Well if you want to play that game you can refer to the 10th amendment and the delegation of powers and how it relates to the states. To my knowledge there is no standing law that bars people from instituting a class on biblical studies as it relates public or private. What you have is one group of peoples, the liberal "progressive" constitutional interpretation where seperation of church and state exists as law even though there is no mention of it in any legal documents or the constitution. The original intent of Separation of Church and State was meant to be one sided, solely to protect the people from the government delving into religion, amazing how it got warped in the last half century by "progressive" judges. At any rate you could perhaps argue judicial precedent for this particular case, but I would expect that wouldn't hold any weight until this action in Odessa is later determined.
Isn't it funny how liberals and democrats, more these days, love to profess their love for democracy, to claim their motives are in favor of such, but the only way you ever get shit done is by mandate from behind the bench and never by mandate of the people? Weird.
Last edited by Mojo_PeiPei; 04-27-2005 at 09:28 PM..
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