The Christian Student Veto Bill
By Beach Blogger at 19 March, 2010, 11:11 am
Florida state representative Greg Evers (R-Baker) either is an idiot or he supposes his constituents are. Quite probably, both. Evers is a state legislator from the netherworld of northern Escambia and Santa Rosa counties. He’s also the brother of a teacher at notorious Pace High School. (Pity the unfortunate students at Pace who apply for admission to college. Thanks to principal Frank Lay and a handful of others in the secretarial pool and on the faculty, the school has earned a national reputation for rank stupidity.) Evers was first elected in 2001 to fill the seat of Jeff Miller ( “It’s time for your business to go away” ) Miller, who was sent to Washington to become a feckless congressman. Since then, Evers has accomplished exactly zero in public office. Nothing. Zip. Nada. So, naturally, he’s running for a promotion to replace term-limited Pistol Packin’ Peaden as state senator. Imagine! Three consummate idiots in a row — Miller, Peaden, and Evers — elected by what must be the dumbest collection of voters in the entire nation. Let this be a warning to anyone who contemplates moving to Northwest Florida. Evers now is positioning himself for the coming election by pushing proposed legislation which “is designed” — so says Rick Outzen’s Independent News , relying on a report from Destin’s Northwest Daily News — “to allow student-initiated inspirational messages at some school events.” That’s a misleading circumlocution. In fact, the bill is ‘designed’ to “require schools to set aside school time for any student request to express religious views,” as Paul Flemming more candidly reports for the Pensacola News Journal . House Bill 31 essentially tries to wedge “prayer” through the back door of public schools by giving anyone at the school, even a single student, absolute veto power over the policies and rules of “District school boards, administrative personnel, and instructional personnel.” Here is the complete text of House Bill 31: Delivery of inspirational message. – (1) District school boards, administrative personnel, and instructional personnel are prohibited from discouraging or inhibiting the delivery of an inspirational message at a noncompulsory high school activity, including, but not limited to, a student assembly, a sports event, or other noncompulsory school-related activity, if the participating students request and initiate the delivery of such inspirational message. (2) District school boards, administrative personnel, and instructional personnel are prohibited from taking affirmative action, including, but not limited to, the entry into any agreement, that infringes or waives the rights or freedoms afforded to instructional personnel, school staff, or students by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, in the absence of the express written consent of any individual whose constitutional rights would be impacted by such infringement or waiver. [italics added] The bill is a deeply deceptive muddle. It doesn’t address “voluntary” private prayer, of course, because that’s always been allowed under the Constitution. Even we remember muttering a prayer or two just before a calculus exam. Individual, silent prayer is perfectly legal in public schools and always has been. Instead, Evers’ bill seeks
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The Christian Student Veto Bill
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