Court gives Louisiana green light to display Ten Commandments in every public school
After the Ten Commandments are posted, can the school principal add a few more for good measure?
Under the heading of “Here we go again,” I just came across a headline over an Associated Press story that declared, “Court clears way for Louisiana law requiring Ten Commandments in classrooms to take effect.”
Glory hallelujah.
Then again, as a certain Ayatollah found out the other day after his 37-year reign of terror, forced religion rarely works out very well.
You can enslave people and incarcerate people and indoctrinate people until the cows come home, but they’ll never believe in their hearts what you’re forcing upon them, which is really the only place that counts.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, dominated by judges who have been drinking Kool-Aid provided by MAGA (Make America Genuflect Again), thinks forcing religious belief upon children in the public schools is fine and dandy.
Judges in the 5th Circuit voted 12-6 to overturn a lower court decision that blocked the implementation of a Louisiana law requiring that the Ten Commandments be prominently displayed in every classroom in every public school throughout the state, including elementary, middle, high school and even every public college or university.

