Saint Isidore vs Karl Marx

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A majore case for religion in education is being heard today in the Supreme Court.

1. Cultural Marxists, Marxists of all stripes, will always lie. So when anyone points to the Constitution and claims it bars religion anywhere, especially in education, why would you believe them?



2. No, Jefferson never said religion should be kept out of any aspect of society. He simply said that government could not dictate anyone’s religion. As for the famous “separation of church and state,” the phrase appears in no federal document. In fact, at the time of ratification of the Constitution, ten of the thirteen colonies had some provision recognizing Christianity as either the official, or the recommended religion in their state constitutions.
From the 1790 Massachusetts Constitution, written by John Adams, includes: [the] good order and preservation of civil government essentially depend(s) upon piety, religion, and morality…by the institution of public worship of God and of the public instruction in piety, religion, and morality…”
Constitution of Massachusetts - Wikipedia



3. How gullible must one be to be convinced that the Founders wanted to restrict religion, when every one of them was deeply religious…..that’s the Judeo-Christian religion. 55 of 56 signers of the Declaration were Bible-believing church attending Christians.
  • Common law itself comes from Blackstone, who was Christian, and common law comes from the Scriptures
    God is mentioned four times in the Declaration of Independence. Jesus Christ is referenced in the Consitution.



4. Saint Isidore Catholic Charter School is asking to Supreme Court to right the decades long wrong that restricts religion in schools, and prevent tax dollars from funding both religious and atheistic (Marxist) versions that predominate today.




5. “WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Supreme Court justices heard oral arguments Wednesday over the nation’s first religious charter school that aims to open in Oklahoma, putting the constitutionality of a state-funded Catholic education to the test.

A state board in Oklahoma approved St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School to operate as a publicly funded charter school in 2023. The Oklahoma Supreme Court blocked the school from opening in a June ruling, finding the concept of a religious charter school a violation of the Constitution’s prohibition against government-established religion.” U.S. Supreme Court hears Oklahoma Catholic charter school case • Oklahoma Voice



How do you suppose the Supreme Court will decide?
 
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A majore case for religion in education is being heard today in the Supreme Court.

1. Cultural Marxists, Marxists of all stripes, will always lie. So when anyone points to the Constitution and claims it bars religion anywhere, especially in education, why would you believe them?



2. No, Jefferson never said religion should be kept out of any aspect of society. He simply said that government could not dictate anyone’s religion. As for the famous “separation of church and state,” the phrase appears in no federal document. In fact, at the time of ratification of the Constitution, ten of the thirteen colonies had some provision recognizing Christianity as either the official, or the recommended religion in their state constitutions.
From the 1790 Massachusetts Constitution, written by John Adams, includes: [the] good order and preservation of civil government essentially depend(s) upon piety, religion, and morality…by the institution of public worship of God and of the public instruction in piety, religion, and morality…”
Constitution of Massachusetts - Wikipedia



3. How gullible must one be to be convinced that the Founders wanted to restrict religion, when every one of them was deeply religious…..that’s the Judeo-Christian religion. 55 of 56 signers of the Declaration were Bible-believing church attending Christians.
  • Common law itself comes from Blackstone, who was Christian, and common law comes from the Scriptures
    God is mentioned four times in the Declaration of Independence. Jesus Christ is referenced in the Consitution.



4. Saint Isidore Catholic Charter School is asking to Supreme Court to right the decades long wrong that restricts religion in schools, and prevent tax dollars from funding both religious and atheistic (Marxist) versions that predominate today.




5. “WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Supreme Court justices heard oral arguments Wednesday over the nation’s first religious charter school that aims to open in Oklahoma, putting the constitutionality of a state-funded Catholic education to the test.

A state board in Oklahoma approved St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School to operate as a publicly funded charter school in 2023. The Oklahoma Supreme Court blocked the school from opening in a June ruling, finding the concept of a religious charter school a violation of the Constitution’s prohibition against government-established religion.” U.S. Supreme Court hears Oklahoma Catholic charter school case • Oklahoma Voice



How do you suppose the Supreme Court will decide?
 

"Faith in schools

Author HeadshotBy Adam Liptak
I cover the Supreme Court.
In just the last month, the Supreme Court has heard three important religion cases, culminating in yesterday’s argument over a Catholic charter school in Oklahoma. Judging from the justices’ questioning, the side pressing religious-freedom claims seemed likely to prevail in all three.
That would extend a remarkable winning streak for religion at the Supreme Court.
Since 2012, the pro-religion side has won all but one of 16 First Amendment cases about the government’s relationship with faith. (The exception: The court rejected a challenge to the first Trump administration’s ban on travel from several predominantly Muslim countries.)
The court has been especially active in cases involving religious education. It said if the government was helping private schools, it couldn’t exclude religious ones. It exempted religious schools from anti-discrimination laws. In one pending case, the justices seemed poised to let parents with religious objections withdraw their children during discussions of gay and transgender themes. Yesterday they seemed likely to let a Catholic organization start a charter school in Oklahoma — which would make it the first religious school to get state charter funds.
A 2021 study of religion rulings since Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court in 2005 found that the Roberts court ruled in favor of religious people and groups over 83 percent of the time, compared with about 50 percent of the time for other courts since 1953. “In most of these cases, the winning religion was a mainstream Christian organization, whereas in the past pro-religion outcomes more frequently favored minority or marginal religious organizations,” the study’s authors — Lee Epstein, of Washington University in St. Louis, and Eric Posner, of the University of Chicago — wrote.

If the court rules in favor of religious claims in all three of the pending cases, that figure will rise to 88 percent."
The New York Times


Looks like we have the Devil on the run......
 
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