Like Muslims pushing for sharia law in the U.S., the courts seem to want to have it both ways when it suits them, via Islam: Political or Religious? | Blog – American Freedom Law Center.
Yesterday, AFLC filed a notice of appeal in
the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in response
to the Trademark Trial & Appeal Board’s (TTAB) affirmance of the
denial of the “Stop Islamisation of America” or “SIOA” trademark
application, which was sought by anti-sharia advocates Pamela Geller and Robert Spencer and
their organization, the Freedom Defense Initiative (FDI). In a
nutshell, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) rejected
the application, ruling that the trademark disparaged Muslims and
linked them to terrorism. (You can read the whole story here.)
The Federal Circuit Court of Appeals is a
highly-specialized federal court in Washington, D.C., that was
established to hear, among others, patent/trademark appeals. At this
point, it is difficult to determine how the Federal Circuit will treat
this case. Generally, the TTAB, which is the last administrative appeal
at the USPTO, rubber stamps the director, but in our case, the briefs
and oral argument were so one-sided in our favor that there was hope for
a favorable ruling. However, that did not happen, but it was no
surprise: most judges are quite hostile when these types of cases are
argued. Moreover, and perhaps surprisingly, the most hostile judges are
typically Republican appointees. For example, in AFLC’s victories in the
lower federal courts in New York and Detroit, the judges were liberal
appointees, and they ruled on the side of granting First Amendment
protection to our clients’ speech. In this case, given the law at work,
it should be an easy victory for our clients. But, we shall wait and
see.
To explain further, in one case where AFLC
had won in the trial court after a full evidentiary hearing at which
the transit authority admitted during cross examination that
our clients’ advertisement did not convey an impermissible “political”
message, a three-judge panel in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit comprised of 2/3 George W. Bush appointees reversed, holding
that the advertisement, “Fatwa on your head? Leaving Islam? Contact www.refugefromislam.com,” was not a permissible “religious” ad but, instead, was impermissibly “political”
(the rules were meant to preclude political campaign ads from
Detroit/Dearborn buses — not what we call in the law “political speech,”
which of course is the most protected of all speech under the First
Amendment) because “Fatwa” and sharia are political not religious matters. It was a remarkable and somewhat startling admission.
So, in the Sixth Circuit, sharia is now
political, and to the USPTO, it is religious. In sum, the federal courts
are a laboratory of the studied application of incoherence where words
carry no meaning but are used arbitrarily to protect the politically
correct mantra that Muslims and Islam constitute a special class that
stands above criticism that is otherwise protected speech under the
First Amendment. In short, blasphemy laws are alive and well—we just
don’t want to admit it.
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