Oklahoma Takes Stand Against Fake Religious Freedom
Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry (a conservative Democrat) has vetoed the controversial Religious Viewpoints Antidiscrimination Act (RTF file). The act, which is nearly identical to one recently passed in Texas, forces schools to adopt policies to "protect" students who "voluntarily" express their religious views.
"Henry said students are already allowed to express their faith through voluntary prayer and other activities. He said the legislation was well-intended, but vague and "may trigger a number of unintended consequences that actually impede rather than enhance such expression." Schools could be forced to provide equal time to fringe groups that masquerade as religions and advocate behaviors such as hate speech."
One of the "unintended consequences" of the act was laid out by the Texas House's own research organization, which stated that the law, if enacted, would most likely privilege the Christian majority (though some feared it would empower "Wiccans and anti-Christians" to spread their message to Christian students).
"The bill's constitutionality is questionable ... The bill could serve as a tool to proselytize the majority religious view, Christianity, in Texas schools. The United States is a nation made up of people of many faiths. Children are required to attend school and should be permitted to do so without someone else's religion being imposed on them ... A school should be a religion-free zone - leaving religion for homes, places of worship, and individual hearts."
I was beginning to wonder if any lawmakers or politicians in the "red" states had the guts to stand up for religious minorities (and real religious freedom). With Texas passing the Religious Viewpoints Antidiscrimination Act, and South Carolina passing the Public Invocation Act, its nice to see that Oklahoma won't fall in line with the conservative Christian activists trying to circumvent Church-State separation with vaguely worded legislation and baseless legal challenges. If we had more Governors of conscience, perhaps this anti-religious minority legislation trend would come to an end.
Labels: Christianity, law, Oklahoma, Paganism, Religion, Religious Freedom, South Carolina, Texas
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