NPR - The
ACLU and other groups argued in federal court yesterday that a law
passed in Louisiana earlier this year requiring schools to display
the Ten Commandments in classrooms violates a Supreme Court precedent
and the First Amendment. They sued the state to prevent the law from
taking effect in January. This was the first time both parties met over
the issue. The nine Louisiana families who are plaintiffs in the case argue that the law will harm children if it takes effect, Aubri Juhasz of NPR network station WWNO tells Up First. The main focus in court yesterday was whether the case can move forward,
as attorneys argue that the plaintiffs don’t have a case until the
posters go up in the classrooms. The U.S. Supreme Court struck down a
similar law in Kentucky in 1980. The federal court judge in Baton Rouge
says he will decide whether the case will move forward by Nov. 15.
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
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