Gov. Mike Kehoe is right to oppose bills proposed by state Reps. Hardy Billington and Bill Irwin to require all public schools to put on display the Ten Commandments for the students to see. That portion of Torah has been sacred to the Jewish tradition since the beginning of time, as it is told, and millennia later was embraced by Christians, but the proposed bills defy our civil pledge to maintain the separation between "church and state." kAm*6D[ E96 %6? r@>>2?5>6?ED 42? 36 E2F89E 7C@> 2? 9:DE@C:42= 2?5 4F=EFC2= A@:?E @7 G:6H 3FE ?@E 2D :>A@D65 36=:67] WxE 4@F=5 36[ E9@F89[ E92E :7 @FC D49@@= 49:=5C6? H6C6 6IA@D65 E@ E96 %6? r@>>2?5>6?ED E96J >:89E 5:D4@G6C 9@H >2?J @7 E96 CF=6D @FC 4FCC6?E !C6D:56?E 92D 3C@<6?] x 4@F?E 7:G6[ E9@F89 E96C6 >2J 36 >@C6]Xk^Am kAm%96C6 :D E96 DE@CJ :? E96
Letter: Politicians, not students, are the ones who need commandments
St. Louis Post-Dispatch1 hrs ago
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