US Texas to take up bill requiring Ten Commandments in every public school classroom - WTF is "Separation of Church & State"?

The Texas state Senate Education Committee this week will take up a bill requiring the Ten Commandments to be installed in every public school classroom, and another that would allow schools to hire pastors or chaplains instead of counselors.


“A public elementary or secondary school shall display in a conspicuous place in each classroom of the school a durable poster or framed copy of the Ten Commandments,” reads SB 1515.

The bill is extremely specific, mandating the size of the poster (at least 16 x 20), and that it be readable from anywhere in the classroom: “in a size and typeface that is legible to a person with average vision from anywhere in the classroom in which the poster or framed copy is displayed.”

The bill also includes the complete text of the Ten Commandments, in the version ordained by its author, state Senator Phil King, a Republican.

Senator King’s bill goes as far as to mandate that if a school classroom does not have the Ten Commandments posted, it “must” accept a copy if anyone donates one, and any extras “must” be offered for donation to any other school. It can also use taxpayer funds to purchase a copy.


NBC News senior investigative reporter Mike Hixenbaugh, who posted news of the bill on Monday, points out language in the Ten Commandments might be confusing to a first grader.


The Education Committee will also take up a bill “allowing school districts to employ chaplains to perform the duties of school counselors.”

The bill, SB 763, specifies that the chaplains do not need to be certified by the state education board.

Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott, believed to be gauging a run for the White House, as the state Attorney General won a U.S. Supreme Court case allowing the Ten Commandments to be displayed on the state capitol grounds.



A constitutional attorney for the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF) in 2019 wrote allowing the Ten Commandments in classrooms would “impose biblical law on the state’s public schools,” and added: “Such displays are illegal.”






 
NOT. WHAT THAT PHRASE ACTUALLY MEANS.
Public schools are part of the state.

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When Jefferson used the term "separation of church and state" he wasn't saying "gubbament better not touch anything religious ever" he was arguing that a state government had no business telling one denomination of Christians they had to worship the main denomination in the state at the time. Baptists might as well have been Mormons in the eyes of the Anglican church and the Danbury baptists wrote to Jefferson expressing concern that their state lacked religious protections. Jefferson responded in a letter where he used the separation of church and state argument to argue that the state couldn't force baptists to practice as Anglicans or vice versa.

Having posters of the Ten Commandments in schools doesn't force anyone to practice a different faith, there is no oppression or declaration that students must believe or practice the ten commandments as a spiritual matter.

Now if they tried to force them to do Bible study to pass their classes etc yeah that could probably be seen as more akin to what Jefferson wrote. But these histrionic atheists who shriek like hateful banshees any time any governmental body so much as invokes the name of Christ really out themselves for the godless heretics they are, who would use the words of a Christian founder of a Christian nation to bludgeon others into obedience.
 
SEPARATION. OF CHURCH AND STATE.
Yet the very man who popularized that phrasing also encouraged religious education in the Northwest Territory. From the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, Article 3: "Religion, morality, and knowledge, being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged."
 
These stunt bills are so gay.

Whatever they're trying to accomplish by sponsoring them, it's not working.
The last stunt move that really worked, at least for a bit, was shipping the illegals to Martha's Vinyard and other elite leftist places. But that just petered out.

I guess Texas can always bring up secession again.
 
Having posters of the Ten Commandments in schools doesn't force anyone to practice a different faith, there is no oppression or declaration that students must believe or practice the ten commandments as a spiritual matter.
Irrespective of its intent, having religious references within school grounds is crossing the line as it can be viewed as an endorsement of religion faith. Especially if it's mandated by state law.
 
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