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Also, after the Ten Commandments, do we post in the classroom the 8 precepts of Buddhism, its 4 Noble Paths, the I Ching of Tao, and whatever holy sayings the Hindus and the Shintoists and the Bahai crowd have? Then there's the Native Americans, etc., etc., etc.
Or did you think the only religions were Judaism, Christianity and Islam?
I know there are other religions, but no, I don't think their precepts should be displayed. The Ten Commandments are the historical moral precepts of this country and have been accepted as so for the past two hundred years or more. Do you see the 8 precepts of Buddhism posted at the entrance to the Supreme Court chambers?
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Do you propose a federal law mandating it? Or a federal law giving local school districts that authority to allow it? Or a SCOTUS ruling to overturn the 1962 Scotus ruling against public school prayer, or any other religious instruction that's not in an educational context? The individual is however, as WG stated, allowed to pray silently to themselves in a non disruptive way.
I have not called for prayer. As for the Ten Commandments, it would take a Supreme Court ruling as far as I know. I would suggest it be left up to the individual states. I don't see it happening. My main point is that since SCOTUS decided that having the Ten Commandments displayed, which had been done for 150 years, was suddenly a violation of the Constitution, we have lost our moorings as a country. We did not have this large number of mass shootings in the fifties and sixties. You want to restrict gun ownership. I want to establish some public morals.