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The Bell Curve:

A national motto, and the royal ‘we’

November 18, 2009|By Joseph N. Bell

If persistence and determination are the prime earmarks of statesmanship, we should lend Councilwoman Wendy Leece to the U.S. government to take on the Taliban in Afghanistan. Or put her on the trail of Osama bin Laden. Instead, Leece will be working the home front with “In God We Trust” marking the City Hall in Costa Mesa, where the motto will reside after a unanimous vote of the City Council (Where, oh where, were you, Katrina Foley?).

All of this took place Tuesday when Leece requested permission to introduce God to the Council Chambers. There were emotional speeches from the audience on both sides, from contesting display of the motto as a reincarnation of McCarthyism to the remembrances of a combat veteran from World War II. But the vote — as one speaker said — was a foregone conclusion.

There is some history and there are two voices that, I would suggest, Leece hasn’t consulted and that might have offered more clarity to the debate. The voices come from President Theodore Roosevelt and the U.S. Supreme Court. The history tells us that “In God We Trust“ first appeared on a 2-cent coin in 1864, put there by the order of the secretary of the Treasury — and later by Congress — in response to appeals from Christians suffering the agonies of the Civil War.

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Use of the motto came and went several times until it bumped into President Roosevelt, who wrote in 1907: “My own feeling in the matter is due to my very firm conviction that to put such a motto on coins, or to use it in any kindred manner, not only does no good but does positive harm, and is in effect irreverence, which comes dangerously close to sacrilege. It seems to me eminently unwise to cheapen such a motto by use on coins, just as it would be to cheapen it by use on postage stamps or in advertisements.”

The issue didn’t surface again until 1955 when any suggestion to the left of Henry Ford was regarded as communism, and embracing God on our coinage, and, a year later, as the national motto of the United States, was regarded as a Cold War weapon against the Commies.

The Supreme Court took a dimmer view of all this with a kind of legal pat on the head for critics who contended that the motto’s placement on money constitutes the establishment of a religion or a church by the government and thus violates the establishment clause of the 1st Amendment.

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