| by Cal Thomas
FOLLOWING THE Columbine High School shootings, many people wondered
why the clues given by Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold were not acted on
and why someone didn't try to redirect their anger. Not only did the
young men frequently speak of their hate, Harris recorded it on his
personal Web page.
Last week I wrote about a Calvert County, Maryland, high school
senior who walked out of commencement when the audience spontaneously
began reciting The Lord's Prayer. A graduating senior, Julie Schenk,
had sought and was granted permission by the school principal to lead
an invocation. She knew that the courts have allowed student-initiated
prayer under certain conditions. The principal approved but later
withdrew permission when another student, Nick Becker, brought the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) into the matter. A compromise
allowed for a "moment of reflection.''
When that moment arrived, audience-initiated prayer followed.
Becker walked out and was prevented from returning to the ceremony
because of a school rule that forbids reentry into assemblies. He
received his diploma later.
Becker is being portrayed in some quarters as a modern-day Thomas
Paine and a martyr to the First Amendment. But a visit to his Web page
reveals a disturbing anger.
Here's one of his little ditties. It's called "My Dad Can Go to
Hell.''
I'm gonna speak, I'm gonna yell
My f---ing dad can go to
hell,
You find it such a f---ing shock,
your mind's closed
with a master lock
Yeah I know it's pretty sick
it's a joke
you fascist pr--k
what would uncle Stevie think?
or all those
other sheltered dinks?
What a touching Father's Day sentiment.
Elsewhere on his Web page, Becker says that the notoriety he's
received since walking out of commencement is making him "bigger than
Jesus'' in whom he doesn't believe. He says: "I am not an atheist. I
definitely do not believe in a God who sits in the clouds and judges
us right or wrong and decides whether we receive eternal pleasure or
never-ending damnation. I have not ruled out the possibility of an
Alpha God who created the universe, a sort of living force behind the
Big Bang.''
Contrast this pattitude with that of Darrell Scott, the father of
Rachael Scott, who was one of those killed at Columbine. Testifying
May 27 before a House subcommittee, Scott read a poem he composed
following his daughter's murder:
Your laws ignore our deepest needs,
Your words are empty
air.
You've stripped away our heritage,
You've outlawed simple
prayer.
Now gunshots fill our classrooms.
And precious
children die,
You seek for answers everywhere,
And ask the
question, "why?''
You regulate restrictive laws, Through
legislative creed.
And yet you fail to understand,
That God is
what we need!
Compare Nick Becker's song lyric and Darrell Scott's poem and ask
yourself which attitude better promotes the general welfare of our
children and nation.
This isn't, and shouldn't be, about government imposing religious
faith (or non-faith) on anyone. It should be about the ability of
individuals, including students, to freely exercise their beliefs,
which was the purpose of the First Amendment as originally understood.
Congress would make no law establishing a national religion, so that
everyone would have the widest latitude to freely exercise whatever
faith they may or may not possess.
But in modern times, the government has determined that the public
square is to remain naked of religion. The results of this imposed
agnosticism are the things we deplore, such as school shootings, but
refuse to do anything about other than pass more laws that are rarely
enforced by the state or obeyed by the lawless.
So a single student can impose his will on 4,000 people in Calvert
County, Maryland. What about the rights of all the others? Why is God
the only idea banned from government schools, while the demons that
produce the beliefs of a Harris, a Klebold and a Becker are tolerated,
protected, even promoted? Does this make sense? Only to the clueless.
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