good about the judiciary of the individual States. Check out his bio and you will see why.
You'll notice that the dirty devils attacking Judge Moore's position, credibility, dignity and personal character are the same people that attack the patriot movement... including the 'Scalawag Poverty Law Center', a partner with the ADL ('Anti-freedom Defamatory Lynchmob').
Personally, I relish the thought of Justice Moore ripping a new *@$$#% for Morris Dees, the infamous and un-Godly, anti-American, anti-patriot, anti-freedom, child molester enemy of We the People.
* (Legal brief)
It is said that 86% of Americans believe in God. Why there is such a mess about having "In God We Trust" on our money and having God in our nation's Pledge of Allegiance?!? Why don't we just tell the 14% to shut up and sit down????
And without further ado, the latest from the "Spin Zone":
Alabama Justice Refuses to Remove Ten Commandments Monument,
Will Appeal to Supreme Court
(The Associated Press - MONTGOMERY, Ala. Aug. 14)
Chief Justice Roy Moore said Thursday he will not remove a Ten Commandments monument from the Alabama Judicial Building as a federal court has ordered, but will appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court to stop any removal.
"I have no intention of removing the monument...," he said. "This I cannot and will not do."
Moore's decision came six days before the Aug. 20 deadline for the 5,300-pound monument to be removed from the judicial building rotunda, where it is in clear sight of visitors coming in the main entrance.
U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson of Montgomery, who ruled the monument violates the constitution's ban on government promotion of religion, had said fines of about $5,000 a day would have been imposed against the state if the monument were not removed.
Moore accused Thompson of a "callous disregard for the people of Alabama" and their tax dollars.
Moore made his announcement at the Judicial Building, where supporters cheered his stand.
He noted that Thompson had served notice of the monument removal order to the governor, attorney general and eight Supreme Court associated justices. This is an attempt "to intimidate these state officials," Moore said.
He said the "acknowledgement of almighty god" is the foundation of the country and its legal system and referred to Alabama's motto: "We Dare Defend Our Rights."
Moore said he would file his first pleading with the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday.
When elected chief justice three years ago, Moore was already known nationally as the "Ten Commandments judge" for his legal fight to keep a hand-carved Ten Commandments display posted on the wall of his courtroom in Gadsden, where he was a circuit judge.
In office as chief justice, he had the gray granite Ten Commandments monument moved into the judicial building in the middle of the night on July 31, 2001, without announcing the event to the public or to the news media. He did inform a Christian television ministry, which filmed the installation and used it on the TV program.
The monument contains two Ten Commandments tablets cut into the top of a large stone about the size of a washing machine. Along the sides are quotes from Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and other historical figures and documents concerning the influence of religion on American law.
Moore said he had the monument installed because he believes the Ten Commandments to be the moral foundation of American law.
In October 2001, the Southern Poverty Law Center, Americans United for Separation of Church and State and the American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit on behalf of three Alabama lawyers who said they often had business to attend to inside the judiciary building and were offended by the monument. After a weeklong trial, Thompson ruled last year that the monument was an unconstitutional endorsement of religion by the state.
Moore had testified during the trial that one reason he became interested in the public display of the Ten Commandments was because of what he called a decline of moral values in America, which he blamed on federal court rulings concerning prayer in school and other issues.
He also contended the federal judge had no authority to tell the state's chief justice to remove the monument.
Moore appealed Thompson's order, but a three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled unanimously against Moore, saying in part that his argument echoed state's rights claims of segregationists such as Alabama's Gov. George C. Wallace in the 1960s.
Moore has said he would appeal for a final ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court.
Several religious groups have scheduled a rally on the Capitol steps for Saturday to protest Thompson's decision. Organizers have said they expect thousands to come to Montgomery from across the country for the rally. Religious groups have also said Christians would kneel in prayer in front of the monument if there is an attempt by Thompson to have it removed.
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...And many others have offered to defend the monument using the power of the 2nd Amendment. ~W.A.F.