In 1978, the Kentucky legislature introduced the controversial law KRS 158.178, which required a permanent copy of the Ten Commandments to be framed on a wall in each public elementary and secondary ...
"I won’t dare put a Democratic bumper sticker on my car because I don’t want to get run off the road or have my tires slashed." ...
"I won’t dare put a Democratic bumper sticker on my car because I don’t want to get run off the road or have my tires slashed." ...
El Paso Matters on MSN
GOP primary draws 7 candidates for party’s 16th Congressional District nomination
The crowded field is emerging as El Paso County’s long Democratic stronghold saw an uptick in Republican voters in 2024 – ...
The Tennessee House of Representatives has approved a bill allowing all public and charter schools to prominently display the ...
A closely watched bill clearing the Tennessee House would allow public school districts to display the Ten Commandments.
WDTV on MSN
New bill would require ‘In God We Trust’ & Ten Commandments in all W.Va. public buildings & schools
House Bill 5619, introduced by Delegate Elias Coop-Gonzalez on Monday, would require public buildings and schools to display both the national motto “In God We Trust” and the Ten Commandments on ...
Representatives from West Tennessee had varying votes, reflecting mixed support across the region.
A bill proposed in the Alabama Senate would require school systems to display a poster of the Ten Commandments, along with quotations that seek to show them as central to American history and law.
Tennessee House Republicans want public schools to be able to display the Ten Commandments as a historical document akin to the U.S. Constitution.
House Bill 47 would allow state public and charter schools to display the Ten Commandment alongside other key historical documents.
The Ten Commandments could be posted in public schools under legislation passed by the Tennessee House of Representatives.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results