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On the proliferation of Ten Commandments signs

Richard Wackrow | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 5 months AGO
by Richard Wackrow
| August 22, 2014 1:33 PM

When I was a newspaper editor in Texas, we had a policy of not reporting phony bomb threats because it would bring more public nuisances and other nutcases out of the woodwork. I am hoping that was the thinking behind local newspapers’ not covering the Aug. 16 dedication of Philip Klevmoen’s God’s Ten Commandments Park in Columbia Heights.

While there were advance stories, my Google search did not yield coverage of the actual event by local newspapers. It was to be kicked off by a photo op of Matthew Murray carrying a 10-foot cross from Half Moon Road through Columbia Falls to the park.

In addition, according to a story in the July 16 Hungry Horse News, “[Klevmoen] said he’s had plenty of help from local businesses — Brian Peterson made the crosses, LHC Inc. provided a discount on concrete, and Midway Rental, Bighorn Development and Mel Sheeran all helped.”

I feel lucky that my routine travels do not take me past that park. Other folks, however, are not so blessed. The overwhelming majority of letters to the editor and Web-page comments about the park that I have read have been written by Christians, who characterize the park as a garish monstrosity that blocks their view of God’s creation to the point of mocking their faith.

Apparently these comments are written by folks who regard their belief in God and the comfort and fellowship it provides them as a personal matter, rather than something that has to be shoved in other people’s faces. Good for them.

This whole issue would be comical except for the fact that this park and the proliferation of Ten Commandments signs around the county create a tribal in-group/out-group mentality and an environment of fear for non-Christians.

For example, when an issue such as church-state separation is raised in the local media, supporters of this basic American concept (both religious and non-religious) tend to post anonymous comments on the newspapers’ Web pages rather than signed letters to the editor, so they don’t suffer discrimination by, or other grief from, co-workers, neighbors or classmates. On the other hand, Christianists tend to write letters to the editor just to flaunt their faith.

With the November elections coming up, those who are concerned by this state of affairs might want to ask the candidates their opinions about the park, how it and the Ten Commandment signs make a laughing stock of Flathead County to passers-through, and whether this is a “Christian county” or one that is open and welcoming to everyone.

Richard E. Wackrow, of Polebridge and Whitefish, is the administrator of the Flathead Area Secular Humanist Association.

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ARTICLES BY RICHARD WACKROW

May 5, 2014 10:09 a.m.

Supreme Court ruling supports theocracy in America

On May 5, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that prayers that open town council meetings do not violate the Constitution even if they routinely stress Christianity (Town of Greece v. Galloway), thus overturning a 2012 federal appeals court ruling upholding the separation of church and state.

May 4, 2015 8 a.m.

National day of reason celebration

In 1952, during the McCarthy era, the U.S. Congress established the National Day of Prayer. According to the statute signed by President Harry S. Truman, “The President shall issue each year a proclamation designating the first Thursday in May as a National Day of Prayer on which the people of the United States may turn to God in prayer and meditation at churches, in groups, and as individuals.”

August 22, 2014 1:33 p.m.

On the proliferation of Ten Commandments signs

When I was a newspaper editor in Texas, we had a policy of not reporting phony bomb threats because it would bring more public nuisances and other nutcases out of the woodwork. I am hoping that was the thinking behind local newspapers’ not covering the Aug. 16 dedication of Philip Klevmoen’s God’s Ten Commandments Park in Columbia Heights.