I don't know if the founders would have considered it fair if the will of the people was crushed. Imagine if you were dicator and changed the motto back, then you would be violating the democratic will of the people that the founder's intended would have significant influence on our government. Ignoring the fact that you would be a dictator and would have crushed it already.
The public was not consulted when the motto was changed to “In God we trust,” so I do not see why it is so important now.
Well, by those standards Mr. Palau, we've already violated it when putting the motto onto the money, so any repeal of that is probably good.
Representative Democracy not Direct Democracy, but the representatives represent the will of the people, and they passed it and the people made no issue of it so it was clearly in their will then, and now any appeal would be wrong because it would go against the will of the people to do so.
Even if the people didn’t know or care that the motto was changed their representatives would still have been acting out the will of the greater proportion of the people as the percentage of very religious Americans is higher than the percentage of Americans who are Atheists or of a non-Judeo-Christian-Islamic faith.
I don't know if the founders would have considered it fair if the will of the people was crushed.
That is seemingly the exact intention of the Founders, to empower a non-democratic branch of government to quash democratic, executive and legislative edicts anathema to individual rights. To protect from the "Tyranny of the Majority," as Burke put it.
Personally, given our legislature's track record, I'm happy our more overeager laws must occasionally retreat before a legal force they cannot trifle with.
To protect from the Tyranny of the Majority, which I was aware of the Founder's opinions on when writing that and still am, is not the same as not listening to the people when considering policies for the country, and the courts have held that putting "In God We Trust" on money is fully within the power of the legislature to require. No case has been brought that this violates individual rights but given the precedent of Zorach v. Clauson and the current composition of the court I expect it wouldn't even be considered.
I don't know if the founders would have considered it fair if the will of the people was crushed.
If the founders wouldn't have considered it fair for the courts to do their job, they would have given the courts a different job.
My question to you: Would the founders have considered it fair for majority rule to trump people's civil rights, or their protections under the Constitution, or for Congress to pass laws that have absolutely no Constitutional basis or, in cases similar to this, laws that flagrantly violate the Constitution fairly explicitly?
What I'm trying to say is that just as much as the founders believed the people could be wrong on morals, they also believed there was a place for the people's will in the government.
Yes, which is why we have three branches of government, not just one or two. And the (partial) job of one of those branches is to interpret laws and strike them down if they violate the constitution.
Actually the SCOTUS has held that it is perfectly constitutional to have "In God We Trust" on Dollar bills, I have a post a while back you should take a look at quoting the opinion in that case.
As far as your bit about civil rights that could be more elegantly termed a Tyranny of the Majority Critique there is a difference between the people passing a bill that is constitutional and one that is not. This has been ruled the former.