I think Rick misreads Justice Breyer's comments.  He was playing  Michael, 
saying, tongue-in-cheek, that it would be "fantastical" that there  would be 
this open exchange between opposing views on a law school  campus.  Michael 
was resisting agreeing that such an exchange was  likely or good, and so 
Breyer needed to bring him back to another view  of the universe to get 
Michael to answer the question he wanted  answered.  Careful reading of the 
transcript does not support Rick's  interpretation.
 
 I think a law school has a compelling interest in having an  all-comers 
policy, because it encourages lawyers to see all sides of every  issue, 
regardless of their existing predispositions, which is crucial to  becoming a 
good 
lawyer, no?  
 
In any event, this case is not about whether or not this group can protect  
its associational rights to exclude certain believers and actors.  It is  
about whether a public university law school must provide certain meeting  
rooms and certain bulletin boards and money to a group that insists on  
exclusionary practices among its voting membership and leadership.  There  are 
no 
rules that forbid the group from meeting or holding the beliefs it  holds.  
It is an attempt to move Rosenberger beyond its facts.  I  thought 
Rosenberger was wrongly decided, but cleverly argued.  I think  the Court needs 
to 
draw the line on this foolhardy doctrine before schools  are required to have 
to pay for all worship services, which surely is not  required by the First 
Amendment.  Only Chief Justice Roberts and  Justice Alito made any real 
effort to defend CLS's position, which seems to  me to bode well for Martinez.  
But I would not have thought it possible  that a majority of the Supreme 
Court today would agree that white crosses  are the standard marker for our 
diverse array of soldiers, so as usual, it will  be interesting to see what 
happens.
 
Marci
 
 
In a message dated 5/10/2010 4:41:46 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
icl...@law.gwu.edu writes:

This  concern about associations getting taken over by hostile forces is 
completely  ungrounded -- it never happens, and for an obvious reason.  These 
kinds  of fora are cooperation games -- no group is ever a majority (even 
the  Democratic law students at a liberal law school have a relatively small 
number  of active members), and every group is vulnerable to takeover.  But  
takeover would invite tit-for-tat counter-takeover.  CLS members could  
intrude on the GLBT group, and vice versa.  Everyone knows this, so all  of the 
incentives are lined up in ways that make this extremely unlikely to  occur. 
 (Yes, if the KKK had a campus group, enraged others might try to  "invade 
and destroy" the association, but that example is sui generis, just  like 
the Bob Jones case.)

If CLS had not litigated this, and had filed  by-laws with Hastings LS that 
said CLS was open to all comers, there is no  reason to expect that those 
who reject orthodox Christianity would try to  join.  Someone just has to 
show forbearance -- either the school by  allowing discrimination based on 
beliefs (which could be a pretext for other  kinds of discrimination), or the 
groups by being open to "all comers"  (confident that the process of selecting 
and joining would bring them no  hostile members).   In a law school, there 
is certainly a rational  basis for coming down on the side of 
non-exclusivity as a condition of access  to the forum and its privileges  -- 
among other 
things, all-comers  increases the likelihood of dynamic exchange of views, 
something a law school  may legitimately value.  CLS is not a church, and 
neither is Outlaw, and  yet (if Hastings prevails) both will wind up with 
(only) the members  sympathetic to their respective purposes.


Ira C. Lupu
F.  Elwood & Eleanor Davis Professor of Law
George Washington University  Law School
2000 H St., NW 
Washington, DC 20052
(202)994-7053
My  SSRN papers are  here:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=181272#reg


----  Original message ----
>Date: Mon, 10 May 2010 11:47:00 -0700  (PDT)
>From: religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu (on behalf of Rick  Duncan 
<nebraskalawp...@yahoo.com>)
>Subject: RE: Factual  Clarification re CLS  
>To: Law & Religion issues for Law  Academics <religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu>
>
>    Interestingly, Hastings takes the position that the  
>    policy it is enforcing against the CLS is not a       
>   sexual orientation policy, but an "all comers"   
>   policy, a policy that forbids any  group from         
>    discriminating against any person who wishes to be a 
>    member. Under this policy, an NAACP student group     
>   would have to admit racists as voting members and   
>   even leaders of the group, and the Young  Republicans 
>   would have to allow democrats to be voting  members   
>   and leaders.        
>         
>   I think the school took this tack to  avoid the       
>   viewpoint  discrimination argument, but may have      
>    substituted an even greater problem for the one it    
>   seeks to avoid.              
>                   
>   The school may even lose Justice Breyer, who in the   
>   oral argument referred to the policy as     
>   "fantastical"   and as creating a silly kind of forum 
>   in which "everyone  gets together in a nice            
>   discussion group and hugs each other."     
>           
>   That led Mike McConnell to conclude that  the policy  
>   does not even provide a rational basis  for excluding 
>   a student group from a forum with the  stated purpose 
>   of creating a diverse marketplace of  ideas. As Mike  
>   put it, the all comers policy does  not even slightly 
>   advance the stated purpose of the  forum, and indeed  
>   is destructive of that purpose by  prohibiting groups 
>   from having a membership policy based  upon its       
>   organizing principles  and beliefs.                 
>                   
>   Rick Duncan              
>   Welpton Professor of  Law                     
>   University of Nebraska  College of Law                 
>   Lincoln, NE 68583-0902            
>                      
>   "And  against the constitution I have never raised a  
>    storm,It's the scoundrels who've corrupted it that I 
>   want  to reform" --Dick Gaughan (from the song,        
>   Thomas Muir of Huntershill)          
>________________



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