The decedants' wishes can be honored on their tombstones, privately. There is no reason to run afoul of the First Amendment here except to appease people who might complain.
It is argueable that a cross as a traditional memorial, such as is already in use in the United States is going to run afoul of the 1st amendment in the courts. There is every possibility that an attempt to take down the cross would result in it getting passed without any problems.
Only if you count the lunatics who rammed the planes into the buildings in the first place.
The statistical odds of the plurality of the victims not being nominally Christian is rather low. The statistical odds that none of the victims were blatantly Christian is just about zero.
A "pluralistic" memorial of religious symbols naturally excludes atheists and non-religious people, genius.
No it doesn't. If Atheists wish to put up the atom from American Atheists, the rational lightning bolt, the humanist icon or any other atheist symbol in use (or hell make up their own) then fine - let them. Atheists would should be more than free to include their own symbology in this memorial.
you seriously suggesting that the government ask the families of everyone who died what their religion was so that they can tack on the grave stone?
The government should simply make it public that they wish to respect the preferences of the dead and anyone who beleives their relative is not being so respected should contact such and such. Then when people ask for a Wiccan circle, a Jewish star, or whatever it can be included - path of least resistance here.
That seems like an awful lot of work compared to my idea for a completely secular memorial.
Your idea will most likely result in massive public outcry, possible lawsuits, and congressional grandstanding. In terms of manhours I fail to see how the highly popular WTC cross is going to take fewer manhours to be rid of than the 10 commandments in Alabama.
You'll have a giant cross for the Christians, uh ... something for Jews and, um, something else for Muslims and maybe a snake thing for Hindi ... yeah, this is working out really well. So much classier than a simple wall with their names on it.
As I said I'm perfectly happy with a simple wall, if you can get it built without wasting lots of time and money upsetting people.
If people want individual attention after their deaths, they can get a fancy tombstone. Existing memorials in the Capitol seem to be just fine without religious symbols for everyone.
Existing memorials in the Capitol already use religious symbology, and ridiciously blatant symbology at that. If you want to follow that precedent then keeping the cross alone would be no problem (see that Argonne Cross for an example).
Here's what isn't a religious symbol: a big wall with an engraving of the New York City horizon and the names of those who died.
Nope. You just tresspassed on sacred Yanomani beliefs.
Is that indeed what the dead wanted?
I recall reading such.
How nice of them to pass that along to you. Pity they couldn't inform anyone else and spare us still living the controversy.
I'm following legal precedent which treats the statements of legal heirs as representative of the wishes of the dead.
A gross generalization if there ever was one.
The death toll was large enough that it is stasticly inconceivable that such people weren't victims. On balance it would be exceedingly likely that most of the victims were Christians of some degree.
It matters a great deal. It's tasteless to turn a memorial to a large and diverse group of victims on a secular site into a religious event. This isn't like the concentration camp memorials, where religion (among other things) determined who was victimized and who was not. What matters about the WTC victims is that they were in the buildings that were targeted for destruction, not that they were x% Christian, y% Jewish, z% Other.
Why? If the victims, as represented by their heirs, want this or don't mind, what is the problem? What matters to me is making the public and people happy without violating the constitution. If that can be done, then the plan works.
It is possible that the Lemon test could prevent the creation of a religious (even pluralistically so) memorial, depending on how it was constructed.
Exceedingly unlikely given the current composition of the SCOTUS. I'd lay odds that the cross would pass judicial muster without even making it plural.
It would be much easier to design a secular memorial than to design a religious one that can pass Lemon.
Don't kid yourself.
Van Orden v. Perry shows quite well what pluralizing can do. Even if a more plural monument, one inclusive of atheists and humanists, has bigger problems do recall that the court has shifted rightward and Breyer's vote is not required.
The number of manhours it took to get rid of Moore's little monument easily dwarfs the number it takes to build a plural monument; and that was for a not particularly inspiring or popular monument.
Very funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes.