Ten Commandments Out, Pride Banners In

The ACLU and several other civil rights groups are supporting a federal lawsuit to strike down a new Louisiana law that mandates the Ten Commandments be displayed in public school classrooms. These civil rights groups claim they are protecting “separation of church and state” and that public schools are no place for religious indoctrination.

Advertisement

The lawsuit arrives during Pride Month, when hundreds of government organizations, including educational institutions, declare their everlasting devotion to the cult of LGBTQ. Due to a concerted effort by militant activists, the United States has transformed into a country where displaying Pride and Black Lives Matter banners in the classroom is normal, but posting the Ten Commandments in a classroom is unconstitutional.

Corporations, academia, law enforcement agencies, and media entities turn June into the new American Ramadan, honoring the unofficial state religion.

Ed Morrissey

How about we all stop using classrooms as battlegrounds? The only flags that schools should display are the US, state, and local city flag (if applicable). Political interest-group flags don't belong there, and neither does political interest-group propaganda. I don't see an issue with posting the Ten Commandments, but we can probably live without them in K-12 classrooms as decorations. 

It's either that or everyone gets to post everything in those classrooms. Or maybe, just maybe, we should start home-schooling kids instead. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Trending on HotAir Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement