Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
No, I don’t agree that students are made to pray. Spectators are not made to pray. If a Muslim coach was praying, I’d respect his right to do so. I am not Muslim and don’t pray to Allah. But coach is welcome to do so. I would not stand on his prayer mat, that’s his prayer mat.
Where is a news source that states that football coaches and sports coaches are forcing athletes to pray?
You pray to Allah every time you pray. Allah literally is the word for God. Literally the same god as yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
No, I don’t agree that students are made to pray. Spectators are not made to pray. If a Muslim coach was praying, I’d respect his right to do so. I am not Muslim and don’t pray to Allah. But coach is welcome to do so. I would not stand on his prayer mat, that’s his prayer mat.
Where is a news source that states that football coaches and sports coaches are forcing athletes to pray?
You pray to Allah every time you pray. Allah literally is the word for God. Literally the same god as yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
No, I don’t agree that students are made to pray. Spectators are not made to pray. If a Muslim coach was praying, I’d respect his right to do so. I am not Muslim and don’t pray to Allah. But coach is welcome to do so. I would not stand on his prayer mat, that’s his prayer mat.
Where is a news source that states that football coaches and sports coaches are forcing athletes to pray?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
No, I don’t agree that students are made to pray. Spectators are not made to pray. If a Muslim coach was praying, I’d respect his right to do so. I am not Muslim and don’t pray to Allah. But coach is welcome to do so. I would not stand on his prayer mat, that’s his prayer mat.
Where is a news source that states that football coaches and sports coaches are forcing athletes to pray?
Again you clearly did not read Kavenaugh’s opinion where he states student would be compelled, they were in the court case, they worried about playing time.
I did read that. A student said he didn’t pray with the coach, because he didn’t agree with the coach’s religious values- but he was still a starting football player because of his talent and athleticism. The player still played despite not praying with the coach.
The opinion also read that all athletes try to curry favor with the their head coaches, and not just through participation in prayer.
When Ben Rothelsberger was a high school athlete, he was not a starter. The head coach played his own son at quarterback. And his son was not as good as Ben-at all. Coaches start and play who they wish.
Exactly Kavenaugh said that while one student may be so good that he feels he can skip the prayer and pray others on the bubble will be compelled to pray, which infringes on their right to religion. The same reason teachers can’t lead prayers.
The situation where coaches favor their son does not infringe on any constitutional rights and while that sucks it’s not against the constitution.
https://www.scotusblog.com/2022/06/justices-side-with-high-school-football-coach-who-prayed-on-the-field-with-students/
Well- SCOTUS ruled. It’s not the decision of anyone posting here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
No, I don’t agree that students are made to pray. Spectators are not made to pray. If a Muslim coach was praying, I’d respect his right to do so. I am not Muslim and don’t pray to Allah. But coach is welcome to do so. I would not stand on his prayer mat, that’s his prayer mat.
Where is a news source that states that football coaches and sports coaches are forcing athletes to pray?
Again you clearly did not read Kavenaugh’s opinion where he states student would be compelled, they were in the court case, they worried about playing time.
I did read that. A student said he didn’t pray with the coach, because he didn’t agree with the coach’s religious values- but he was still a starting football player because of his talent and athleticism. The player still played despite not praying with the coach.
The opinion also read that all athletes try to curry favor with the their head coaches, and not just through participation in prayer.
When Ben Rothelsberger was a high school athlete, he was not a starter. The head coach played his own son at quarterback. And his son was not as good as Ben-at all. Coaches start and play who they wish.
Exactly Kavenaugh said that while one student may be so good that he feels he can skip the prayer and pray others on the bubble will be compelled to pray, which infringes on their right to religion. The same reason teachers can’t lead prayers.
The situation where coaches favor their son does not infringe on any constitutional rights and while that sucks it’s not against the constitution.
https://www.scotusblog.com/2022/06/justices-side-with-high-school-football-coach-who-prayed-on-the-field-with-students/
Well- SCOTUS ruled. It’s not the decision of anyone posting here.
I don't think I've seen the SCOTUS referenced so many times in the religion forum before. That tells me exactly what I need to know about you. You're party and country before God. You hang on to your warm fuzzies about SCOTUS. As recent rulings have shown, things that have long been considered the law of the land can be overturned though it takes time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
No, I don’t agree that students are made to pray. Spectators are not made to pray. If a Muslim coach was praying, I’d respect his right to do so. I am not Muslim and don’t pray to Allah. But coach is welcome to do so. I would not stand on his prayer mat, that’s his prayer mat.
Where is a news source that states that football coaches and sports coaches are forcing athletes to pray?
Again you clearly did not read Kavenaugh’s opinion where he states student would be compelled, they were in the court case, they worried about playing time.
I did read that. A student said he didn’t pray with the coach, because he didn’t agree with the coach’s religious values- but he was still a starting football player because of his talent and athleticism. The player still played despite not praying with the coach.
The opinion also read that all athletes try to curry favor with the their head coaches, and not just through participation in prayer.
When Ben Rothelsberger was a high school athlete, he was not a starter. The head coach played his own son at quarterback. And his son was not as good as Ben-at all. Coaches start and play who they wish.
Exactly Kavenaugh said that while one student may be so good that he feels he can skip the prayer and pray others on the bubble will be compelled to pray, which infringes on their right to religion. The same reason teachers can’t lead prayers.
The situation where coaches favor their son does not infringe on any constitutional rights and while that sucks it’s not against the constitution.
https://www.scotusblog.com/2022/06/justices-side-with-high-school-football-coach-who-prayed-on-the-field-with-students/
Well- SCOTUS ruled. It’s not the decision of anyone posting here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
No, I don’t agree that students are made to pray. Spectators are not made to pray. If a Muslim coach was praying, I’d respect his right to do so. I am not Muslim and don’t pray to Allah. But coach is welcome to do so. I would not stand on his prayer mat, that’s his prayer mat.
Where is a news source that states that football coaches and sports coaches are forcing athletes to pray?
Again you clearly did not read Kavenaugh’s opinion where he states student would be compelled, they were in the court case, they worried about playing time.
I did read that. A student said he didn’t pray with the coach, because he didn’t agree with the coach’s religious values- but he was still a starting football player because of his talent and athleticism. The player still played despite not praying with the coach.
The opinion also read that all athletes try to curry favor with the their head coaches, and not just through participation in prayer.
When Ben Rothelsberger was a high school athlete, he was not a starter. The head coach played his own son at quarterback. And his son was not as good as Ben-at all. Coaches start and play who they wish.
Exactly Kavenaugh said that while one student may be so good that he feels he can skip the prayer and pray others on the bubble will be compelled to pray, which infringes on their right to religion. The same reason teachers can’t lead prayers.
The situation where coaches favor their son does not infringe on any constitutional rights and while that sucks it’s not against the constitution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else cringe at blatant evangelism in sports?
Prayer circles, coaches proselytizing, etc?
It’s at all levels — youth, college, pro.
I get praying for the safety of participants but why do these people thing God cares about sports, much less has a preference for a victor? Specifically, why do some winners insinuate that God helped them win?
You "cringe" at this, OP? What an odd choice of words. Are you always so fragile?
I think it's great and has a positive influence on younger kits/ players.
If you've never been to Faith Night at Nats Park, you should do so one year. It's very uplifting.
Tgey guy next to you being gay and proud of it does not infringe on any of your rights.
Coach lead prays does.
Your "rights?" You can step away from this coach-led prayer, you know. You aren't forced to participate, like I am forced to look at gay garb if I choose to go to an MLB game on "pride" night.
You can’t step away if you think it will offend the coach and affect your playing time, which was actually called out in the conservatives response as a violation of the students rights.
Coaches have every right to pray alone but when student join them it steps over the violation of rights… the conservatives said so .
Looking at gay garb does not violate your right to religion
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
No, I don’t agree that students are made to pray. Spectators are not made to pray. If a Muslim coach was praying, I’d respect his right to do so. I am not Muslim and don’t pray to Allah. But coach is welcome to do so. I would not stand on his prayer mat, that’s his prayer mat.
Where is a news source that states that football coaches and sports coaches are forcing athletes to pray?
Again you clearly did not read Kavenaugh’s opinion where he states student would be compelled, they were in the court case, they worried about playing time.
I did read that. A student said he didn’t pray with the coach, because he didn’t agree with the coach’s religious values- but he was still a starting football player because of his talent and athleticism. The player still played despite not praying with the coach.
The opinion also read that all athletes try to curry favor with the their head coaches, and not just through participation in prayer.
When Ben Rothelsberger was a high school athlete, he was not a starter. The head coach played his own son at quarterback. And his son was not as good as Ben-at all. Coaches start and play who they wish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
No, I don’t agree that students are made to pray. Spectators are not made to pray. If a Muslim coach was praying, I’d respect his right to do so. I am not Muslim and don’t pray to Allah. But coach is welcome to do so. I would not stand on his prayer mat, that’s his prayer mat.
Where is a news source that states that football coaches and sports coaches are forcing athletes to pray?
Again you clearly did not read Kavenaugh’s opinion where he states student would be compelled, they were in the court case, they worried about playing time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
No, I don’t agree that students are made to pray. Spectators are not made to pray. If a Muslim coach was praying, I’d respect his right to do so. I am not Muslim and don’t pray to Allah. But coach is welcome to do so. I would not stand on his prayer mat, that’s his prayer mat.
Where is a news source that states that football coaches and sports coaches are forcing athletes to pray?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
So you agree that players are compelled to at least fake it.
You’d just stand on a prayer mat and go through the motions and not move your lips and you’d be comfortable doing that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Just keep your lips still and no prayer can hurt you. Muslim, Jewish, Christian- still lips will keep those prayers away from u and they can’t hurt u. U will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.
This doesn't have anything to do with Christianity you know.
And I'm not sure I don't hate the SCOTUS too. Looks like the dragged in a bunch of second-tier types in just to pay off their political pals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 on Monday that a high school coach’s post-game prayers on a football field were in-bounds.
Joseph Kennedy’s prayers are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech and free exercise of religion, the court decided. The coach didn’t coerce any Bremerton, Washington, high school players into praying, so the school district was wrong to try to stop him from practicing his Christian faith.
“The Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of discrimination,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the conservative majority, citing a 1992 precedent. “Learning how to tolerate speech or prayer of all kinds is part of learning how to live in a pluralistic society,’ a trait of character essential to ‘a tolerant citizenry.’”
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/april/praying-coach-scotus-kennedy-bremerton-schools.html
Atheists and anti-theists posting here are not able to be tolerant citizens. Go figure. It’s always the people who claim to be the most tolerant and accepting that are the least tolerant and accepting.
Christians have the right to pray in public. People who don’t believe in religion and prayer don’t have to pray, or be religious. Op, and others who wish they could take away this right-it’s not going to happen in our free society. You may wish to live in a country that limits freedom of speech and religion. You are out of luck in that regard in America.
As atheist troll above states- just don’t move your lips when a gang of praying Christians physically assault you by forcibly pulling you into a group prayer. God won’t hear your prayer if your lips don’t move. Also they can only see you if you move, so stand still and they can’t see you. Wear earth tones to blend into nature so you can flee if necessary and take refuge among the trees. Work on your cardio so if the praying Christians give chase, your endurance can outlast them. /s
People in the position of power do not have the right to infringe on other people’s right to religion by making them feel compelled to pray a religion they doing believe it.
The second a coach is praying to Allah with the team is the moment the SCOTUS will change their ruling.
SCOTUS has the right and duty.
No one is being forced to pray or be religious. SCOTUS is affirming the right Americans have to be religious and pray. You just don’t like it.
You can keep trying to push bigotry and hatred against Muslims as a little treat- but you are talking out your rear end.
Students and players are forced to pray or compelled. Both violate the right to religion.
Even Kavanaugh stated that in his statement.
You would be okay if your child’s coach had them pray to Allah before/after a game?
You are a lying troll who hates freedom.
You hate religious people and especially Catholics; you hate SCOTUS.
Nobody is forcing anyone to pray. Still lips troll disappeared.