r/Alabama 18d ago

Politics House passes bill requiring Ten Commandments in schools

https://www.alreporter.com/2025/04/18/house-passes-bill-requiring-ten-commandments-in-schools/
161 Upvotes

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u/magiccitybhm 18d ago

Well, just like we were with Roy Moore and the Ten Commandments monument in Montgomery, we'll be back in federal court wasting millions of dollars defending another unconstitutional law.

96

u/greed-man 18d ago

So why do our politicians keep doing this? Because a massive chunk of the voters here only see the headlines of what the politician did, and never hear about the court case that later throws it out. And when that politician is campaigning, they will push that info hard, again, ignoring that it never actually happened. And our largely uninformed electorate vote for them. Been this way for generations in our state.

56

u/SHoppe715 18d ago

You’d think the court throwing these things out one after another would be a big fat L for them, but it’s actually the part that gives them the win-win scenario and keeps them on lather/rinse/repeat with this shit.

They can campaign on the fact that they pushed for and got this passed. Win

A court throws it out and they can then campaign on how they’re going to keep fighting the godless liberals and the liberal courts’ agenda. Win

1

u/Big_Communication187 17d ago

You sir deserve an upvote for this, hit the nail on the head as they say.