Texas
Related: About this forumTexas inches closer to requiring Ten Commandments in schools
Should the controversial bill pass, Texas would join Louisiana in mandating that all classrooms display the religious text if the measure survives legal challenges.
AUSTIN, Texas (CN) Texans had their last chance to comment on a bill requiring schools to display the Ten Commandments at a legislative hearing early Wednesday morning.
Just after 3:30 a.m., the Texas House Public Education Committee took up Senate Bill 10, a controversial proposal requiring a poster of the Ten Commandments in all the state's public elementary and secondary school classrooms. The bill sailed through the Senate as a priority piece of legislation for Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick.
After enduring a grueling 10 hours of voting on bills Tuesday in the House chamber and waiting several more hours for the committee to get through 19 other bills it was set to consider, Representative Candy Noble, a Republican from Lucas, made her case for the legislation she's sponsoring in the House.
In Noble's words, Texas classrooms are crying out for moral guidance, which is best provided by displaying the religious text. She said she also wants to reintroduce students to a vital document that shaped the country.
https://www.courthousenews.com/texas-inches-closer-to-requiring-ten-commandments-in-schools/

walkingman
(9,160 posts)The dumbing down of America is very real.
Bernardo de La Paz
(55,108 posts)lastlib
(25,825 posts)F*CK THEIR choice. That is all.
Grins
(8,320 posts)Argue separation of state and religion, but stipulate you are fine with it - if they delete the first three commandments (Catholic version) or first 4 (King James Protestant version.)
Thatll make them howl!
If they dont agree, then they are admitting their intentions are non-secular.