ACLU Targets War Memorial

Mojave Desert Cross, Don't Tear Me Down!

Tony Jingo
Article originally published on AmericanAngle with correlating images and video.

"Any nation that does not honor its heroes will not long endure"- Attributed to, Abraham Lincoln

In 1934, the VFW erected a wooden cross in the Mojave Desert as a memorial to their fallen brethren. The wooden cross was later converted to white painted metal and stands 8-feet tall. The current version was constructed and maintained by Henry Sandoz. Mr. Sandoz takes care of the area in memory of his late friend, J. Riley Bembry, who helped construct the original cross.

In 1994, the VFW donated the land to the government for the Mojave Land Preserve. The preserve encompasses 1.6 million acres of the Mojave Desert in California and falls under the auspices of the National Park Service (NPS)

In 1999, the ACLU demanded the Mojave Cross be removed because its display on federal land violated the Constitution's establishment clause. The memorial received widespread support and rankled only a former NPS employee, Frank Buono.

In 2000, the NPS exchanged several letters with the ACLU in an attempt to save the memorial. The ACLU responded by threatening to go after individual park employees if the memorial was not torn down. The NPS relented and was bullied into compliance.

In December 2000, Rep. Jerry Lewis got involved and had an appropriations bill disallow the NPS from using government funds to dismantle the cross, which gave the memorial a well deserved reprieve.

In March 2001, the ACLU made good on its threats and filed their lawsuit. In December 2001, Lewis rallied again and successfully had the Mojave Cross declared a national memorial in honor of World War 1 veterans.

In 2002, U.S. District Court Judge Robert Timlin ruled in favor of the ACLU and ordered the cross removed, but he failed to set a deadline. The Justice Department slowly navigated the murky waters of the courts decision and the Congressional ruling that designated the Mojave Cross a World War 1 national memorial.

During the legal maneuvering, the Justice Department had the cross covered by a plastic tarp. Patriots and Defenders of Freedom did not stand for that and removed the covering.

Henry and Wanda Sandoz landowners in the confines of the Preserve and caretakers of the Memorial Cross donated five acres of their own property to the NPS. This donation enabled the one-acre encompassing the Mojave Cross to bereturned back to the VFW.

The ACLU did not relent and argued that the land transfer was unconstitutional, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed. The Bush administration appealed that decision and asserted that the land transfer was "an eminently sensible and constitutionally permissible way of resolving any establishment clause problem."

In February 2009, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the Mojave Cross case (now known as Salazar vs. Bruno). The Mojave Cross, a designated World War 1 memorial is now covered by a plywood box awaiting that decision.

The transfer of the federal land back to private ownership and in the hands of our defenders of Freedom not only enriches the government but also satisfies any "establishment clause" issues.

The devil is in the details, the ACLU does not care about civil liberties. They simply wish to target and attack sacred and traditional American symbols to further a radical agenda. They have the money, ergo the power to wield their ugly influence.

"It is bad enough to say that the veterans' memorial is unconstitutional, but it is outrageous to say that the government cannot give the monument back to the people who spilled their blood and put it there in the first place."- Kelly Shackelford, chief counsel of Liberty Legal Institute and attorney for the veterans groups.

An ACLU victory will put other veterans memorials in the cross hairs. Folks, do not allow this

Published by Tony Jingo

An American Patriot with an independent view on today's topics. Jingo (noun) One who vociferously supports one's country  View profile

  • In 1934, the VFW erected a wooden cross in the Mojave Desert as a memorial to their fallen brethren.
  • In 1994 the VFW donated the land to the government.
  • In 1999, the ACLU demanded the Mojave Cross be removed
Henry and Wanda Sandoz landowners in the Preserve donated five acres of their own property to the NPS. This donation enabled the one-acre encompassing the Mojave Cross to be returned back to the VFW.

37 Comments

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  • Darrell3/11/2012

    Don't let the Federal Gov. mess with our religious rights. Obama do something right for a change. Save the Cross!!

  • Randy Inman10/27/2009

    Angry Communist Loving Uglies=ACLU

  • Kristie Leong M.D.8/4/2009

    Sounds pretty typical of the ACLU. Fine job, as always, Tony. :-)

  • Tony Vega8/3/2009

    AC, consistently truncated this article. I went back and included the rest of it..but I see my last pithy line was again left out in the published piece. More important than my bloviating was the resources that AC left out and they are:
    www.donttearmedown.com, http://www.nps.gov/archive/moja/adminhist/adhi6.htm, http://www.saveourmemorials.com/

  • Tony Vega8/3/2009

    Thanks for the comments and support folks. I noticed among the comments there is an overwhelming amount of support for the memorial, well accept for one dude. Thanks for serving him his lunch, VOR ;-) The comments here give me hope that we are still able to think outside of the partisan box.

  • Angela - Upon Request8/3/2009

    Thanks for the info. This is new to me... and saddening.

  • Roberta Baxter8/3/2009

    I think the thought of painting a cross on the covered cross is a great idea for someone to do.If I lived close, I would be taking a flash light and doing just that. TX for this well documented info.

  • K. Karl8/3/2009

    I cannot say what I am thinking (it's just not professional). I will shout it and send emails. Another great, well researched piece, Tony!

  • Angel Vee8/3/2009

    Very well reported here Tony!

  • BeelineBuzz8/2/2009

    Well reported, and very well stated point of view. Too bad everyone doesn't share it.

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