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    WELLS; FREEDOM FROM RELIGION FOUNDATION, INC v. DEPARTMENT OF GENERAL  SERVICES OF THE CITY AND  COUNTY OF DENVER
                                            FILED
                               United States Court of Appeals
                                        Tenth Circuit
      
                                         JUL 2 2001
      
                                       PATRICK FISHER
                                            Clerk                                      PUBLISH
             
                               UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
             
                                       TENTH CIRCUIT
             
             
             
             JULIE N. WELLS; FREEDOM FROM     
              RELIGION FOUNDATION, INC.;  THE  
             COLORADO CHAPTER OF  THE FREEDOM                 
             FROM RELIGION  FOUNDATION, INC.,            No. 00_1040
                                                              
                   Plaintiff _ Appellant,                           
             vs.                                              
                                              
             CITY AND COUNTY OF DENVER;  DEPARTMENT
             OF GENERAL  SERVICES OF THE CITY 
             AND  COUNTY OF DENVER;  WELLINGTON
             WEBB, Mayor of the  City and     
             County of Denver; THOMAS  J.     
             MIGAKI, Manager of the  Department
             of General Services, City  and   
             County of Denver; JOHN HALL,     
              Director of the Division of      
             Public  Office Buildings,        
                                              
             Defendants _ Appellees.          
                                              
    
             
             
                        APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                                FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
                                    (D.C. No. 99_Z_2373)
             
             
             
             Robert R. Tiernan, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiffs _ Appellants.
             
             Stanley M. Sharoff, Assistant City Attorney (J. Wallace Wortham, Jr., City 
             Attorney, with him on the brief), Denver, Colorado, for Defendants _ Appellees.
             
              
             
             Before KELLY, BRISCOE, Circuit Judges, and MURGUIA,(1) District Judge.
             
             
             
             KELLY, Circuit Judge.
             
             
    
             
    
                  Plaintiffs Julie Wells and the National and Colorado Chapters of the 
    
             Freedom From Religion Foundation ("FFRF") appeal from the district court's 
    
             order denying their motion for preliminary injunctive relief.  Pursuant to a 
    
             stipulation by the parties, the court advanced and consolidated trial on the merits 
    
             with the hearing on Plaintiffs' motion, and entered a final judgment in favor of 
    
             Defendants.  Our jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm.
    
             
    
                                         Background
    
                  Every year, the City and County of Denver ("the City") erects a holiday 
    
             display on the steps leading up to the east entrance of the City and County 
    
             Building ("the East Steps").  The East Steps "are the primary entrance to the City 
    
             and County Building, . . . the primary access . . . into the second floor rotunda 
    
             area of the building."  Aplt. App. at 85.  The 1999 display included a creche, tin 
             (1)      Honorable Carlos Murguia, District Judge, United States District Court of 
             Kansas, sitting by designation.
             
     
             
             soldiers, Christmas trees, snowmen, reindeer and other animals, an array of lights, and a shed containing Santa Claus and his elves.  See Addendum, infra at __ [Op. 
    
             at 41].  The display also contained a large sign with the message "Happy Holidays 
    
             from the Keep the Lights Foundation and the sponsors that help maintain the 
    
             lights at the City and County Building," situated to the far right of the display 
    
             ("Happy Holidays sign").  Id.; Aplt. Add. at 1_3 (Pl. Ex. 1_5).(1)  The Happy 
    
             Holidays sign, which was built by the City's carpentry shop using public funds, 
    
             listed six corporate sponsors.  Aplt. App. at 86_87.  The sponsors' contributions to 
    
             the non_profit Keep the Lights Foundation were used to reimburse the City for 
    
             part of the cost of the display.  Id. at 88, 102.  The display was surrounded by a 
    
             fence and monitored by motion detectors and security cameras.  Id. at 69_70, 88, 
    
             102_03.  The fenced_off area occupied more than two_thirds of the East Steps' 
    
             total square footage, leaving open a broad central corridor to allow public access 
    
             to and from the building.  See Addendum, infra at __ [Op. at 41]. 
    
                  On November 12, 1999, the plaintiffs wrote a letter to Defendant John Hall, 
    
             the Director of Public Office Buildings for the City and County of Denver, 
    
             requesting permission to place a sign "inside this year's Christmas display area" 
    
             and quoting the text of the proposed sign ("Winter Solstice sign") as follows:
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (1)      Plaintiffs refer to their exhibits as "Joint Exhibits" to indicate that an 
             exhibit was part of their complaint, as well as their application for a preliminary 
             injunction.  The exhibits are not offered in cooperation with the defendants.  Aplt. 
             App. at 66.  To avoid confusion, we refer to the plaintiffs' exhibits as "Pl. Ex." 
             and the defendants' exhibits as "Def. Ex."
             
     
                                     At this season of 
                                    THE WINTER SOLSTICE 
                                    may reason prevail.
             
                                    There are no gods, 
                                   no devils, no angels, 
                                    no heaven or hell.  
                                       There is only 
                                     our natural world.
             
                          THE "CHRIST CHILD" IS A RELIGIOUS MYTH.
                      THE CITY OF DENVER SHOULD NOT PROMOTE RELIGION.
             
             "                     I believe in an America 
                         where the separation of church and state 
                                       is absolute."
             
                       John F. Kennedy ? 1960 Presidential campaign.
             
                     PRESENTED BY THE FREEDOM FROM RELIGION FOUNDATION
             
             Aplt. Add. at 9 (Pl. Ex. 11).(2)  On November 28, 1999, having received no 
    
             response from Denver, Ms. Wells placed the Winter Solstice sign "on the steps of 
    
             the City and County Building inside the area fenced off for the City's display." 
    
             Aplt. Br. at 5.  Written on the back of the sign was the Eighth Commandment: 
    
             "Thou shalt not steal."  Aplt. App. at 58.  Denver removed the sign the following 
    
             morning.
    
                  Plaintiffs filed this action on December 13, 1999, seeking a preliminary
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (2)      The FFRF had written a similar letter in 1998.  Aplt. Add. at 11_12 (Pl. 
             Ex. 12).  Denver responded to the 1998 letter by summarily denying "the 
             foundation's request `to have its holiday message included in the Christmas 
             display' . . . ."  Id. at 13 (Pl. Ex. 13).
             
     
             injunction to compel the City "to allow the Plaintiffs to exhibit their winter 
    
             solstice display on the steps of Denver's City and County Building within the 
    
             fenced_off area where Defendants' Christmas holiday display is exhibited for as 
    
             long as the latter display is on exhibit."  Id. at 16.  At the hearing on that motion, 
    
             held December 23, 1999, it became clear that Plaintiffs' action included a 
    
             challenge to the City's policy against unattended displays on the East Steps.  Id. 
    
             at 49; see also id. at 22 (Compl. at  9_10).  At the close of the hearing, during 
    
             which both parties had presented testimony and arguments, the court denied 
    
             Plaintiffs' motion.  Id. at 132_42 (oral ruling).  Upon the parties' stipulation that 
    
             the court's oral ruling "be entered as the final order and judgment," id. at 39, the 
    
             court advanced and consolidated the trial on the merits with the hearing for 
    
             preliminary relief, entered a final judgment in favor of the defendants, and 
    
             dismissed the action with prejudice.  Id. at 41_42. 
    
                  On appeal, Ms. Wells and the FFRF claim that the district court erred in 
    
             failing to require Denver to justify (1) the exclusion of the Winter Solstice sign 
    
             from the City's fenced_off holiday display, or (2) the ban on private unattended 
    
             displays on the East Steps.  They contend that both restrictions violate their free 
    
             speech rights under the First Amendment.  One of the plaintiffs' objections to 
    
             Denver's unattended display ban is their claim that the policy, by virtue of being 
    
             unwritten, vests unbridled discretion in city officials.  Aplt. Br. at 12_14, 17.
             
     
             They also claim that both restrictions are selectively enforced, and that the district 
    
             court erroneously denied them the opportunity to develop a factual record on 
    
             those claims.  Id. at 14_19.  In addition to their free speech challenges, the 
    
             plaintiffs assert violations of their rights under the Free Exercise, Establishment, 
    
             and Equal Protection Clauses.(3)
    
                                         Discussion
    
             I.   Do the Plaintiffs' Free Speech Rights Allow Them to Compel Denver to 
                  Include the Winter Solstice Sign in the Fenced_Off Holiday Display?
             
                  The Supreme Court has articulated a three_step framework to be used when 
    
             analyzing restrictions on private speech on government property.  Cornelius v. 
    
             NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc., 473 U.S. 788 (1985).  First, the court 
    
             must determine whether the speech at issue is protected by the First Amendment. 
    
             Id. at 797.  If so, the court must then "identify the nature of the forum, because the extent to which the Government may limit access depends on whether the 
    
             forum is public or nonpublic."  Id.  Third, the court "must assess whether the 
    
             justifications for exclusion from the relevant forum satisfy the requisite standard," 
    
             e.g., whether a content_based restriction can survive strict scrutiny, whether a 
    
             content_neutral restriction is a valid regulation of the time, place, or manner of 
    
             speech, or whether a restriction in a nonpublic forum is reasonable.  Id.  When the 
    
             government is the speaker, however, "different principles" apply.  Rosenberger v. 
    
             Rector & Visitors of Univ. of Va., 515 U.S. 819, 834 (1995).  
    
                  When the government speaks, either directly or through private 
    
             intermediaries, it is constitutionally entitled to make "content_based choices," id. 
    
             at 833, and to engage in "viewpoint_based funding decisions," Legal Serv. Corp. 
    
             v. Velazquez, 121 S. Ct. 1043, 1048 (2001).  Thus, our analysis of restrictions 
    
             that arise in the context of government speech is "altogether different" than the 
    
             analysis set forth in Cornelius.  Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Wisc. Sys. v. 
    
             Southworth, 529 U.S. 217, 235 (2000); see also id. ("The Court has not held, or 
    
             suggested, that when the government speaks the rules we have discussed 
    
             [regarding public fora and viewpoint neutrality] come into play."); Latino 
    
             Officers Ass'n, New York, Inc. v. City of New York, 196 F.3d 458, 468 (2d Cir. 
    
             1999) (noting in dicta that "the government may regulate its own expression in 
    
             ways that would be unconstitutional were a private party the speaker"), cert.
             (3)      Plaintiffs do not challenge the inclusion of the creche in the display.  Cf. 
             County of Allegheny v. ACLU, 492 U.S. 573 (1989); Lynch v. Donnelly, 465 
             U.S. 668 (1984).  Prior challenges to the creche have been unsuccessful.  See 
             Citizens Concerned for Separation of Church & State v. City & County of 
             Denver, 508 F. Supp. 823 (D. Colo. 1981) (rejecting challenge under the 
             Establishment Clause of the U.S. Constitution), aff'd, No. 82_1022 (10th Cir. May 
             14, 1984) (unpublished order) (upholding district court's decision on basis that 
             challenged display was indistinguishable from display upheld in Lynch v. 
             Donnelly, 465 U.S. 668 (1984)); see also Conrad v. City & County of Denver, 
             724 P.2d 1309 (Colo. 1986) (rejecting challenge under the Preference Clause of 
             the Colorado Constitution); Citizens Concerned for Separation of Church & State 
             v. City & County of Denver, 628 F.2d 1289 (10th Cir. 1980) (holding that 
             organizational plaintiff failed to establish standing to challenge creche).
             
     
             denied, 528 U.S. 1159 (2000).  Although the Supreme Court has applied these 
    
             principles in only one case, Rust v. Sullivan, 500 U.S. 173, 192_93 (1991) 
    
             (sustaining a prohibition on abortion_related advice by recipients of federal funds 
    
             designated for family_planning counseling), the Court has discussed the 
    
             government speech doctrine at some length in three recent cases.  Velazquez, 121 
    
             S. Ct. at 1048; Southworth, 529 U.S. at 235; Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 833.  Thus, 
    
             we believe that the doctrine is a viable one, and that it is appropriate to employ it 
    
             in the case before us.  Cf. Downs v. Los Angeles Unified Sch. Dist., 228 F.3d 
    
             1003, 1011 (9th Cir. 2000), cert. denied, 121 S. Ct. 1653 (2001); Knights of the 
    
             Ku Klux Klan v. Curators of the Univ. of Mo., 203 F.3d 1085, 1093_94 (8th Cir.) 
    
             [hereinafter Knights of the KKK], cert. denied, 121 S. Ct. 49 (2000); Muir v. Ala. 
    
             Educ. Television Comm'n, 688 F.2d 1033, 1044 (5th Cir. 1982) (en banc) 
    
             (predating Rust).
    
                  Under the government speech doctrine, the exclusion of the Winter Solstice 
    
             sign from the fenced_off display raises two questions.  First, given that the 
    
             display constitutes speech, who is the speaker?  Second, if the speaker is the City 
    
             of Denver, to what extent may it control the contents of the display?  
    
                  A.   Whose Speech Is It?
    
                  Denver owns each component part of the display.  Aplt. App. at 89.  The 
    
             City maintains and replaces those parts when necessary, it erects the fence that
             
     
             surrounds the display, and it provides video cameras, motion detectors, and a 
    
             security guard to protect the display.  Id. at 69_70, 88_89, 102_03.  In Denver's 
    
             view, the display is the City's message to the community.  Id. at 95_96, 101_04. 
    
             On the other hand, Ms. Wells and the FFRF contend that the display is merely an 
    
             assortment of private speech by corporations that have paid for the privilege. 
    
             E.g., id. at 95.  Plaintiffs' characterization of the display is not supported by the 
    
             record.  
    
                  Plaintiffs' argument revolves around the large Happy Holidays sign, which 
    
             stands inside the fence at the far right of the display.  See Addendum, infra at __ 
    
             [Op. at 41].(4)  According to the City, the Happy Holidays sign is a "Thank You" 
    
             from Denver to the sponsors, Aplee. Br. at 20 n.10, and the district court agreed. 
    
             Aplt. App. at 140_41.  In the plaintiffs' view, however, the plain language of the 
    
             sign demonstrates that it is a message from __ not to __ the sponsors, and they 
    
             assert that they are equally entitled to communicate their message from within the fence.  Aplt. Br. at 18_19.  We conclude that the sign is Denver's speech, not that 
    
             of the listed corporations.
    
                  The Supreme Court has provided very little guidance as to what constitutes 
    
             government speech.  As noted, we are aware of only one case, Rust v. Sullivan, 
    
             500 U.S. 173 (1991), in which the Court actually applied the principles that 
    
             underlie the government speech doctrine.  In that case, the Court "upheld the 
    
             government's prohibition on abortion_related advice applicable to recipients of 
    
             federal funds [under Title X] for family planning counseling."  Rosenberger, 515 
    
             U.S. at 833 (citing Rust, 500 U.S. at 194).  We recognize that "Rust did not place 
    
             explicit reliance on the rationale that the counseling activities of the doctors 
    
             under Title X amounted to governmental speech; when interpreting the holding in 
    
             later cases, however, [the Supreme Court has] explained Rust on this 
    
             understanding."  Velazquez, 121 S. Ct. at 1048.  The other Supreme Court cases 
    
             that have discussed the doctrine have done so only in dicta.  Id.; Southworth, 529 
    
             U.S. at 235; Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 833.  In each case, the Court held that the 
    
             speech at issue did not constitute government speech.  Velazquez, 121 S. Ct. at 
    
             1049 ("The advice from the attorney to the client and the advocacy by the 
    
             attorney to the courts cannot be classified as governmental speech even under a 
    
             generous understanding of the concept."); Southworth, 529 U.S. at 235 ("In the 
    
             instant case, the speech is not that of the University or its agents.  It is not,
             (4)      As shown in the Addendum, the text of the sign is as follows: on the left, 
             "HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM THE Keep the Lights Foundation and the sponsors 
             that help maintain the lights at the City and County Building," and on the right, 
             "NEWS4 Spirit of Colorado", "Coors Light", and "King Soopers  AAA of 
             Colorado  Denver Rocky Mountain News  Rock Bottom Brewery".  "HAPPY 
             HOLIDAYS", "NEWS4", and "Coors Light" are written in the largest font, and 
             are therefore the most prominent.  The font used for the phrases "FROM THE 
             Keep the Lights Foundation" and "Spirit of Colorado," and to list the other four 
             corporate sponsors is about half that size.  The phrase "and the sponsors . . ." is 
             even smaller, about one_quarter the size of the largest font.  
             
     
             furthermore, speech by an instructor or a professor in the academic context, where 
    
             principles applicable to government speech would have to be considered."); 
    
             Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 841 ("The University has taken pains to disassociate 
    
             itself from the private speech involved in this case.").(5)  A few of our sister 
    
             circuits, however, have had occasion to apply the government speech doctrine, 
    
             and their opinions are instructive.  Downs, 228 F.3d at 1013_16; Knights of the 
    
             KKK, 203 F.3d at 1093_94; see also Muir, 688 F.2d at 1044. 
    
                  The Eighth Circuit's opinion in Knights of the KKK is particularly on 
    
             point.  That case arose when the Ku Klux Klan of Missouri wrote to the 
    
             University of Missouri's public radio station, KWMU, offering to underwrite four 
    
             segments of National Public Radio's "All Things Considered."  208 F.3d at 1089. 
    
             Under federal law, public radio stations must acknowledge the underwriters 
    
             (sponsors) of particular broadcasts by identifying them, on the air, during the 
    
             broadcast.  Id. at 1088 (citing 47 U.S.C. § 317(a)(1)).  To encourage 
    
             contributions, KWMU operated an "enhanced underwriting" program, pursuant to 
    
             which acknowledgments could include a limited amount of additional information 
    
             about the underwriter.  Id. at 1088_89 & n.3 (citations omitted).  The Klan
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (5)      The Court has consistently "emphasized the importance of context in 
             determining the extent to which the government can control speech."  Snyder v. 
             Murray City Corp., 159 F.3d 1227, 1243 (10th Cir. 1998) (Briscoe, J., dissenting) 
             (citing Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 833_34); accord Velazquez, 121 S. Ct. at 1049_
             52; Southworth, 529 U.S. at 234_35.  
             
     
             included the following proposed announcement with its offer of funds: 
    
                  The Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, a White Christian organization, 
                  standing up for rights and values of White Christian America since 
                  1865.  For more information[,] please contact the Knights of the Ku 
                  Klux Klan, at [mailing address].  Let your voice be heard!
             
             Id. at 1089 (first alteration in original).  When the station declined the Klan's 
    
             offer, the organization sued, alleging violations of the First Amendment and the 
    
             Equal Protection Clause.  The Eighth Circuit rejected both challenges, holding, 
    
             inter alia, that the underwriting acknowledgments constituted government speech. 
    
             Id. at 1093.  
    
                  To support that conclusion, the Eighth Circuit relied on a number of 
    
             factors: (1) that "the central purpose of the enhanced underwriting program is not 
    
             to promote the views of the donors;" (2) that the station exercised editorial 
    
             control over the content of acknowledgment scripts; (3) that the literal speaker 
    
             was a KWMU employee, not a Klan representative; and (4) that ultimate 
    
             responsibility for the contents of the broadcast rested with KWMU, not with the 
    
             Klan.  Id. at 1093_94.  The Ninth Circuit relied on similar factors in Downs, in 
    
             which the court rejected a public school teacher's claim that he had a First 
    
             Amendment right to respond to his school's recognition of Gay and Lesbian 
    
             Awareness month by posting anti_homosexuality materials on a school bulletin 
    
             board.  See Downs, 228 F.3d at 1011_12 (holding that content of bulletin boards 
    
             was government speech in that boards were used to express school policy, that
             
     
             access was limited to faculty and staff, that "postings were subject to the 
    
             oversight of the school principals," that the school district had made no 
    
             "affirmative effort to disclaim responsibility for the [boards'] content," and that 
    
             the boards were "the property and responsibility" of the school and the district). 
    
             Due to the "special characteristics of the school environment," Hazelwood Sch. 
    
             Dist. v. Kuhlmeier, 484 U.S. 260, 266 (1988) (quoting Tinker v. Des Moines 
    
             Indep. Cmty. Sch. Dist., 393 U.S. 503, 506 (1969)), we rely primarily on the four 
    
             factors articulated in Knights of the KKK.(6) 
    
                  As to the purpose of the sign, the record evidence includes the City's 
    
             complete control over the sign's construction, message, and placement, as well as 
    
             Mr. Hall's testimony that "[t]he sign is there to thank the sponsors and the 
    
             citizens for the support of the cost of the display. . . .  It is there to recognize their 
    
             financial support and presentation of the display."  Aplt. App. at 96; see also id. 
    
             at 102_03.  The district court found Mr. Hall's testimony to be credible, id. at 
    
             140, and we cannot say that finding was clearly erroneous.  The fact that the 
    
             sponsors may receive an incidental benefit from the Happy Holidays sign __ in the 
    
             form of publicity and good will __ does not refute Mr. Hall's testimony as to the
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (6)      Although Downs did involve speech in a secondary school, the Ninth 
             Circuit indicated that its holding was neither controlled by nor limited to the 
             school setting in which the case arose.  E.g., 228 F.3d at 1011 ("This case is not 
             controlled by [the leading Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit school cases] because 
             it is a case of the government itself speaking . . . .").
             
     
             sign's purpose.  Indeed, any benefit that accrues to the sponsors ultimately serves 
    
             the City's interests by providing current and putative sponsors with an incentive 
    
             to contribute to the Keep the Lights Foundation in the future.  In this sense, the 
    
             sign is comparable to the enhanced underwriter acknowledgments in Knights of 
    
             the KKK.  See 203 F.3d at 1088, 1093_94 & nn.10_11.
    
                  Second, it is uncontroverted that the City built, paid for, and erected the 
    
             sign.  Aplt. App. at 86_87; see also Knights of the KKK, 203 F.3d at 1094 n.9 
    
             (recognizing that the announcements at issue served primarily to identify 
    
             sponsors, but noting that "conveyance of this collateral information remains a 
    
             communicative act of the government").  Significantly, there is no indication that 
    
             any of the corporate sponsors even knew about the Happy Holidays sign, much 
    
             less exercised any editorial control over its design or content.  Ms. Wells and the 
    
             FFRF could have obtained discovery on this issue by serving interrogatories on 
    
             Denver, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 33, or by deposing representatives of the listed 
    
             corporations.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 30(a)(1) (allowing deposition of non_party); 
    
             Fed. R. Civ. P. 45 (allowing party to subpoena witness to appear at deposition). 
    
             Rather than pursue these options, however, Plaintiffs stipulated to the entry of a 
    
             final judgment.  Aplt. App. at 38_40.  According to that stipulation, "[n]either the 
    
             Plaintiffs nor the Defendants has any additional witnesses, evidence, or argument 
    
             to present to the Court at this time and, therefore, agree that this action may,
             
     
             pursuant to Rule 65(a)(2) F.R.C.P., be advanced and consolidated on the merits 
    
             based upon the evidence received at the hearing on the Motion for Preliminary 
    
             Injunction."  Id. at 39,  4 (emphasis added).  
    
                  As to the final Knights of the KKK factor, this litigation is itself an 
    
             indication that the City bears the ultimate responsibility for the content of the 
    
             display.  Even more persuasive is the fact that the City has assumed full 
    
             responsibility for providing security for the display, including a fence to guard 
    
             against theft and protect citizens from possible electrical hazards, Aplt. App. at 
    
             88, video cameras, id. at 102_03, motion detectors, id., and a security guard.  Id. 
    
             at 69_70, 103.  Accordingly, we conclude that the holiday display, including the 
    
             Happy Holidays sign, is government speech.
    
                  The dissent relies on a footnote in Knights of the KKK for the proposition 
    
             that "[a]n additional factor relevant to the inquiry is who the listener believes to 
    
             be the speaker." Infra at __ [Dissent at 3] (citing Knights of the KKK, 203 F.3d at 
    
             1094 n.9).   Even assuming, arguendo, that "listeners' perception" is one relevant 
    
             factor, our consideration of that factor would be limited to the perception of an 
    
             informed and objectively reasonable observer.  Cf., e.g., Good News Club v. 
    
             Milford Cent. Sch., No. 99_2036, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 2001 WL 636202, at *11 (U.S. 
    
             June 11, 2001) (rejecting subjective, speculative listeners' perception argument as 
    
             "a modified heckler's veto, in which a group's religious activity can be proscribed
             
     
             on the basis of what the youngest members of the audience might misperceive") 
    
             (emphasis added); Capitol Square Review & Advisory Bd. v. Pinette, 515 U.S. 
    
             753, 780 (1995) (O'Connor, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment) 
    
             ("[T]he reasonable observer . . . must be deemed aware of the history and context 
    
             of the community and forum in which the religious display appears. . . . Nor can 
    
             the knowledge attributed to the reasonable observer be limited to the information 
    
             gleaned simply from viewing the challenged display.") (emphasis added); 
    
             Bauchman ex rel. Bauchman v. West High School, 132 F.3d 542, 555 (10th Cir. 
    
             1997) (attributing to reasonable observer knowledge of "the purpose, context and 
    
             history of public education in Salt Lake City, including the historical tension 
    
             between the government and the Mormon Church").  In this case, an informed, 
    
             objectively reasonable observer would know the significance of the display's 
    
             location on the City and County Building Steps; would know that Denver has 
    
             erected this or a similar holiday display since at least 1979, see Citizens 
    
             Concerned for the Separation of Church & State, 508 F. Supp. at 825; would view 
    
             the size, content, and location of the Happy Holidays sign in the context of the 
    
             display as a whole;(7) and would consider the fact that the sign's largely generic
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (7)      As shown by the Addendum to this opinion, the dissent's assertion that 
             the Happy Holidays sign "appears to dominate one side of the display," infra at 
             ___ [Dissent at 2] (emphasis added), is inaccurate.  See Addendum, infra at __ 
             [Op. at 41].
             
     
             lettering is a far cry from the sophisticated graphic design generally associated 
    
             with commercial speech.  Weighed against this knowledge, we cannot agree with 
    
             the dissent's conclusion that the mere fact that the sign did not contain the words 
    
             "Thank You" would lead a reasonable observer to conclude that the display was 
    
             corporate speech.  Having determined that the display constituted government 
    
             speech, we turn now to the constitutional implications of that conclusion.
    
                  B.   Given that the Holiday Display Constitutes Government Speech, To 
                       What Extent Can Denver Control the Contents of the Display?
             
                  "[W]hen the State is the speaker, it may make content_based choices." 
    
             Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 833.  For example, the First Amendment does not bar 
    
             the government from "mak[ing] a value judgment favoring childbirth over 
    
             abortion," Rust, 500 U.S. at 192_92 (internal quotations and citations omitted), or 
    
             from implementing that judgment by "refusing to fund activities, including 
    
             speech," which relate to abortion.  Id. at 194_95.  Similarly, "[a]n arm of local 
    
             government . . . may decide not only to talk about gay and lesbian awareness and 
    
             tolerance in general, but also to advocate such tolerance if it so decides, and 
    
             restrict the contrary speech of one of its representatives" by refusing to 
    
             incorporate that speech into its own presentation.  Downs, 228 F.3d at 1014; see 
    
             also Knights of the KKK, 203 F.3d at 1094_95 (holding that government_owned 
    
             radio station may control the contents of its own speech, but declining to decide 
    
             whether governmental speech that is not editorial in nature is per se exempt from
             
     
             forum analysis).
    
                  Upon consideration, we conclude that the City of Denver is entitled to 
    
             present a holiday message to its citizens without incurring a constitutional 
    
             obligation to incorporate the message of any private party with something to say. 
    
             "Simply because the government opens its mouth to speak does not give every 
    
             outside individual or group a First Amendment right to play ventriloquist." 
    
             Downs, 228 F.3d at 1013.  Although we recognize that "viewpoint_based funding 
    
             decisions can be sustained in instances in which the government is itself the 
    
             speaker," Velazquez, 121 S. Ct. at 1048, there is nothing in this record that 
    
             supports the plaintiffs' assertion that the Winter Solstice sign was excluded from 
    
             the display for viewpoint_based reasons.  In fact, Mr. Hall testified that he had 
    
             also denied an anonymous caller's request for permission to add a menorah to the 
    
             1999 display.  Aplt. App. at 95, 104.  We see no inconsistency between that 
    
             denial and Mr. Hall's reluctance to rule out the possibility that he might consider 
    
             an elected official's proposal that the City include a menorah in future displays. 
    
             Id. at 108_09.  Nor do we agree that the district court abused its discretion by 
    
             sustaining the City's objection to a line of inquiry that called for speculation as to 
    
             the possible content of future displays.  Id. at 109.
    
                  In sum, we hold that the City acted within its rights to control the contents 
    
             of its own speech.  See, e.g., Muir, 688 F.2d at 1044 ("[T]he First Amendment
             
     
             does not preclude the government from exercising editorial control over its own 
    
             medium of expression.").
    
             II.  Does Denver's Private Unattended Display Ban, Either on its Face or As 
                  Applied, Violate the Plaintiffs' First Amendment Rights to Freedom of 
                  Speech?
    
                  Plaintiffs' Winter Solstice sign was removed not only because it was "an 
    
             intrusion into the display [the City] had erected," but also because "[i]t was an 
    
             unattended display on the front [i.e., East] steps of the City and County 
    
             Building."  Aplt. App. at 92.  Although Denver permits demonstrations, rallies, 
    
             picketing, leafleting, and similar speech activities on the City and County 
    
             Building's interior sidewalks and __ absent a conflict with another event __ on the 
    
             East Steps, the City does not permit private unattended displays on the steps.  Id. 
    
             at 89_92.  Thus, whether speech is permissible or impermissible depends solely on 
    
             its "manner," namely: whether or not the speaker is present.  Id. at 91.  As 
    
             explained, we assess the regulation of private speech on government property 
    
             according to a three_step analytical framework.  Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 797; 
    
             accord Mesa v. White, 197 F.3d 1041, 1044 (10th Cir. 1999); Summum v. 
    
             Callaghan, 130 F.3d 906, 913 (10th Cir. 1997).  Because the defendants have 
    
             conceded that the Winter Solstice sign constitutes protected speech, Aplee. Br. at 
    
             12, our analysis begins with the second step: whether the property to which the 
    
             plaintiffs seek access is a traditional public forum, a designated public forum, or a
             
     
             non_public forum.  See Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 797; accord Summum, 130 F.3d at 
    
             913.  This characterization of the relevant forum is necessary to determine "the 
    
             extent to which [Denver] may limit access to this property __ i.e., whether a 
    
             heightened or reasonableness standard applies . . . ."  Summum, 130 F.3d at 913 
    
             (citing Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 797).  Third, "we must assess whether [Denver's] 
    
             justifications . . . satisfy the requisite standard," id., in this case, whether the 
    
             unattended display ban is narrowly tailored to further significant government 
    
             interests, while leaving open ample alternative channels for communication.  See 
    
             Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781, 791 (1989).
    
                  A.   Public Forum Analysis
    
                  "[T]he Court [has] identified three types of fora: the traditional public 
    
             forum, the public forum created by government designation, and the nonpublic 
    
             forum."  Arkansas Educ. Television Comm'n v. Forbes, 523 U.S. 666, 677 (1998) 
    
             (quoting Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 802) (alteration in original); accord Hawkins v. 
    
             City & County of Denver, 170 F.3d 1281, 1286 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 528 U.S. 
    
             871 (1999).  In addition, certain government properties are "not fora at all." 
    
             Forbes, 523 U.S. at 677 (citation omitted).  Traditional public fora, such as public 
    
             parks and sidewalks, are places that "by long tradition or by government fiat have 
    
             been devoted to assembly and debate . . . ."  Perry Educ. Ass'n v. Perry Local 
    
             Educators' Ass'n, 460 U.S. 37, 45 (1983).  Within a traditional public fora, the
             
     
             appropriate First Amendment standard depends on whether a restriction on speech 
    
             is content_based or content_neutral.  Content_based restrictions must survive strict 
    
             scrutiny __ i.e., they must be narrowly tailored to further a compelling 
    
             governmental interest.  Id.; see also United States v. Playboy Entm't Group, Inc., 
    
             529 U.S. 803, 813 (2000) (noting that under strict scrutiny, "[i]f a less restrictive 
    
             alternative would serve the Government's purpose, the legislature must use that 
    
             alternative").  "On the other hand, we will uphold content_neutral time, place, and 
    
             manner restrictions on speech provided they are `narrowly tailored to serve a 
    
             significant government interest, and leave open ample alternative channels of 
    
             communication.'" Hawkins, 170 F.3d at 1286 (quoting Perry, 460 U.S. at 45) 
    
             (emphasis added).
    
                  The second category of government property consists of designated public 
    
             fora.  "The designated public forum, whether of a limited or unlimited character, 
    
             is one a state creates `by intentionally opening a non_traditional forum for public 
    
             discourse.'" Hawkins, 170 F.3d at 1286 (quoting Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 802); see 
    
             also Forbes, 523 U.S. at 677 ("Designated public fora . . . are created by 
    
             purposeful governmental action.").  Designated public fora differ from traditional 
    
             public fora in that "a State is not required to indefinitely retain the open character 
    
             of the facility . . . ."  Hawkins, 170 F.3d at 1287 (quoting Perry, 460 U.S. at 46); 
    
             accord Summum, 130 F.3d at 914; see also DiLoreto v. Downey Unified Sch.
             
     
             Dist. Bd. of Educ., 196 F.3d 958, 970 (9th Cir. 1999) ("The government has an 
    
             inherent right to control its property, which includes the right to close a 
    
             previously open forum.") (citations omitted), cert. denied, 529 U.S. 1067 (2000). 
    
             While a designated public forum remains open for public discourse, however, the 
    
             government is subject to the same standards that apply in a traditional public 
    
             forum.  Perry, 460 U.S. at 46. 
    
                  "Other government properties are either nonpublic fora or not fora at all." 
    
             Forbes, 523 U.S. at 677 (citing Int'l Soc'y for Krishna Consciousness, Inc. v. Lee, 
    
             505 U.S. 672, 678_79 (1992)).  "Control over access to a nonpublic forum can be 
    
             based on subject matter and speaker identity so long as the distinctions drawn are 
    
             reasonable in light of the purpose served by the forum and are viewpoint neutral." 
    
             Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 806 (citing Perry, 460 U.S. at 49).  A reasonable restriction 
    
             "need not be the most reasonable or the only reasonable limitation."  Cornelius, 
    
             473 U.S. at 808.
    
                       1.   Definition of Forum
    
                  Before we may properly characterize the forum at issue, we must first 
    
             identify its boundaries.  See id. at 801 ("[F]orum analysis is not completed merely 
    
             by identifying the government property at issue").  To define the relevant forum, 
    
             the Supreme Court has
    
                  focused on the access sought by the speaker.  When speakers seek 
                  general access to public property, the forum encompasses that
             
     
                  property.  In cases in which limited access is sought, [the Court's] 
                  cases have taken a more tailored approach to ascertaining the 
                  perimeters of a forum within the confines of the government 
                  property.
               
             Id. (citation omitted).  For example, the Cornelius Court defined the relevant 
    
             forum as the federal fund_raising drive to which the plaintiffs sought access, 
    
             rather than the federal workplace in general.  Id.; see also Lebron v. Nat'l R.R. 
    
             Passenger Corp. (Amtrak), 69 F.3d 650, 655_56 (2d Cir.) (defining forum as 
    
             particular advertising space to which plaintiff sought access, rather than 
    
             alternative space also owned by defendant), amended by 89 F.3d 39 (2d Cir. 
    
             1995); Texas v. Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, 58 F.3d 1075, 1078 (5th Cir. 1995) 
    
             (defining forum as Adopt_a_Highway Program rather than public highways 
    
             generally, where KKK sought permission to participate in Program near recently 
    
             desegregated housing project).  We recognize that Ms. Wells and the FFRF 
    
             initially sought access only to the fenced_off area, Aplt. Add. at 9_12 (Pl. Ex. 11_
    
             12), and that they actually installed the Winter Solstice sign inside the fence.  Id. 
    
             at 2 (Pl. Ex. 4).  Nonetheless, the record shows that for the purpose of Plaintiffs' 
    
             "as applied" challenge to the unattended display ban, the relevant forum 
    
             encompasses the entire East Steps, whether fenced_off or not.  See Aplt. App. at 
    
             49 ("[W]e don't even want [the Winter Solstice sign] included in [Denver's] 
    
             display.  All we want to do is to have the right to post our sign unattended on the
             
     
             steps . . . .") (statement by Plaintiffs' counsel at hearing) (emphasis added).(8)
    
                       2.   Characterization of Forum
    
                  The parties disagree as to whether the relevant forum is a traditional or a 
    
             designated public forum.  See Aplt. Br. at 10 & n.3 (traditional); Aplee. Br. at 12_
    
             14 (designated).  We find it unnecessary to resolve this dispute.  As explained, the 
    
             only distinction between the two types of public fora is that the government "is 
    
             not required to indefinitely retain the open character" of a designated public 
    
             forum.  Perry, 460 U.S. at 46; accord Hawkins, 170 F.3d at 1287; Summum, 130 
    
             F.3d at 914.  Since neither the plaintiffs nor the defendants claim that the 
    
             unattended display ban has effectively closed the forum, the distinction between 
    
             traditional and designated public fora has no practical significance in this case. 
    
             E.g., Aplt. App. at 114 ("[T]he only difference between [a designated] and a 
    
             traditional public forum . . . is that [a designated forum] can be canceled as a 
    
             public forum if the City so chooses, but it hasn't so chosen, so it's a public 
    
             forum.") (statement by Plaintiffs' counsel at hearing).  As long as a public forum 
    
             remains open, the government is subject to the same constitutional standards 
    
             regardless of whether the forum is designated or traditional; the critical inquiry is
             
    
    
    
             (8)      With respect to Plaintiffs' facial challenge to the unattended display ban, 
             of course, our consideration is not limited to the East Steps, but includes all areas 
             covered by the policy, i.e., the steps and interior sidewalks.  See infra at __ [Op. 
             at 33_35].
             
     
             content_neutrality. 
    
                       3.   Content_Neutrality  
    
                  In this case, the district court concluded that Denver did in fact have a 
    
             policy prohibiting unattended displays, and that the policy was content_neutral. 
    
             Aplt. App. at 139_40.  We agree.  The trial court based its finding on the 
    
             testimony of Mr. Hall, and on the absence of any evidence to the contrary.  Id. at 
    
             139_42.  Despite the district court's exclusive reliance on testimonial evidence, 
    
             "in cases raising First Amendment issues . . . an appellate court has an obligation 
    
             to `make an independent examination of the whole record' in order to make sure 
    
             that `the judgment does not constitute a forbidden intrusion on the field of free 
    
             expression.'"  Rankin v. McPherson, 483 U.S. 378, 386 n.9 (1987) (quoting Bose 
    
             Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc., 466 U.S. 485, 499 (1984) 
    
             (quoting New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 284_86 (1964))); see 
    
             also Aplt. App. at 49 ("[T]his case probably can be decided without evidence . . . 
    
             because it really is an issue of law.  I don't think there is much factual dispute.") 
    
             (comment by court).  Thus, our review is de novo.  Snyder v. Murray City Corp., 
    
             159 F.3d 1227, 1230 n.7 (10th Cir. 1998) (en banc).
    
                  Upon a careful review of the entire record, we agree that Denver does 
    
             indeed have a policy that prohibits unattended displays on the East Steps, and we 
    
             hold that this policy is content_neutral both on its face and as applied.  As to the
             
     
             existence of the policy, Plaintiffs have presented no evidence to counter Mr. 
    
             Hall's testimony, given under oath, that Denver's unattended display ban has been 
    
             in effect since at least 1985.  Aplt. App. at 92, 97.  Unlike the dissent, we cannot 
    
             construe the City's failure to cite the unattended display ban in response to 
    
             Plaintiffs' letters as evidence that no such policy existed.  The record shows that 
    
             both the 1998 letter and the 1999 letter specifically requested permission to place 
    
             the Winter Solstice sign inside the fenced_off display.  Aplt. Add. at 9 (Pl. Ex. 
    
             11) (1999 letter) (noticing intent "to place the [] sign inside this year's Christmas 
    
             display area") (emphasis added); id. at 11 (Pl. Ex. 12) (1998 letter) (noticing 
    
             intent to have the sign "included in the Christmas display") (emphasis added). 
    
             But cf. Aplt. Br. at 4 (stating that letters noticed Plaintiffs' "intention to place a 
    
             display on the steps of the City and County Building").  We have already held 
    
             that the City was not required to incorporate Plaintiffs' message into its holiday 
    
             display.  Accordingly, we cannot accept Plaintiffs' argument that the City's 
    
             failure to cite the unattended display ban constitutes evidence that the ban was 
    
             fabricated for the purpose of this litigation.  Aplt. Br. at 12.(9)  The same reasoning applies to the anonymous caller's request to add a menorah to the display ? i.e., 
    
             inside the fence.  Aplt. App. at 104.  The City's failure to volunteer information ?
    
             either to Plaintiffs or to the anonymous caller ? about an irrelevant policy is 
    
             probative of nothing. 
    
                  B.   Time_Place_Manner Restrictions
    
                  A content_neutral restriction in a traditional or designated public forum is 
    
             subject to review as a regulation on the time, place, and manner of speech.  In a 
    
             time_place_manner analysis, the government must show that the regulation is 
    
             "narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and that [it] 
    
             leave[s] open ample alternative channels for communication of the information." 
    
             Ward, 491 U.S. at 791 (internal quotations and citations omitted); see also Perry, 
    
             460 U.S. at 45.  Applying this test, we conclude that Denver's unattended display 
    
             ban is constitutional. 
    
                       1.   Significant Governmental Interests
    
                  The analysis applicable to time_place_manner restrictions is more lenient 
    
             than strict scrutiny.  First, the interests supporting a content_neutral 
    
             time_place_manner regulation need not be compelling, only significant or 
    
             substantial.  See Ward, 491 U.S. at 796; cf. Playboy, 529 U.S. at 813 (noting that 
    
             (9)      The policy was not clearly implicated until the hearing on December 23, 
             1999, when Plaintiffs' counsel clarified: "we don't even want [the sign] included 
             in [Denver's] display.  All we want to do is to have the right to post our sign 
             unattended on the steps of city hall."  Aplt. App. at 49.  But cf. id. at 13 
             (requesting, in Complaint, that the court order "Defendants to permit the 
             Plaintiffs to display their sign unattended in the fenced_off area on the steps of 
             Denver's City and County Building") (emphasis added).
             
     
             content_based regulation must "promote a compelling Government interest").  The 
    
             City has asserted two interests supporting the unattended display ban: (1) keeping the steps free of physical obstructions in order to enable access to the building, 
    
             particularly in the event that an emergency evacuation is necessary, and (2) 
    
             avoiding the burden of eventually disposing of displays left unattended.  See 
    
             Aplee. Br. at 14_15.  
    
                  The Supreme Court has upheld a wide range of government interests as 
    
             sufficiently significant or substantial to justify a time_place_manner restriction. 
    
             E.g., Ward, 491 U.S. at 796 ("substantial interest in protecting . . . citizens from 
    
             unwelcome noise") (quotations and citations omitted); Clark v. Cmty. for Creative 
    
             Non_Violence, 468 U.S. 288, 296 (1984) ("substantial interest in maintaining the 
    
             parks . . . in an attractive and intact condition").  In 1997, the Court held that the 
    
             government's asserted interests in ensuring public safety and order, promoting the 
    
             free flow of traffic on streets and sidewalks, protecting property rights, and 
    
             protecting a woman's freedom to seek pregnancy_related services, in combination, 
    
             were significant.  Schenck v. Pro_Choice Network, 519 U.S. 357, 376 (1997). 
    
             The City's interest in avoiding the burden of disposing of unattended displays is 
    
             not supported by the record, but because the City's interest in facilitating building 
    
             access implicates public safety, e.g., Aplt. App. at 91_92, that interest is 
    
             significant and substantial.  In light of our holding that the plaintiffs have no right 
    
             to add their sign to the City's display, their argument that a sign "placed well 
    
             inside the fenced_off area" would not constitute an obstruction is irrelevant.  See
             
     
             Aplt. Br. at 10_11; Aplt. App. at 71, 101.
    
                       2.   Narrowly Tailored
    
                  Second, unlike a restriction subject to strict scrutiny, a time_place_manner 
    
             regulation need not be the least restrictive means available in order to qualify as 
    
             "narrowly tailored."  Ward, 491 U.S. at 798.  In a time_place_manner case, "the 
    
             requirement of narrow tailoring is satisfied so long as the . . . regulation promotes 
    
             a substantial government interest that would be achieved less effectively absent 
    
             the regulation," and does not "burden substantially more speech than is necessary 
    
             to further the government's legitimate interests."  Ward, 491 U.S. at 799 
    
             (quotations and citations omitted, alteration in original).  The permissive nature of 
    
             the time_place_manner "narrowly tailored" requirement was most recently 
    
             illustrated in Hill v. Colorado, 530 U.S. 703 (2000).  In that case, the Court 
    
             upheld a Colorado statute that created a floating "no_approach" zone around 
    
             anyone within one hundred feet of the entrance to any health care facility.  While 
    
             acknowledging that the statute would sometimes operate to limit harmless speech, 
    
             the Court concluded that "[a] bright_line prophylactic rule may be the best way to 
    
             provide protection . . . ."  Hill, 530 U.S. at 729.  In light of this precedent, we 
    
             must conclude that the unattended display ban is narrowly tailored.  In the 
    
             absence of the ban, Denver's asserted interests would certainly be "achieved less 
    
             effectively," and there is no evidence that the ban restricts "substantially more
             
     
             speech than is necessary."  Ward, 491 U.S. at 799; see also infra at __ [Op. at 30_
    
             31] (discussing alternative channels of communication). 
    
                       3.   Alternative Channels of Communication
    
                  The defendants presented undisputed testimony that the ban leaves speakers 
    
             with ample alternatives for communicating their message:
    
                  Q:        [I]f I can summarize, you're saying that leafleting, 
                       demonstrations, picketing, and all other kinds of First 
                       Amendment activities where the speaker is present is available 
                       anywhere on the steps or in the interior sidewalk or the 
                       pedestrian sidewalk by the City and County Building?
                  A.   That's correct.
             
             Aplt. App. at 91 (direct examination of Mr. Hall); see also id. at 89_91.  The 
    
             plaintiffs' concern that "because of the controversial nature of the sign, 
    
             confrontations would inevitably result thus jeopardizing [the sign holder's] 
    
             physical safety" is irrelevant to their First Amendment rights.  Aplt. Br. at 7; see 
    
             also id. at 11 (noting Ms. Wells' concern that "if she is required to attend the 
    
             sign, her personal safety would be put in danger from malcontents who might feel 
    
             offended").  The First Amendment does prohibit the suppression of unpopular 
    
             speech because of its content, but it does not require the government to serve as a 
    
             speaker's proxy or bodyguard in order to enhance the strength of the speaker's 
    
             message in the marketplace of ideas.  See Regan v. Taxation With Representation 
    
             of Wash., 461 U.S. 540, 549_50 (1983) ("[A]lthough government may not place 
    
             obstacles in the path of a person's exercise of freedom of speech, it need not
             
     
             remove those not of its own creation.")  (internal quotations, citation, and 
    
             alterations omitted).  
    
                  That said, we cannot ignore the fact that assault and menacing are illegal 
    
             under Colorado law.  See Colo. Rev. Stat. § 18_3_204 ("A person commits the 
    
             crime of assault in the third degree if he knowingly or recklessly causes bodily 
    
             injury to another person . . . ."); Colo. Rev. Stat. § 18_3_206 ("A person commits 
    
             the crime of menacing if, by any threat or physical action, he or she knowingly 
    
             places or attempts to place another person in fear of imminent serious bodily 
    
             injury."); see also 18 U.S.C. § 241 (prohibiting conspiracies to interfere with 
    
             exercise of a federal right, including the right to free speech).  Our evaluation of 
    
             whether the unattended display ban leaves Ms. Wells and the FFRF with 
    
             sufficient alternative channels of communication must presume that people who 
    
             view the sign will obey the law.   In sum, we hold that Denver's ban on 
    
             unattended private displays is a content_neutral regulation of the time, place, or 
    
             manner ? in this case, manner ? of speech, and that it is therefore consistent with 
    
             the First Amendment.
    
                  C.   Capitol Square Review & Advisory Bd. v. Pinette, 515 U.S. 753 
                       (1995) 
             
                  The plaintiffs are very critical of the district court's oral reference to 
    
             Capitol Square Review & Advisory Bd. v. Pinette, 515 U.S. 753 (1995).  See 
    
             Aplt. Br. at 9.  In Pinette, the Court held that the State does not violate the
             
     
             Establishment Clause when, pursuant to a content_neutral policy, it permits a 
    
             private party to display an unattended cross in a traditional public forum.  515 
    
             U.S. at 770.  The Court noted that a State could "impose reasonable, content_
    
             neutral time, place, and manner restrictions" in public fora, and noted in dicta that 
    
             "a ban on all unattended displays, which did not exist [in Pinette], might be one 
    
             such" restriction.  Id. at 761.  In this case, Ms. Wells and the FFRF claim that 
    
             "the Court indulged in a strained and incorrect reading" of that dicta.  Aplt. Br. at 
    
             9.  Specifically, they allege that the court "erroneously construed Pinette" as 
    
             overruling, by dicta, the Supreme Court's prior decisions in Ward and Perry. 
    
             Aplt. Br. at 9.  In addition, the plaintiffs object to the court's failure to explicitly 
    
             conduct the time_place_manner analysis set out in Ward.  Aplt. Br. at 8, 15. 
    
             These arguments are unpersuasive. 
    
                  First, it is well_established that "we are free to affirm a district court 
    
             decision on any grounds for which there is a record sufficient to permit 
    
             conclusions of law, even grounds not relied upon by the district court."  United 
    
             States v. Sandia, 188 F.3d 1215, 1217 (10th Cir. 1999) (quotations and citation 
    
             omitted).  Upon de novo review, we conclude that the unattended display ban is a 
    
             valid time_place_manner restriction, and the district court's discussion of the 
    
             various opinions in Pinette hardly displaces our analysis.  In any case, we find no 
    
             error in the court's reference to Pinette.  The relevant language in Justice Scalia's
             
     
             majority opinion __ joined, in pertinent part, by six other justices __ hypothesized 
    
             that an unattended display ban "might be" an example of a valid 
    
             time_place_manner restriction.  Pinette, 515 U.S. at 761.(10)  The district court in 
    
             this case consistently referred to the relevant language as dicta.  E.g., Aplt. App. 
    
             at 116 ("Capitol Square indicates there can be a ban on all unattended displays.  It 
    
             did not occur in that case, so it's dicta . . . ."); see also id. at 137_138.  Taking the 
    
             Pinette Court's suggestion as a starting point, the court then concluded that the 
    
             policy before it was, in fact, a valid time_place_manner restriction.  In our view, 
    
             the court did conduct a time_place_manner analysis, despite its failure to say 
    
             whatever magic words the plaintiffs were looking for.
    
                  D.   Facial Challenge to the Unattended Display Ban: Unbridled 
                       Discretion
             
                  Plaintiffs also challenge the unattended display ban on its face, claiming 
    
             that the prohibition is a per se violation of the First Amendment in that it vests 
    
             unbridled discretion in city officials.  "[I]n the area of free expression a licensing statute placing unbridled discretion in the hands of a government official or 
    
             agency constitutes a prior restraint and may result in censorship."  City of 
    
             Lakewood v. Plain Dealer Pub. Co., 486 U.S. 750, 757 (1988) (citations omitted); 
    
             see also, e.g., Police Dep't of Chicago v. Mosley, 408 U.S. 92, 97 (1972); 
    
             Shuttlesworth v. City of Birmingham, 394 U.S. 147, 150_53 (1969); Poulos v. 
    
             New Hampshire, 345 U.S. 395, 407 (1953).  As a preliminary matter, we note that 
    
             the fact that Denver's policy is unwritten is not fatal, but merely a factor to be 
    
             considered.  Lebron, 69 F.3d at 658 ("The fact that a policy is not committed to 
    
             writing does not of itself constitute a First Amendment violation."). 
    
                  In addition, the record indicates that the unattended display ban leaves very 
    
             little room for official discretion __ if any.  E.g., Aplt. App. at 97, 107 (testifying 
    
             that there are no exceptions to the unattended display ban) (Mr. Hall).  To counter 
    
             this evidence, Ms. Wells and the FFRF note that in the wake of the Columbine 
    
             High School shooting in April 1999, the mayor allowed "signs, cards, stuffed 
    
             animals, and other paraphe[r]nalia [that] were taped to the sidewalk and the fence 
    
             below the steps" by mourners to remain unattended for ten to fourteen days.  Aplt. 
    
             Br. at 15; see also Aplt. App. at 73.  There is no other evidence that the City has 
    
             permitted private, unattended displays at the City and County Building, and there 
    
             is no evidence that the City has ever permitted such displays on the East Steps. 
    
             Aplt. App. at 77, 93_94, 97, 107.  
             (10)      The language in Justice Souter's concurring and Justice Stevens' 
             dissenting opinions is more definitive, but that language did not carry a majority 
             of the Court.  Id. at 783_84 (Souter, J., concurring in part and concurring in the 
             judgment) ("The fact that the capitol lawn has been the site of public protests and 
             gatherings, and is the location of any number of the government's own unattended 
             displays . . . does not disable the State from closing the square to all privately 
             owned, unattended structures.") (emphasis added); id. at 803 (Stevens, J., 
             dissenting) (noting that "a State may impose a ban on all private unattended 
             displays in [] a [public] forum") (emphasis added).
             
     
             
                   Even if we assume that the Columbine displays constitute evidence that the 
    
             policy allows official discretion, we find that discretion is sufficiently bounded to 
    
             survive constitutional scrutiny.  The unbridled discretion doctrine requires that 
    
             official discretion affecting First Amendment interests be bounded by limits that 
    
             are "made explicit by textual incorporation, binding judicial or administrative 
    
             construction, or well_established practice."  City of Lakewood, 486 U.S. at 770 
    
             (citations omitted, emphasis added).  In this case, Denver's "well_established 
    
             practice" with respect to the unattended display ban appears to be one of uniform 
    
             enforcement, with the sole exception of the Columbine displays.  As discussed 
    
             below, the events surrounding the Columbine displays were extraordinarily tragic 
    
             and highly emotional.  Neither City of Lakewood nor any other unbridled 
    
             discretion case supports the proposition that a single, unique exception to a 
    
             generally applicable and otherwise uniformly enforced policy is sufficient to 
    
             render that policy constitutionally void.  Accordingly, we must reject the 
    
             plaintiffs' claim that the City's discretion is unfettered. 
    
                  E.   As Applied Challenge to the Unattended Display Ban: Selective 
                       Enforcement
             
                  As to the application of the policy, Plaintiffs have presented no probative 
    
             evidence to counter Mr. Hall's testimony that the policy is and always has been 
    
             enforced in a uniform, non_discriminatory manner, without regard to content or 
    
             viewpoint.  Aplt. App. at 92_93, 97, 107.  We have given careful consideration to
             
     
             the Columbine displays, see Aplt. App. at 73, 77, 92_93, 97; Aplt. Add. at 5_8 (Pl. 
    
             Ex. 7_10), taking judicial notice of the facts surrounding those displays, see Fed. 
    
             R. Evid. 201(b), (c), and we conclude that the plaintiffs' selective enforcement 
    
             claim is not supported by the record.  On April 20, 1999, two masked gunmen 
    
             opened fire on their fellow students at Columbine High School in Littleton, 
    
             Colorado.  The shooters murdered thirteen high school students, then killed 
    
             themselves.  An additional twenty_three students were hospitalized, twenty_one 
    
             with gunshot wounds.  On April 21_22, 1999, the City of Denver sponsored a 
    
             memorial event in Civic Center Park, which is across the street from the City and 
    
             County Building at issue in this appeal.  Aplt. App. at 93.  Simultaneous with that 
    
             event, grieving citizens left various items in the nature of teddy bears, flowers, 
    
             and notes on the interior sidewalks surrounding the East Steps in order to express 
    
             solidarity with the victims and their families.  Aplt. Add. at 5_8 (Pl. Ex. 7_10).  
    
                  Despite the unattended display ban, which applies to the interior sidewalks 
    
             as well as the East Steps, Mayor Webb elected to postpone removing those items 
    
             for ten to fourteen days.  Aplt. App. at 73, 97.  According to Mr. Hall, the 
    
             mayor's decision was based on "the particularly tragic nature of that event, the 
    
             heinous nature of the crime, and simply the outpouring of sympathy" from 
    
             Denver's community.  Id. at 93.  Like the district court, we believe that the 
    
             Columbine shooting was so unique and so extraordinarily horrific that the
             
     
             mayor's decision not to remove the mourners' teddy bears and flowers is simply 
    
             not probative as to the general operation of the unattended display ban.  See id. at 
    
             140 ("I can't really give weight to [the Columbine displays] as some evidence 
    
             that there is no policy, because that was a totally unique situation.  That was a 
    
             situation which never arose before and probably hopefully never will arise 
    
             again.") (statement by court).  On direct examination, even Ms. Wells expressed 
    
             doubts as to whether the Columbine display was properly described as "an 
    
             exception to their policy [concerning] unattended displays . . . ."  Id. at 73. 
    
                  We must also reject Plaintiffs' contention that the district court erroneously 
    
             denied them the opportunity to develop a complete factual record on the issue of 
    
             selective enforcement.  Aplt. Br. at 14.  At the hearing on Plaintiffs' motion for 
    
             preliminary injunctive relief, the City objected to the following question, posed to 
    
             Mr. Hall: "You think the Columbine situation is more important than Ms. Wells' 
    
             sign?"  Aplt. App. at 98.  The court sustained the objection on the grounds that 
    
             the question was not only argumentative, but also irrelevant in that it asked the 
    
             "witness his personal views about which is more important."  Id. at 99.  We see 
    
             no abuse of discretion in the court's ruling.
    
             III. Free Exercise, Establishment Clause and Equal Protection Challenges
    
                  Plaintiffs' remaining constitutional arguments are somewhat elusive.  The 
    
             underlying premise for all three challenges is that the Winter Solstice sign is
             
     
             "religious in the sense that atheism is a belief system that competes with theistic 
    
             religions . . . ."  Aplt. Br. at 20.  Plaintiffs cite no legal authority for this 
    
             proposition, but as we did in Otero v. State Election Bd. of Okla., 975 F.2d 738, 
    
             740 (10th Cir. 1992), we will assume, without deciding, that atheism is a religion 
    
             for First Amendment purposes.  Next, the plaintiffs claim that:
    
                  By keeping [the Winter Solstice] sign off the steps of City [sic] and 
                  by imposing . . . restrictions on it that do not apply to the creche 
                  [presumably, the unattended display ban], the City is preferring 
                  Christianity over non_religion and theism over atheism.  This 
                  abridges Wells' right . . . to free exercise of her religious beliefs 
                  under the First Amendment and is a denial of equal protection under 
                  the Fourteenth Amendment.  It is also an unconstitutional 
                  establishment of religion under the First Amendment because it 
                  violates the second prong [of] the Lemon test . . . .
             
             Aplt. Br. at 20_21 (footnote omitted); cf. Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602, 612_
    
             13 (1971) (articulating three_part test for Establishment Clause challenges: first, 
    
             the governmental action at issue "must have a secular legislative purpose; second, 
    
             its principal or primary effect must be one that neither advances nor inhibits 
    
             religion; finally, [it] must not foster an excessive government entanglement with 
    
             religion") (internal quotations and citations omitted).  Beyond Lemon, Plaintiffs 
    
             cite no legal authority for these assertions.  
    
                  Because the challenged policies are both generally applicable and neutral as 
    
             to religion, the free exercise claims must fail.  See Shaffer v. Saffle, 148 F.3d 
    
             1180, 1181_82 (10th Cir. 1998) (holding that religion_neutral law that is generally
             
     
             applicable does not violate Free Exercise Clause, despite incidental effect on 
    
             religious practice); accord Employment Div., Dep't of Human Resources v. 
    
             Smith, 494 U.S. 872, 878_79 (1990).  The plaintiffs' claims under the 
    
             Establishment Clause are also unavailing.  As to the exclusion of the Winter 
    
             Solstice sign from the City's display, we find the reasoning employed by Citizens 
    
             Concerned for Separation of Church & State v. City & County of Denver, 508 F. 
    
             Supp. 823 (D. Colo. 1981), aff'd, No. 82_1022 (10th Cir. May 14, 1984) 
    
             (unpublished order), to be persuasive.  See supra note 3.  The fact that the present 
    
             plaintiffs seek to add to the City's display, rather than to dismantle it, makes no 
    
             difference to the Establishment Clause analysis.  Cf. Snyder, 159 F.3d at 1233 
    
             (rejecting Establishment Clause claim by individual seeking "equal public access 
    
             to a legislative body's program of invocational prayers").  With respect to the 
    
             unattended display ban, Plaintiffs fail on each prong of the Lemon test.(11)  As 
    
             explained in our discussion of the significant governmental interests supporting 
    
             the policy, see supra at __ [Op. at 27_29], the unattended display ban has a 
    
             secular purpose.  Cf. Lemon, 403 U.S. at 612.  There is no evidence that the policy's "principal or primary effect" either "advances [or] inhibits religion," id. 
    
             (citation omitted), nor does it  "foster an excessive government entanglement with 
    
             religion."  Id. at 613 (internal quotations and citation omitted).
    
                  Plaintiffs' equal protection claims are also without merit.  Contrary to 
    
             Plaintiffs' characterization, the display, including the Happy Holidays sign, is the 
    
             City's speech.  As explained, the plaintiffs have no First Amendment rights to 
    
             dictate the content of that speech.  Thus, there is no evidence that the plaintiffs 
    
             have been "intentionally treated differently from others similarly situated and that 
    
             there is no rational basis for the difference in treatment."  Village of Willowbrook 
    
             v. Olech, 528 U.S. 562, 564 (2000) (citations omitted).  Without such evidence, 
    
             the equal protection claim must fail.  Nor is there any evidence that similarly 
    
             situated persons were subject to differential treatment with respect to the 
    
             unattended display ban.  As noted in our discussion of the plaintiffs' selective 
    
             enforcement claim, the Columbine mourners were not similarly situated.  See 
    
             supra at __ [Op. at 35_37].
    
                  For the foregoing reasons, the district court's judgment is AFFIRMED.
    
             (11)      The dissent concedes "that a content_neutral policy banning all 
             unattended displays would pass the Lemon test," but concludes that no such 
             policy exists in this case.  Infra at __ [Dissent at 6].  Given our conclusion that 
             Denver does have a content_neutral unattended display ban, we need not address 
             the dissent's analysis under Lemon, nor is it necessary to respond to the dissent's 
             rhetoric regarding the implications of Mr. Hall's brief conversation with an 
             anonymous caller.  See infra at __ [Dissent at 7_8].
             
     
                                          Addendum
    
        
    
        Graphics not available in ASCII format.
        
     
             No. 00_1040, Wells v. City & County of Denver
    
             BRISCOE, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    
                  I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion.  First, I disagree with the 
    
             conclusion that the display on the Denver steps is solely government speech.  Second, I 
    
             disagree with the conclusion that Denver has a neutral policy of banning all unattended 
    
             displays from the steps.  Third, I disagree with the majority's analysis of the 
    
             Establishment Clause issue.
    
                                     Standard of Review
    
                  In a First Amendment case, this court performs an independent examination of the 
    
             record to ensure protection of free speech rights.  Hawkins v. City & County of Denver, 
    
             170 F.3d 1281, 1285 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 528 U.S. 871 (1999).  "In cases involving 
    
             the First Amendment, the de novo standard is appropriate. . . . [A]n appellate court has an 
    
             obligation to make an independent examination of the whole record in order to make sure 
    
             that the judgment does not constitute a forbidden intrusion on the field of free 
    
             expression."  Horstkoetter v. Dep't of Pub. Safety, 159 F.3d 1265, 1270 (10th Cir. 1998) 
    
             (internal quotations omitted).
    
                                     Government Speech
    
                  The majority concludes that the display on the steps is government speech rather 
    
             than private speech.  This conclusion is significant because "when the State is the 
    
             speaker, it may make content_based choices."  Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of Univ. 
    
             of Va., 515 U.S. 819, 833 (1995).  I agree with Wells that the holiday display is not
             
     
             solely government speech, but contains private speech, because it includes a billboard 
    
             which states:
    
                       HAPPY HOLIDAYS                             News 4
                          FROM THE                             Spirit of Colorado
                 Keep the Lights Foundation               Coors Light
                    and the sponsors that           King Soopers · AAA of Colorado
               help maintain the lights at      Denver Rocky Mountain News
               the                                  Rock Bottom Brewery
                  City and County Building       
                                              
             
             Maj. Op. Add.   This large billboard is the only sign evident from the photos of the 
    
             display  included in the record  and it appears to dominate  one side of the display.  See 
    
             id. 
    
                  The majority states that the billboard with the list of sponsors is a thank you from 
    
             the city to the sponsors, making it government speech.  However, the language of the 
    
             billboard is not phrased as a thank you from Denver to the sponsors.  Rather, it is a 
    
             greeting from the sponsors to the public.  To a passerby, the billboard does not appear to 
    
             be from Denver, but from the sponsors, all of whom are private entities.  The billboard 
    
             shows that those private corporations have co_sponsored the holiday display, also making 
    
             the display their speech as well as Denver's speech. 
    
                  In determining this is government speech, the majority relies on the four_factor 
    
             "test" in Knights of Ku Klux Klan v. Curators of University of Missouri, 203 F.3d 1085 
    
             (8th Cir. 2000).  However, it is not clear whether the court in Knights of KKK was 
    
             creating a test to be applied in all government speech cases, or whether it was identifying
             
     
             the factors that evidenced government speech in that case.  See id. at 1093_94.  An 
    
             additional factor relevant to the inquiry is who the listener believes to be the speaker. 
    
             See id. at 1094 n.9 (differentiating the underwriting announcements from letters to the 
    
             editor because the letters "are more obviously the speech of the writer, not the 
    
             government").  
    
                  In Knights of KKK, it was clear that the government was speaking.  See id.  at 
    
             1093_94.  Similarly, in Downs v. Los Angeles Unified School District, 228 F.3d 1003, 
    
             1009_11 (9th Cir. 2000), it was clear to the reader that the bulletin board constituted 
    
             government speech, as presented by a state_employed teacher.  In the present case, it is 
    
             not clear to the reader/listener that the government, rather than the sponsors, is the 
    
             speaker.  All of the factors identified by the majority (purpose of the sign, who paid for 
    
             and built the sign, legal responsibility of the display) address who is actually responsible 
    
             for the message on the sign.  While I agree that Denver owns and controls the sign, there 
    
             is no way for the casual reader/listener to know this.  To a passerby, the sign and the 
    
             message are from a group of private organizations, and the holiday display is at least in 
    
             part their speech.  I dissent from the majority holding that the display is government 
    
             speech.
    
                                       Neutral Policy
    
                  The majority also concludes that Denver has a content_neutral policy of banning 
    
             all unattended displays from the steps.  Because the steps are either a traditional or a
             
     
             designated forum, such a policy would be a constitutional time, place, and manner 
    
             restriction.  See Capitol Square Review & Advisory Bd. v. Pinette, 515 U.S. 753, 761, 
    
             783_84 (Souter, J. concurring), 803 (Stevens, J. dissenting) (1995).  However, I disagree 
    
             with the conclusion that Denver has such a policy.
    
                  John Hall testified that private unattended displays are not permitted on the steps 
    
             or the interior sidewalk and that this unwritten policy had been in place since at least 
    
             1985.  However, on the two occasions that Wells requested information about the need 
    
             for a permit related to her sign, she was not told of such a policy.  An anonymous caller 
    
             inquiring about adding a menorah to the holiday display was not told about this policy. 
    
             Following the Columbine tragedy, a display of cards, flowers, and stuffed animals 
    
             remained on the interior sidewalk in front of the steps of the building for over ten days. 
    
             Further, the annual Christmas display is itself an exception to the policy, as it is replete 
    
             with unattended displays and signs.  
    
                  The majority states that the fact that the policy was not identified to Wells or the 
    
             anonymous caller does not mean it does not exist, and that the Columbine display was a 
    
             one_time exception.  However, Denver's failure to enforce the policy consistently should 
    
             come under very close scrutiny.  See Members of City Council of Los Angeles v. 
    
             Taxpayers for Vincent, 466 U.S. 789, 816 (1984) ("To create an exception for appellees' 
    
             political speech and not these other types of speech might create a risk of engaging in 
    
             constitutionally forbidden content discrimination.").  If Denver is permitted to make
             
     
             exceptions to its policy that private unattended displays are not permitted on the steps or 
    
             interior sidewalk, or if Denver is permitted to make these exceptions without any 
    
             established standards, it has the sort of unbridled discretion that permits viewpoint 
    
             discrimination and violates the First Amendment.  See Schad v. Borough of Mount 
    
             Ephraim, 452 U.S. 61, 84 (1981) (Stevens, J., concurring) ("[M]unicipalities may 
    
             regulate expressive activity__even protected activity__pursuant to narrowly drawn 
    
             content_neutral standards; however, they may not regulate protected activity when the 
    
             only standard provided is the unbridled discretion of a municipal official.").  The 
    
             majority reasons that the discretion is not unbridled because it has been exercised only 
    
             for the Columbine tragedy.  However, there is no indication that the policy was enforced 
    
             prior to Wells' request, only that the policy existed.  Further, the fact that Denver has not 
    
             exercised its discretion to permit an exception to its policy on numerous occasions does 
    
             not make the exercise of its discretion any less unbridled.  There are no clear restrictions 
    
             on the City's discretion or established standards which would in any way restrict the City 
    
             when granting an exception to its policy banning unattended displays.
    
                  Because the policy of disallowing unattended displays from the steps is unwritten 
    
             and subject to exceptions for which there are no standards, the policy is not a content_
    
             neutral time, place, and manner restriction, and it does not pass constitutional muster. 
    
    
     
                                    Establishment Clause
    
                  The majority concludes there is no Establishment Clause violation because we 
    
             previously have found the Denver display to be constitutional and because the 
    
             unattended display ban passes the test created in Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 
    
             (1971).  I disagree.
    
                  The case of Citizens Concerned for Separation of Church & State v. City & 
    
             County of Denver, 508 F. Supp. 823 (D. Colo. 1981), aff'd, No. 82_1022 (10th Cir. May 
    
             14, 1984) (unpublished order), is not persuasive or controlling authority for the 
    
             resolution of the Establishment Clause issue presented.  Citizens dealt with the question 
    
             of whether the display's inclusion of a creche was unconstitutional.  It did not address the 
    
             question of whether including a creche while excluding other religious messages was 
    
             constitutional.  This court has not addressed the question of exclusion of religious 
    
             messages from holiday displays.
    
                  I agree with the majority that a content_neutral policy banning all unattended 
    
             displays would pass the Lemon test.  However, because such a policy does not exist here, 
    
             I would apply the Lemon test to the decision to exclude Wells' sign, rather than any 
    
             alleged policy to ban all unattended displays.  Under the Lemon test, the statute or action 
    
             must have a secular purpose, the primary or principal effect must neither advance nor 
    
             inhibit religion, and it must not foster excessive government entanglement with religion. 
    
             Lemon, 403 U.S. at 612_13.
    
    
     
                  Under Lemon, the first question is whether the decision to prohibit Wells' sign 
    
             has a secular purpose.  Denver argues that its purpose in prohibiting the sign is to keep 
    
             the steps from being blocked.  However, this justification is meaningless since Wells 
    
             proposed putting the sign within the fenced_off display which Denver already had 
    
             located on the steps.  Denver has not identified any other secular reason for its decision.  
    
                  Under Lemon, the second question is whether the principal or primary effect is 
    
             one that neither advances nor inhibits religion.  In Conrad v. City & County of 
    
             Denver,724 P.2d 1309, 1316 (Colo. 1986), the court held that the holiday display's 
    
             primary effect was not to advance or inhibit religion.  However, the court noted that the 
    
             presence of a nativity scene may have the remote and incidental effect of advancing 
    
             religion.  
    
                  Hall testified that when an anonymous caller asked if she could put a menorah in 
    
             the holiday display, Hall told her that she could not.  Thus, Denver has taken the position 
    
             that, as regards religious items, only items pertaining to the holiday of Christmas are 
    
             welcome in its display.  Wells' sign, like the menorah, represents an alternative religious 
    
             perspective that Denver has opted to exclude from its display.   The decision to exclude 
    
             Wells' sign and a menorah from the display sends the message that Denver supports 
    
             Christianity and does not support other religions or religious viewpoints.  When the City 
    
             creates that impression, it violates the Establishment Clause.  Because the decision to 
    
             allow only Christian symbols in the display and to prohibit other religious perspectives
             
     
             has the primary effect of promoting or inhibiting religion, Denver's decision fails the 
    
             second prong of the Lemon test.
    
                  Under Lemon, the third question is whether the decision fosters excessive 
    
             government entanglement with religion.  To determine this question, we are required to 
    
             inquire as to whether there is excessive administrative entanglement and whether the 
    
             government action causes continuing political strife over aid to religion.  Conrad, 724 
    
             P.2d at 1316.  The answer to both of these questions is no.  The only administrative 
    
             responsibilities involved are to deny the requests of all persons who wish to have their 
    
             non_Christian religion represented in the display.  This is not complicated and has not 
    
             taken much administrative time.  The only political strife that exists is caused by 
    
             litigation such as the present case.  A plaintiff cannot create strife by litigating and then 
    
             arguing that the policy causes strife.  Therefore, Denver's decision passes the third prong 
    
             of the Lemon test.
    
                  Because the decision to exclude Wells' sign violates the first two prongs of the 
    
             Lemon test, I dissent from the opinion's holding that there is no basis for concluding 
    
             there is an Establishment Clause violation established in the present case.
    
                  I would reverse the district court's dismissal of Wells' claims and remand for 
    
             further proceedings.
    
             
    
    
    
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