Back to Bibles in school.
I cannot fathom what possible damage could result by having a Bible in schools, or broadcasting a morning prayer over the intercoms in classrooms, or acknowledging that religion exists and is a major part of the human condition. I can plainly see, we all can, the results in schools of not having those things.
Whinny little brats who want their way, and the Supreme Court who has by and large let them, have turned a simple, unambiguous phrase in the Constitution into something entirely different. The "no establishment of religion" clause means no state religion. Think
Church of England, which is what the Founding Fathers wanted to avoid completely. It does not, and never did mean that the state cannot acknowledge and allow religion within its hallowed halls and institutions. All it means is that the state cannot force a preference of one over another, or promote any particular religion. And more to the point, the Amendment speaks of Congress making a law establishing a religion (and a law prohibiting the free exercise of religion), not each and every possible local, state and federal government entity and how they must divorce themselves from any and all things religious out of fear that by doing so Congress is somehow creating a law in violation of the Amendment.
These things Congress cannot legislate: an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
It's as straightforward and unambiguous as the right to keep and bear arm "shall not be infringed," which is absolute in its phrasing and meaning and intent.
We (most of us, anyway) certainly don't want Congress establishing a state religion, but there's no real valid reason, save the Supreme Court's bone-headed decisions, that government entities can't participate in or allow a religion or religions within.
Now, when they start legislating Creationism be taught in schools (
cough, cough, Kansas, cough), it's a problem, because now you're promoting one particular religion, and that you cannot do under even the most conservative interpretation of the First Amendment.
But a Bible in a schoolhouse or the Ten Commandments in a courthouse are unquestionably the least offensive things a government can do, I don't care who you are or what you believe or don't believe.