[1/2] theguardian.com/us-news/articl

Louisiana Republicans passed a law to require every public school classroom to display a copy of the Ten Commandments. This sectarian requirement obviously contradicts the First Amendment (combined with the subsequent amendment which says states can't do those things either). It prohibits establishment of religion. But we can't count on those Republican wreckers on the Supreme Court …

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@rms Agree but seems like nothing else left to see or believe in...

Like losing / not teaching some principles or examples of of it, though this is as much of a reflection of sterility and detachment in life / schools / classes as anything.

And yes many parts of religion can be unworthy or inconsistent / without solid or clear principles... so although I wouldn't want all principles needed to be followed so strictly either (like a religion in school), this just highlights lack of anything coherent in every day life other than more monotony / non-religion / non-believe in everything (more about the principles I mean here in this context)...

I've heard university lecturers uses mottos, ethos, code of conduct against their own institute to lesser avail, so yeah doesn't mean institutes believe it either! But helps when fighting to say "this" and point to the plaque where it is above the blackboard in terms of humanity / being human or whatever point argued in class... which I appreciate you are not necessarily interested in directly having asked you...

You like to stick to komputa rather than people directly :)

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