Oh, the verbiage is not yours.
Ok, then why not quote the source when you used the verbiage?
Are you simply a parrot of an atheist group?
There was no reason to address the core issue, if the case could be dismissed and avoided on technical issues.
This is very common.
They are saying in effect, bring back the case when you have done everything properly to the point when it cannot be dismissed on a technical basis.
In this way, by dismissing it on technical grounds, if a similar case is brought forth that is free of technical issues, no one can argue their actual juducial decision was technically influenced. The ruling was not judicial in the classic sense of the issue, but on the merit of the case technically, and it should not be evaluated if the technical grounds are not present. The Supreme Court has plenty to do with properly and technically grounded appeals.
That the group or individuals that sponsored the case to begin with did not get the ruling they wanted, and call it "ducking the case", means they don't completely understand the system, the law, and the need for every single technical ground to be covered before the issues at the heart of the case can be addressed.
The court is telling those who want to really address the issue of church and state to bring them something clean, not muddled with other issues of who is actually filing a suit, or qualified to file a suit.
Bottom line, they did the right thing, as you rarely see a court with both conservatives and liberals agree without dissent.
Your side lost, they are pissed, so what else is new?
Quote from axeman:
The word "duck" is not mine. Im using the american atheists
quoted verbiage in case you didnt notice.
My position is that the CORE issue was NOT addressed. Period.
There was NO ruling on the separation of church and state issue
which is what this case is REALLY all about. Not Newdows
custody issues.
Wether or not there was some conspiracy by the supreme court
to avoid the issue on purpose is a different matter.
peace
axeman