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Law & Courts

Louisiana Uses History, Pop Culture to Defend School Ten Commandments Mandate

Schools can use memes, jokes, 鈥楬amilton鈥 quotes to display the Ten Commandments, state argues
By Evie Blad 鈥 August 07, 2024 6 min read
Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill, right, speaks alongside Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry during a press conference regarding the Ten Commandments in schools Monday, Aug. 5, 2024, in Baton Rouge, La. Murrill announced on Monday that she is filing a brief in federal court asking a judge to dismiss a lawsuit seeking to overturn the state鈥檚 new law requiring that the Ten Commandments be displayed in every public school classroom.
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Public schools can meet the requirements of a new Louisiana law that calls for a Ten Commandments poster in every classroom without violating students鈥 constitutional rights, Attorney General Liz Murrill argued.

The law, signed June 19, has already been challenged in federal court. But supporters of such displays are emboldened by recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions they see as cracking open the door to more religious displays and texts in schools.

Teachers could display the text alongside classroom rules, historical quotes, cartoon jokes, and even quotes from the musical 鈥淗amilton鈥 to add context without promoting a specific religion, Murrill鈥檚 office said in a federal court legal brief filled with images of punchy hypothetical examples.

One example includes an internet meme depicting Regina George, a popular high school student from the movie 鈥淢ean Girls,鈥 saying: 鈥淲hy are you so obsessed with me?鈥 with an exasperated look on her face. The still from the film is printed alongside the text of the Ten Commandments and surrounded by headlines from news articles about ACLU lawsuits challenging public displays of the religious text in various communities.

鈥淲e believe there are numerous ways that this law can be applied constitutionally and in ways that create really, really powerful teaching moments for students in our schools,鈥 Murrill said at an Aug. 5 press conference surrounded by large printed examples propped up on easels.

Murrill鈥檚 brief accompanied a request to dismiss a lawsuit brought by a group of parents, the ACLU, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, and the Freedom From Religion Foundation that argues that mandating the Ten Commandments displays would violate students鈥 religious liberty.

鈥楾ell the child not to look at it,鈥 governor says

鈥淚 think we鈥檝e forgotten in this country that democracy actually means majority rules,鈥 Republican Gov. Jeff Landry said at the news conference after a reporter asked him what he would tell parents who are offended by the new legal mandate. 鈥淎nd so what I would say to those parents is that if there are posters in a school and they find them so vulgar, tell the child not to look at it.鈥

The state鈥檚 new law requires all public schools and colleges in the state to display the Ten Commandments in every classroom no later than Jan. 1, 2025. Louisiana officials have agreed not to draft rules under the law until Nov. 15 while courts consider the legal challenge.

Calling Moses, the biblical figure who received the Ten Commandments in scripture, the 鈥渙riginal lawmaker,鈥 Murrill argued the biblical laws are relevant to students because they are foundational to U.S. law and history. Some historians have disputed conservatives鈥 claims about the extent to which protestant Christianity influenced key historical documents.

Here are some examples of suggested classroom posters from the state鈥檚 legal brief.

1. Alongside classroom rules

鈥淎n elementary school or teacher might use the Commandments as an illustration of rules before laying out the class rules,鈥 the brief said.

2. In a 鈥榙ad joke鈥

Computer classes could show the text on a 鈥渉umor-inspired poster,鈥 the brief suggests.

3. With techniques to control stuttering

鈥淔or schools and teachers focused on rhetoric, debate, or the study of speech-language pathology, they might use this opportunity to reinforce strategies for overcoming stuttering,鈥 the brief said.

(In the biblical book of Exodus, Moses describes himself as 鈥渟low of speech and tongue.鈥)

4. With a 鈥楬amilton鈥 quote

Arts classrooms may show Charlton Heston鈥檚 portrayal of Moses in a 1956 film alongside lyrics from the musical 鈥淗amilton,鈥 the filing said.

The Ten Commandments brief cites this movie- and theater-themed H.B. 71 poster featuring Charlton Heston as Moses and Lin-Manuel Miranda as Hamilton.

5. Paired with the writings of civil rights leaders

A teacher may display the commandments with information about civil rights leaders, the brief said.

鈥淔or example, Martin Luther King Jr., who famously required Birmingham campaign volunteers to sign 鈥榯en commandments of non-violence,鈥 or Thurgood Marshall, whom the New York Times memorably described as 鈥榖randishing鈥 the Constitution as Moses brandished the Ten Commandments.鈥

The Ten Commandments brief cites this H.B. 71 poster describing Martin Luther King Jr.鈥檚 Ten Commandments of Non-Violence, alongside Moses鈥檚 own Ten Commandments.

6. With a quote from Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg

History teachers may display the Ten Commandments alongside other historic documents and a quote from the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the filing said.

The Ten Commandments brief cites this poster showing the late Justice Ginsburg鈥檚 emphasis on foundational documents in world history, including the Ten Commandments.

7. Showing the commandments depicted in the U.S. Capitol

Posters 鈥渕ight draw inspiration from the incredible architecture and artwork in the U.S. House of Representatives鈥 chamber, adding that one of Louisiana鈥檚 own congressmen serves as Speaker and looks directly at Moses when presiding from the dais,鈥 said the brief, showing a poster that includes an image of Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson.

The Ten Commandments brief cites this poster describing the lawgivers reflected in the House of Representatives鈥 chamber, and Moses鈥檚 placement directly in front of Speaker Mike Johnson.

Legal challenges over church-state issues in schools

Louisiana鈥檚 new law comes amid a flood of state actions that test the limits of the church-state divide in public schools, among them a directive from Oklahoma Secretary of 91制片厂视频 Ryan Walters that schools put a Bible in every classroom and incorporate it into lessons.

Biblical scholars have questioned the educational purpose of those mandates and suggested they may be difficult for untrained teachers to implement in a way that respects students from all backgrounds.

Lawmakers in Arizona, Georgia, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Utah, and West Virginia have all introduced bills similar to Louisiana鈥檚, but no others have passed, 91制片厂视频 Week reported in June.

See Also

Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry signs bills related to his education plan on June 19, 2024, at Our Lady of Fatima Catholic School in Lafayette, La. Louisiana has become the first state to require that the Ten Commandments be displayed in every public school classroom, the latest move from a GOP-dominated Legislature pushing a conservative agenda under a new governor.
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, a Republican, signs bills related to his education plan on June 19, 2024, at Our Lady of Fatima Catholic School in Lafayette, La. One of those new laws requires that the Ten Commandments be displayed in every public school classroom, but the law is similar to one from Kentucky that the U.S. Supreme Court struck down in 1980.
Brad Bowie/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate via AP

Parents suing to stop Louisiana鈥檚 law, who include nonreligious families and include clergy from a variety of faith backgrounds, have argued the law violates the Supreme Court precedent established in the 1980 case Stone v. Graham. In that decision, the court held that a Kentucky school鈥檚 display of the Ten Commandments violated the establishment clause of the First Amendment because the display 鈥渉ad no secular legislative purpose鈥 and was 鈥減lainly religious in nature.鈥

That ruling relied on a test, from the 1971 case of , that says that a statute must have a secular legislative purpose; its primary effect must neither advance nor inhibit religion, and it must not foster an excessive government entanglement with religion.

鈥淭here is no evidence that the Framers of the Constitution considered the Ten Commandments to be a basis for either American law or government,鈥 said the plaintiff鈥檚 suit, disputing characterizations in the Louisiana bill.

But Murrill鈥檚 brief argued that the Stone precedent was no longer applicable because the Supreme Court effectively overruled the so-called 鈥淟emon test鈥 in the 2022 case of , which centered on a high school football coach who prayed in the middle of the field after games.

The court has also ruled that students can refuse to say the Pledge of Allegiance in school if they have a religious objection, but it has not said that schools must stop saying the pledge altogether, the brief said.

鈥淎s with the Pledge of Allegiance, while students may have a right to opt out of participating in specific lessons, activities, or observances that cause them to violate their faith, they do not have a right to remove content from the curriculum (or the classroom wall) because the presence allegedly offends them,鈥 it said.

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