This article is about the ban on the posting of the Ten Commandments in the classroom of the public school. To me, removing a simple post related to religion is to try to eliminate all forms of religion in school. I believe that the serious decline of student behavior is caused by the elimination of religion and elimination of fear of God. Since religion is in school, students are held at higher education institutions so students are well-balanced ethical behavior.
People who disagree with the publication of the Ten Commandments on Public Property believe that it violates the provisions of the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. By contrast, groups that support the public display of the Ten Commandments, such as the Order of Brothers, say that the commandments are not necessarily religious, represent the moral and legal basis of society, and are suitable as historical sources of gifts I will argue. In addition, some people think that prohibition of public religious activities like Judge Roy Moore violates the guarantee of freedom of religion by the first amendment.
This article is about the ban on the posting of the Ten Commandments in the classroom of the public school. To me, removing a simple post related to religion is to try to eliminate all forms of religion in school. I believe that the serious decline of student behavior is caused by the elimination of religion and elimination of fear of God. Since religion is in school, students are held at higher education institutions so students are well-balanced ethical behavior.
Since the mid 1990s it has become more common to display ten commandments in public buildings outside the school. Some judges led to a lawsuit because they took the attention of the whole country when they issued the Ten Commandments in the court. Alabama Judge Judge Roy Moore used this propaganda when he removed his 10 commandments from the court in November 2000 and refused to run for the President of the Supreme Court of Alabama Supreme Court. After taking office in January 2001, he temporarily avoided the conflict by issuing a bill. Ten Commandments in his room, not in the Court of the Supreme Court. However, Moore set up a 10 ton monument weighing 5,300 pounds in the judicial building on the summer night of 2001. A citizen of a group filed a lawsuit against the US District Court and opposed it. In November 2002, the Federal Court issued an order to direct Moore to dismantle the monument. Moore refused to appeal this decision and pledged (Glassroth v. Moore, 242 F.Supp. 2 1068)