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Friday, January 28, 2011

More than a feeling, it could be a movement!

First Oklahoma passed a law outlawing sharia law in the course of determining legal cases.  Judge Vicki Miles-Lagrange has put the brakes on implimentation, but it is on the books.  I mentioned Wyoming and their attempt to elevate the dialogue about sharia through legislation recently, now we can add South Carolina to the roster.  It appears there is a groundswell of activity regarding sharia and American law, and this is only a good thing.  Maybe we need to start a movement here in Oregon to get the same law passed.


From Human Events Jan 26 by W. Thomas Smith Jr.
Bill Aimed at Protecting S.C. From Foreign Law Introduced in Legislature

COLUMBIA, S.C.A legislative initiative aimed at preventing “a court or other enforcement authority” from enforcing foreign law in the Palmetto State was introduced today in both the S.C. House and Senate by Rep. Wendy Nanney (who drafted the bill) and Sen. Mike Fair respectively, who say the bill will preempt violations of a person’s constitutional rights resulting from the application of foreign law.

Legislators and other proponents of the bill say America has unique values of liberty which do not exist in foreign legal systems. Yet foreign laws are increasingly finding their way into U.S. court cases, particularly in the area of family law, involving divorce and child custody where, for instance, Islamic Shariah Law has been invoked in several U.S. states.
According to Christopher Holton with the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Security Policy (CSP), “There are numerous examples in dozens of states in which parties to such a dispute attempted to invoke Shariah.”


David Yersushalmi, general counsel to the CSP, argues it’s not just “patently bad foreign laws [creeping into our court systems],” it’s that once in the system, the state’s police power would be used to “enforce laws that could never pass federal or state constitutional muster.”

Exactly right.

Fair agrees, which is why he introduced the bill in the Senate.

Read it all

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