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Louisiana’s controversial law requiring public schools and colleges to post the Ten Commandments violates the U.S.
The court unanimously ruled that the state cannot require schools and universities to display the Commandments.
Louisiana’s controversial law requiring public schools and colleges to post the Ten Commandments violates the U.S. Constitution and cannot be enforced, a federal appeals court ruled Friday.
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Gorham: Gov. Gregg Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Attorney General Ken Paxton are doing a wonderful job of trying to ...
A librarian is out of a job because of what she calls political pressure over a book about a transgender child that was part ...
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott gave his pen a real workout over the weekend, signing into law measures hat attack the LGBTQ community ...
Visitors walk past a monument of the Ten Commandments outside the Capitol. A group of Texas families is suing to block a new state law requiring classroom displays of the commandments from taking ...
The law specifies the exact wording that must be used, and that the text size and typeface must be readable for a person with ...
Louisiana's law mandating Ten Commandments displays in public schools deemed unconstitutional by 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, with judges citing First Amendment violations.
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