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A federal judge blocked the Bill of Texas on Wednesday, requiring public school classes, which demands to present religious texts in the latest schools in a string of failures for the Red States, to display ten commandments.
Judge Fred Bairy, while providing an initial prohibition, wrote in an order that the Republican -led legislature could not demonstrate the tradition of public schools posing ten commandments, which he said that he was required for the bill to withstand the court.
“The court found that the time of the founder, and within the history of public education, is inadequate evidence of a comprehensive tradition to justify SB10,” Bayry wrote.
Bayry, who appointed Clinton, also said that the law was not neutral enough on religion to be constitutional. The judge wrote, “Bill” takes favor to the religious questions and is officially in favor of Christian sects on others. ,
Federal Judge blocks the ten commandments law in some districts
A copy of Ten Commandments has been posted along with other historical documents at a hallway at Georgia Capital on June 20, 2024 in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazmore, File)
Families of many religious sects, as well as non-religious plaintiff, brought a lawsuit, arguing that the Bill of Texas gave religious priority in violation of the first amendment on its children.
His trial followed the US Court of Appeal for the fifth circuit in June that a uniform law in Louisiana was unconstitutional. Berry partially trusted the decision to correct his own justification. In Arkansas, a judge overturned another bill about ten commands in public schools this month.
The Supreme Court in 1980 Stone V. The idea of ​​public schools posing religious texts in classes in Graham dismissed the idea. The case was focused on a bill passed by the Kentaki government, requiring the hanging poster of ten commandments in public school classes, which was first violated by the High Court as it lacked a secular purpose.
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The US Supreme Court is shown in the evening in Washington, DC on June 28, 2023 (Drew Anger/Getty Images)
Byry saw that while the Language in Texas’s law had abandoned any religious objectives, the legalists were vocal about its intentions. The judge gave several quotes from state MPs, including major sponsors of the bill in the Senate.
“We want every child, [kindergarten] Through twelve, every day, in every class they sit and read on the wall … those words … because we want to understand them that God’s statement, God’s rules are that they see them in their classes every single day of public education, “State Sen Phil King, said a Republican.
Many other statements quoted by this and the judge demonstrated that when they pass the bill, the MPs had mainly religious objectives.
Ten Command Monuments at Capital in Austin, Wednesday, June 25, 2025. (Jenner/Austin through American-Statesman Getty Image)
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Bill’s writers wrote in a statement with the law that they wanted religious instructions displayed on the walls of the school as they were an important part of history.
The legislators said, “Now that the legal scenario has changed, it is time to pass SB 10 for Texas and restore the history and tradition of ten commands in our state and our nation,” said the MLAs.