Depends on which translation and grouping they use. It could be Judaism or it could be Christianity.EP45 wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 9:20 pmsrothstein wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 7:59 pmAs was pointed out, there are different versions of the Ten Commandments for different religions. In addition, there are a lot of religions that do not believe in the Ten Commandment. Whichever version you post in a government building (like a school) is establishing a specific religion as the state religion. This is a violation of the exact wording of the First Amendment.EP45 wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 6:01 pm "I can't believe anyone would support having the government tell us what religion we should be posting. This a clear violation of the 1st Amendment."
This one stumped me. I am in the process of looking up the the author's intent for SB1515 (Senator Phil King maybe). Why exactly is SB 1515 "wrong"?
About the only way I could see it being legal is if you posted it with things like Hammurabi's Code, the Magna Carta, and the Constitution, making it a display on the history of law.
Which specific religion?
Reading the link to the Wikipedia article you listed, and following its links to the Van Order v. Perry case, makes it even more confusing. Some of the reasons they (well, Breyer mostly) gave for finding it to be secular were who paid for it and how they went about it. They examined who paid for it (the Elks and Cecil B. DeMille) and how long it had been there with no problems (40 years). An interesting point is that the Elks met with representatives of several faiths to find a secular wording of it. I wonder how many of the faiths in those meetings were some variety of Christianity and how many were Muslim or Buddhist.
But the big difference is that the monument was paid for by a private group and donated to the state. This bill requires the poster, specifies it can be paid for with public funds or by private donation, and does not give any explanation for why it should be there. Based on the case McCreary County v. American Civil Liberties Union, which was decided the same day as the Van Order case, it would look to me like the bill under discussion would be found unconstitutional. In that case, they even took my other suggestion of adding other documents to make it more of a basis of law display and still lost.
All told, SCOTUS has made this a very confusing area to look into.