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With The Eyes Of The World On The Ukraine, The Supreme Court Just Made A Big Announcement Concerning The Christian Flag Court Case

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It was recently reported that the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments over whether a Christian flag should be allowed to fly outside of Boston’s City Hall.

The city of Boston claims that allowing a Christian flag to fly on a flagpole often used by community groups is a government endorsement of religion.

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Lawyers for Harold Shurtleff, whose 2017 request to fly a Christian flag was denied, cited that in the 12 years before his request, not one of the 284 proposed events was denied by the city.

“‘The flagpole that stands prominently at the city’s seat of government is the means by which the city communicates its own messages,’ Boston’s lawyers told the Supreme Court. The city uses it as a bully pulpit and has not turned it over ‘to private parties as a forum to pronounce their own messages,’” the outlet reported.

Shockingly enough, the American Civil Liberties Union has come out against banning the flag.

“When the government opens its public property for private speakers, it has to treat everybody equally,” said David Cole, ACLU national legal director. “This case is really about private citizens’ access to government property to express themselves. And that access is critical to our ability to speak to each other, to express our views and the like.”

The Anti-Defamation League, however, sided with the city.

“The value to such groups of the ‘photo op’ of a Nazi flag, the Confederate flag, or some other white supremacist banner flying over Boston City Hall should not be underestimated,” the group said.

Shurtleff made his request as part of Camp Constitution, which he founded and which has as part of its mission “to enhance understanding of the country’s Judeo-Christian heritage.”

The flag he wants to fly is a cross in a blue square on a white field.

“It’s a public access flagpole,” Shurtleff told ABC.

“It’s kind of ludicrous to think flying a flag on a flagpole for maybe an hour or two will somehow get people to think, ‘Oh my goodness, look at the city of Boston now endorsing the Protestant or the Christian faith.”

“The city, for its own speech, does not want to get into the issue of religion,” said attorney Doug Hallward-Driemeier, who is arguing the case for Boston.

“It’s said that it didn’t want to fly a flag that was offered as ‘the Christian flag,’ because that wasn’t the message that the city itself wanted to communicate.”

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