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All told, I think this law should disturb the religious people more than the atheists.
Maybe the wise understand that all this is just stuff made up by men.What I see are ingrates and nasty people who somehow feel that they owe GOD nothing and that GOD owes them everything. Does GOD really ask for so much? I don't think so.
I Corinthians 1:27-29 27 But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. 28 God chose the lowly things of this world and the despised things—and the things that are not—to nullify the things that are, 29 so that no one may boast before him.
The rational minded do.Maybe the wise understand that all this is just stuff made up by men.
But they're going to post the tenet's of Judaism, Islam, Buddhism and Satanism as well aren't they? I mean the Establishment Clause of the 1st Amendment says "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion" and later states in the Supremacy Clause "This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding."The legal battle over Louisiana law requiring schools to display Ten Commandments
It's pretty specific. It says the Ten Commandments need to be displayed in large, easily readable font. The law also says posters displaying the commandments have to include a context statement, the exact wording of which was included in the law passed by Louisiana's Republican-controlled legislature. It's several paragraphs but, in short, says the Ten Commandments, quote, "were a prominent part of American public education for almost three centuries," though I should say some historians argue that isn't true.
The U.S. Supreme Court struck down a similar law to Louisiana's in 1980. In that ruling, the court said requiring schools in Kentucky to post the Ten Commandments, quote, "had no secular legislative purpose," was plainly religious and therefore unconstitutional. Now, Louisiana's attorney general argues the state's law is different and constitutional. She says it passes a history and tradition test and that it's about teaching morals. Opponents aren't buying that, though. They say this case is about getting something that's already been decided back to the Supreme Court, which now has a conservative supermajority.
Let's explain the 7th Commandment to 3rd Graders.
Don't forget there were actually 15 Commandments until Moses accidentally dropped a tablet. [Mel Brooks referenceThe Ten Commandments didn’t come from any god. They came from a man who needed to add some weight to them so he said they came from god. They really are just rules he made in a desperate attempt to reign in an unruly group into a unified one in order to fight their enemies and establish a homeland. The rules were only meant for that group to stop them from doing all the things they are doing that caused disunity. God is always used in this way by leaders trying to get their way, for better or worse. And people tend to fall for it, so they keep on doing it.
Don't forget there were actually 15 Commandments until Moses accidentally dropped a tablet. [Mel Brooks reference]
I certainly ignore them. I dont need religious "commandments" to know how to be a good person.There are really 613 commandments if you dig into the details. The 10 Commandments are seen as some magical rules that would make us all behave perfectly. They are not and since they hold no real consequences they are easily ignored.
The Ten Commandments is a basic tenet of Judaism. It comes from the Torah. Christians stole it, thereby breaking one of the commandments.But they're going to post the tenet's of Judaism, Islam, Buddhism and Satanism as well aren't they? I mean the Establishment Clause of the 1st Amendment says "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion" and later states in the Supremacy Clause "This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding."
Sociology, Philosophy, and History are subjects every decent education should include. I mean they don't teach kids how to even read clocks, or how to write in cursive, or how to read maps. Hopefully education might just return to the standards of the 1950's and not just try not leaving anyone behind --- while students enjoy the same mundane education together. If it wasn't for computers and cell phones the kids would not even be able to communicate with each other because they hardly go outside... Rude is ALL CAPS, but the F word that's just everyday common lingo. And many parents are even more immature than their children... But they certainly do have a passion for body art & piercing, craft beer, computer games, and dressing like they were ten with the vocabulary of a drunken sailor (four letter vocabulary is about all some can handle). Who has time for church with such a heavy roster of pointless frivolity. Society today thinks its freedom from religion instead of freedom of religion. And if you ask someone what they believe, you might just get a little more than a HUH?This sort of thing belongs in church, for whatever religion you may believe, not in schools, especially not public schools. That's what freedom of religion is all about.
I blame people like you for the confusion. You think Christians is anyone who says he is... Christians can generally tell by simply talking to any individual to figure if that person is a true believer. But you wont accept that appraisal as being anything other than mean, and narrow minded. YOU are confused and not me.Christians are whoever says they are Christian and believe in whatever seems to currently fall under the very broad and exceedingly vague definition that no none can agree upon. And there is no god providing any input to clarify it.
I blame people like you for the confusion. You think Christians is anyone who says he is... Christians can generally tell by simply talking to any individual to figure if that person is a true believer. But you wont accept that appraisal as being anything other than mean, and narrow minded. YOU are confused and not me.
The way to test whether this would bother you or not. Is put another faiths,other than christianity,in the classrooms on the wall. Would this bother you?
The way to test whether this would bother you or not. Is put another faiths,other than christianity,in the classrooms on the wall. Would this bother you?
So now you just use hyperbole and BS claims to deflect from what I said?Sociology, Philosophy, and History are subjects every decent education should include. I mean they don't teach kids how to even read clocks, or how to write in cursive, or how to read maps. Hopefully education might just return to the standards of the 1950's and not just try not leaving anyone behind --- while students enjoy the same mundane education together. If it wasn't for computers and cell phones the kids would not even be able to communicate with each other because they hardly go outside... Rude is ALL CAPS, but the F word that's just everyday common lingo. And many parents are even more immature than their children... But they certainly do have a passion for body art & piercing, craft beer, computer games, and dressing like they were ten with the vocabulary of a drunken sailor (four letter vocabulary is about all some can handle). Who has time for church with such a heavy roster of pointless frivolity. Society today thinks its freedom from religion instead of freedom of religion. And if you ask someone what they believe, you might just get a little more than a HUH?
I worked as a teacher, in both the areas of History and Life Sciences (having degrees in Biology and History).
So to answer your question, No. In fact, I would use the opportunity to designate an area of space on one of the walls to put up some element of other faiths. Judaism, Hinduism, Islam, etc. along with the Christian commandments. I would use that to allow for educational discussions on the history and geographical spread of each.
It would encourage the students to learn, and interact in class with each other on the topic of religious differences and similarities. Also backgrounds for historical actions like the crusades, or the fall of Constantinople and the Islamic religion of the Turkish victors in conflict with the Eastern Orthodox Christians.
You are not a Christian and shouldn't be making any determination as to what constitutes one.I blame Christians for the confusion. They came up with way too many variations showing how confused Christians are about their own beliefs. There really is no such thing as a true Christian and any Christian who claims there is will end up in grave disagreement with other Christians. I don’t really think there is such a thing as true any religious belief but many believers get hung up on this. And it never leads to anything good or worthwhile. It is a believers who caused the confusion, not non believers.
If you think that's bad, you should see the taxonomists.I blame Christians for the confusion. They came up with way too many variations showing how confused Christians are about their own beliefs. There really is no such thing as a true Christian and any Christian who claims there is will end up in grave disagreement with other Christians.
You don’t get any say in who is or isn’t a Christian lol.You are not a Christian and shouldn't be making any determination as to what constitutes one.
Being a Christian doesn't give you any right to determine who else is one, what constitutes one.You are not a Christian and shouldn't be making any determination as to what constitutes one.
Wait until the Satanists insist on putting their literature on the walls because the government can't discriminate. Then you can imagine the horror.
What are you talking about?I suspect a lot of people would say that is exactly what the LGBTQRSTUVWXYZ +1@4 dogma in K-12 classrooms is.
It rather begs the question about who this is for. The students won't care about it.
This seems more like a virtue signaling trick.
What are you talking about?
Have you been in elementary schools and seen trans and gay posters plastered all over the school. Tell us about your experience.That a lot of people view the Gay/Trans posters that plaster public schools down to kindergarten as "satanic."
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