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marmar

(80,513 posts)
Wed Jul 1, 2026, 08:43 AM Jul 1

Texas Republicans may regret mandating Bible in classes [View all]


Texas Republicans may regret mandating Bible in classes
Debating Christianity in class will likely create more non-believers

By Amanda Marcotte
Senior Writer
Published July 1, 2026 6:45AM (EDT)


(Salon) The decades-long Republican quest to force Christianity on those they see as unwashed heathens reached a new low on June 26, when the GOP-controlled Texas State School Board put Bible stories on mandatory reading lists for every level of public school student. The decision is disturbing on many levels, starting with the outright disinformation being used to justify this move by people in charge of educating children.

“Our nation was founded as a Christian nation,” board member Brandon Hall insisted during a Thursday news conference.

It’s unclear if Hall is lying or has deluded himself, but there is no excuse for indulging this falsehood about the founders, who clearly forbade the “establishment of religion” in the Constitution and repeatedly emphasized separation of church and state. It’s no surprise where this is coming from, either. The school board hired David Barton, a discredited writer who falsely claims to be a historian, as an adviser. Barton has no training and less than zero credibility, having been caught repeatedly peddling easily disproved lies. But because Republicans are pleased by his intellectually dishonest interpretation of America’s past, they continue to choose his nonsense over actual history developed by real scholars.

This is Christian nationalism in a nutshell. The use of Barton by the GOP and the Texas State School Board is not about faith or belief; it’s about power. Specifically, it’s about pushing their belief that certain people — white right-wing Christians — are the “real” Americans. In practice, it means that everyone else deserves second-class status. Forcing kids to read Bible passages signals to anyone outside the white, evangelical tribe that they don’t belong, which is a grotesque violation of American values of equality and freedom.

It’s also likely to backfire on the religious right. They better hope that the kids skip the assigned reading, much less actual discussion and debate about it in class. As many an ex-evangelical can tell you, direct exposure to what the Bible actually says is often the first step to walking away from Christian fundamentalism altogether. ................(more)

https://www.salon.com/2026/07/01/texas-republicans-may-regret-mandating-bible-in-classes/






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And has Texas selected WHICH parts of the Bible should be "taught" no_hypocrisy Jul 1 #1
Oh Lawdy, it's getting HOT in here..... Blue Owl Jul 1 #3
Needless to say radical noodle Jul 1 #5
Pity . . . . . no_hypocrisy Jul 1 #6
Or Noah getting drunk and naked? Aristus Jul 1 #37
And snakes don't talk, and Shoeless Louis Jul 1 #10
Adam and Eve is on the list radical noodle Jul 1 #24
If I was a a teacher required to use the Bible in my classes, I would cherry-pick the parts of the Bible with liberal Martin68 Jul 1 #36
So many brilliant teaching opportunities! jmbar2 Jul 1 #2
I don't think their intent on mandating the Bible in class has any room for thoughtful student debate ToxMarz Jul 1 #4
It ain't necessarily so. usonian Jul 1 #7
I never saw that Cab Calloway performance! 70sEraVet Jul 1 #23
This is mind boggling on so many levels. flashman13 Jul 1 #25
I'd be in favor of making this required listening/viewing Wiz Imp Jul 1 #8
Just start with Lot and his daughters. It will be banned before you know it. Blue Full Moon Jul 1 #9
Wouldn't it be fun to don your Harry Potter invisibility cloak... 3catwoman3 Jul 1 #13
And yet the Texas GOP is supporting Paxton (crook and adulterer) over Tallarico. surfered Jul 1 #11
+1. And Donald Trump. dalton99a Jul 1 #17
Wheaton College, in Wheaton IL, is extremely fundamental... 3catwoman3 Jul 1 #12
Teenagers love sex, not Jesus dalton99a Jul 1 #14
Just so you know I am a Catholic and believe that what the idiots in charge of my state are doing is wrong TexLaProgressive Jul 1 #15
My 13-year old granddaughter sobbed when she heard about this. Trueblue Texan Jul 1 #16
My niece and her husband just did the same last year FakeNoose Jul 1 #19
Has this been taken to court yet? If not, why not? Seems blatantly un-constitutional. nt wiggs Jul 1 #18
Well, be careful what you wish for. Wednesdays Jul 1 #22
I talked with my daughter about this... Trueblue Texan Jul 1 #29
WHICH VERSION OF THE BIBLE? Jimvanhise Jul 1 #20
Imagine there's no religion. It's easy and you don't even have to try. twodogsbarking Jul 1 #21
No hell below us radical noodle Jul 1 #26
When Will We Ever Learn. twodogsbarking Jul 1 #27
Now there's my idea of heaven! nt Trueblue Texan Jul 1 #30
My heaven would be Trump in hell. Hot in Tx? twodogsbarking Jul 1 #32
It's no hotter than usual here this time of year...mid to upper 90s. nt Trueblue Texan Jul 1 #35
"Children, we have a real treat for you in Bible study Ilsa Jul 1 #28
yeah, soon they'll require menstruating girls to stay home from school! Trueblue Texan Jul 1 #31
They ignore the actual teachings contained in both the Bible and the Constitution. They're Charlatans. ChicagoTeamster Jul 1 #33
keep that delusional nonsense where it belongs Skittles Jul 1 #34
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