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You are here: Home / Politics / Education / SCOTUS (Mis)Education Open Thread: Every Parent A Cleric

SCOTUS (Mis)Education Open Thread: Every Parent A Cleric

by Anne Laurie|  June 28, 20259:43 am| 181 Comments

This post is in: Education, Open Threads, Republican Stupidity, Supreme Court Corruption

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Wow that’s broad. Incredibly broad.
www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/24p…

[image or embed]

— Raffi Melkonian (@rmfifthcircuit.bsky.social) June 27, 2025 at 11:04 AM


===
Mister, we could use a man like Ronald Reagan agaaain…

the percentage of white children in school was around 80% in 1980. today it is right around 45%, give or take.
as the supreme court attempts to uphold that this is a white man’s republic it is going to smash headlong into reality, and the results are going to be catastrophic.

— not an art thief (@famousartthief.bsky.social) June 27, 2025 at 10:49 AM

===

Worth pointing out that only one of the Republican appointees attended public schools, and I’m guessing none of their kids have.

[image or embed]

— Dana Houle (@danahoule.bsky.social) June 27, 2025 at 1:15 PM


===

It also creates bureaucratic problems for schools. Where do kids go when teachers explain that slavery is bad but Phundie Phylis’s snowflakes leave the class? Who watches them? And how will Phundie Phylis know when her kids should be pulled? Do teachers need to send out daily instruction plans? /2

— Dana Houle (@danahoule.bsky.social) June 27, 2025 at 1:04 PM


===

Another impact will be parents "excusing" students from assignments that all of a sudden conflict with their "I just made it up" religion.

— cooptimo.bsky.social (@cooptimo.bsky.social) June 27, 2025 at 1:08 PM


—

looking forward to some parents suing to demand segregated schools because integration violates their religious beliefs

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— jamelle (@jamellebouie.net) June 27, 2025 at 11:16 AM


===

it's important to understand that they want to threaten the very essence of public education. the conservative plan – the plot to enslave america – requires them to destroy public education and replace it with private academies for the rich, religious instruction and prison-like schools for the rest

[image or embed]

— mtsw (@mtsw.bsky.social) June 27, 2025 at 11:25 AM


===

There is, in general right now, a move on the larger right to change the goal of higher education from an academic enterprise (in all its fashions: taking the best students, pushing knowledge forward, etc.) and change back into a means of enforcing differences of class between groups.

[image or embed]

— Schnorkles O'Bork (@schnorkles.bsky.social) June 27, 2025 at 4:05 PM


—

Like, what they're doing makes perfect sense if their goal is to remove the actual educational purpose of higher ed, and instead transform it into part of the cultural apparatus to enforce an aristocratic white class.

— Schnorkles O'Bork (@schnorkles.bsky.social) June 27, 2025 at 4:06 PM


—

One thing that seems clear is that this case was so poorly decided and not thought out that it's likely going to force this SCOTUS to calvinball and somehow say that Christianity is protected but no other religions are. Which I expect! But they've really dug a hole for themselves.

[image or embed]

— Schnorkles O'Bork (@schnorkles.bsky.social) June 27, 2025 at 6:42 PM

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    181Comments

    1. 1.

      kindness

      June 28, 2025 at 9:49 am

      Come next Democratic trifecta, we’re going to need a bigger Supreme Court.

      Reply
    2. 2.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 9:49 am

      Yeah, the injunction decision overshadowed the religion decision. It’s really Christian sharia law.

      Reply
    3. 3.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 9:56 am

      If Christianity is such a good thing for its adherents, what I want to know is why they need to turn the whole world into their ‘safe space’ where they won’t be exposed to contrary notions?

      Speaking as one, I would expect that the presence of the Lord in one’s life would make one less of a snowflake or hothouse flower, less in need of protection from the Big Bad World.  If you say it’s the opposite, that being a Christian means you need this extra layer of protection, then why the fuck would anyone want to be a Christian??

      Reply
    4. 4.

      comrade scotts agenda of rage

      June 28, 2025 at 9:57 am

      The American Taliban win another round. :(

      Reply
    5. 5.

      RaflW

      June 28, 2025 at 9:59 am

      @Baud: I suppose the Court will find ways to tailor and trim this to keep it only fitting conservative Christian views, but if the ruling is as broad as Mr. Melkonian says up top, shouldn’t religious liberals (UUs, UCCs, lefty Lutherans, etc), Jews, Muslims, Janes, Buddhists, Sikhs, Breatharians and Satanists all be readying a bevvy of lawsuits?

      “You got peanut butter on MY version of religious chocolate. How dare you!” Clog up the fucking courts. Make it a giant bugaboo. Like, UUs have a deep theological record of not just tolerance but embracing of LGBTQ people. Find the tiniest infraction against those values and sue, sue, sue.

      Reply
    6. 6.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 10:00 am

      @lowtechcyclist:

      They’re version of Christianity calls on them to become Caesar.

      Reply
    7. 7.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:02 am

      People absolutely should force them to be honest about this “protection” applying only to white conservative “Christianity”. If I had a school-age child again I would be looking for opportunities to protest that, say, the usual lies about US history undermine the UU values I’m trying to teach my child. Or a lesson about families that DOESN’T mention that they can have two daddies or two mommies.

      Reply
    8. 8.

      sab

      June 28, 2025 at 10:03 am

      Five of the nine justices went to private parochial schools. They have no stake whatever in public schools.

      ETA:Sotomayor did also.

      Kagan, Brown, Alito went to public schools. Everyone else on the court went to parochial schools.

      Reply
    9. 9.

      Gvg

      June 28, 2025 at 10:03 am

      Which justice went to public school?
      I now have another question I want Congress to ask candidates for the Supreme Court to ask. Since we need more diversity on the court, I am going to say that a practical middle class up bringing that includes public school at least some of the time is going to be needed now. I hadn’t realized that even the liberal side was so private school that they didn’t know this can’t work.

      in Florida you automatically fail if you miss a certain low number of days of school. The valedictorian of my high school was in danger of this fail because of I think chicken pox so she dragged herself to school. The teacher panicked, parked her in a corner and ran to the front office to get a written exception and sent her home. They evidently didn’t believe dr’s notes and phone calls, but had to face the spots themselves. This was over 50 years ago and the rules are even stricter now. Stupidly so. They also no longer fund any summer school, which is wasteful IMO as kids can struggle in one subject and need special attention, instead of repeating a whole year in all subjects and learning to be bored and hate school.

      Reply
    10. 10.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:05 am

      @lowtechcyclist: That’s pretty much the tell, isn’t it? Deep down they know that nobody will stay within their circle of abuse without thorough brainwashing, and that consequently they will continue to lose a lot of their kids.

      Reply
    11. 11.

      sab

      June 28, 2025 at 10:05 am

      @lowtechcyclist: Their version of Christianity is a cult, not a religion. It requires early brainwashing and rigid enforcement.

      Reply
    12. 12.

      Suzanne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:10 am

      I would expect that this is going to have weird downstream effects. Real estate values in good public school districts are already premium. I already don’t want my kids to go to school with Republicans’ kids. Wouldn’t be surprised to see red areas become even less desirable.

      Reply
    13. 13.

      zhena gogolia

      June 28, 2025 at 10:12 am

      @lowtechcyclist: I know. I try not to be embarrassed to be a Christian, but these people make it really hard.

      Reply
    14. 14.

      Not that proud

      June 28, 2025 at 10:12 am

      I think this decision was fairly minor. The law at issue prohibited the schools from informing parents when they would be reading LGBTQ books. When I was in elementary school in the mid 1980s, we already had kids who opted out of sex ed. In high school in the 1990s, we had kids who opted out of biology lessons on evolution. It was like one or two kids per class. It’s fairly manageable for the school. They go sit in the hallway for 30 minutes.

      There were a fair number of decisions this term that were basically inevitable, but were played up as major. This is one of them. Porn age verification was another. Banning transition medication for minors is another. 

      Reply
    15. 15.

      sab

      June 28, 2025 at 10:14 am

      @Suzanne: My husband in his first marriage (the one with kids) insisted on living in the city because he didn’t want his kids going to school with suburban white flight kids. Having met their cousins who did mostly go to suburban schools, I think he made the right choice.

      Reply
    16. 16.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:14 am

      @Not that proud: You just keep on easing down the road to Gilead. The rest of us aren’t going to willingly go there with you.

      Reply
    17. 17.

      Not that proud

      June 28, 2025 at 10:14 am

      @lowtechcyclist:

      The plaintiffs in this case are Muslim.

      Reply
    18. 18.

      Professor Bigfoot

      June 28, 2025 at 10:16 am

      They’ve been working to destroy public education one way or another since Brown V. Board.

      That is, as usual, they’d prefer to burn it all down than ever share.

      Reply
    19. 19.

      Not that proud

      June 28, 2025 at 10:17 am

      @Steve LaBonne:

      It’s all good. I think I could change your mind about this, but whatever. All I’m doing is making a slightly different prediction about the future.

      Reply
    20. 20.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:17 am

      @sab: And when that fails it fails spectacularly. The past president of my congregation is a young female-presenting nonbinary person married to a woman. They grew up in a fundie family and went to Liberty University! They made a point of reading every book on the “warning do not read these books” list that students were given.

      Reply
    21. 21.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:18 am

      @Professor Bigfoot: Drain those swimming pools!

      Reply
    22. 22.

      different-church-lady

      June 28, 2025 at 10:19 am

      SCOTUS doesn’t Calvinball because it has to; SCOTUS Calvinballs because it wants to.

      Reply
    23. 23.

      sab

      June 28, 2025 at 10:19 am

      @Not that proud: Banning transition medication for minors isn’t minor, and shouldn’t be viewed as inevitable because the exact same medication has been given to cancer treatment kids for more than a generation.

      Reply
    24. 24.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 10:21 am

      Let’s assume for the sake of argument that, in each town, property taxes are increased to pay for these idiotic logistics (teachers sending notices to parents every afternoon outlining the next day’s classroom content — plus separate supervised rooms to warehouse the kids who have been excused from classes).  But how will this really work?  In a rational world, teachers would test and grade the kids on the content presented in the classes — and kids who have been excused from being exposed to that content will get bad, maybe failing grades.  In reality, though, the idiot parents would bitch and moan about that.  So, what will happen is that all classes — physics, math whatever — will be carefully vetted to remove ANYTHING AT ALL that could possibly be offensive to anyone.  The result will be a nation that is even more poorly educated than it is now.  And the states of the former Confederacy (and other “red” states) will be the most poorly educated of them all.  That is the real goal behind his nonsense.

      Reply
    25. 25.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:21 am

      @sab: It is in fact a guarantee of increasing the suicide rate among trans kids. But that’s clearly just a minor detail to some people.

      Reply
    26. 26.

      Suzanne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:23 am

      @sab: My kids go to city public schools. Some of the suburban districts might be better, but these are fine.

      White flight is largely over in my generation, as well as my kids’.

      As the nation’s white population ages and stagnates, the childbearing population is increasingly made up of minorities, who are increasingly drawn to the suburbs. In fact, whites are hardly the lifeblood of suburban growth anymore. As noted in my book, “Diversity Explosion,” whites contributed to only 9 percent of total suburban population growth in the nation’s 100 largest metropolitan areas between 2000 and 2010.

      Nearly one-third of large metropolitan area suburbs experienced absolute declines in their white populations over the decade. The greatest white losses occurred in suburbs surrounding large coastal cities—New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco—where the cost of living helped drive whites to less expensive parts of the country, as well as the suburbs of northern industrial areas including Detroit, Cleveland, and Buffalo.

      Yet in nearly 80 percent (78) of the 100 largest metropolitan suburbs, such as those of Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, and Chicago, minorities accounted for most or all of the population gains. Suburbs will continue to grow in the future, but increasingly as a result of the rapid growth of the nation’s growing young minority families.

      The overall settlement shift in the country is people relocating to the Sun Belt.

      Reply
    27. 27.

      nary

      June 28, 2025 at 10:23 am

      I want to see this decision implemented the same way that things like “work requirements” (i.e., job loss penalties) are implemented for Medicaid. Bury any request in paperwork and red tape. You want your kid to sit out this class? Great; come pick them up and make sure they’re back in time for the next class. You can pay for a private aide to sit with your student–here’s the cost of that, because we must approve that person. Make sure there are plenty of forms to fill out, too.

      Fking auto incorrect changed my nym.

      Reply
    28. 28.

      sab

      June 28, 2025 at 10:23 am

      @Steve LaBonne: Ali Velshi’s MSNBC weekend show has a regular banned book segment that has introduced me to a lot of wonderful books I hadn’t bothered to read before.

      Reply
    29. 29.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 10:24 am

      @Not that proud: Please correct me if I’m wrong, but I’m going to guess that you lived in a “blue” state.  In East Shit-Hole Alabama, the percentage of kid opting out might be 80% or 90%.  Making dumb states even dumber.

      Reply
    30. 30.

      Harrison Wesley

      June 28, 2025 at 10:25 am

      Won’t this lead to a big push for vouchers?

      Reply
    31. 31.

      sab

      June 28, 2025 at 10:25 am

      @Suzanne: I agree. I think I am almost a generation older than you. My stepkids and their cousins are all around forty years old.

      Reply
    32. 32.

      Another Scott

      June 28, 2025 at 10:27 am

      Made me look…

      LincolnCottage.org:

      […] Though he led by describing his support of internal improvements, towards the end of the letter he reached a topic near and dear to his heart. “Upon the subject of education, not presuming to dictate any plan or system respecting it, I can only say that I view it as the most important subject which we as a people can be engaged in.” For Lincoln, it was “of vital importance,” for every man to receive at least “a moderate education,” so that they could “appreciate the value of our free institutions.” Thus, as a legislator, he promised to endeavor to make education “much more general than at present,” to better support American democracy.[1]

      The idea that simply being exposed to teachings that you don’t like is a automatically a “very real threat” is dangerous nonsense that needs to be fought with all our might. If we don’t fight against it, the monsters will win by default.

      The monsters got the advantages of a good education (and apply it in bad ways). Denying those advantages to everyone else is pretty much the textbook definition of elitist and exclusionary and unAmercian.

      Grr…

      In the early 1970s, I changed schools in middle school just before a very basic intro sex ed class (segregated by gender). All the kids were given a permission slip to get signed before hand, but the timing was wrong and I didn’t have a signed slip. The teachers huddled a bit and decided that I could take the class without making any production of it – I just sat in my normal seat like everyone else. (My parent would have signed.) My recollection is that nobody was excluded – it was regarded as kind of a joke that we needed our parents permission (“Ooh! Forbidden Knowledge!!11”).

      (Professed) Religion doesn’t trump all in society. It’s way past time to throw that doctrine out.

      Best wishes,
      Scott.

      Reply
    33. 33.

      different-church-lady

      June 28, 2025 at 10:27 am

      @Steve LaBonne: Don’t be absurd: for some people it’s the whole point.

      Reply
    34. 34.

      different-church-lady

      June 28, 2025 at 10:28 am

      @TONYG: What worries me is dumb is now a superpower.

      Reply
    35. 35.

      jonas

      June 28, 2025 at 10:29 am

      “Justice Sotomayor: Today’s ruling threatens the very essence of public education…”

      Of course it does. Why do you think they ruled that way? It’s like with public swimming pools in the South (and many other cities). As soon as you have to share them with *those* people, then no-one gets them. Or you have to join a fancy private school/country club.

      I’m sure 2025 or 26 will be the year we see some state rep in OK, TX or AL introduce a bill to just end all public instruction and give everyone a voucher good only at religiously-run schools. (Of course it will be a super measly bullshit voucher that covers nothing, so only upper middle-class white families can afford any schooling at all.)  If they haven’t already and I’ve just missed it…

      Reply
    36. 36.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 10:29 am

      @Steve LaBonne: Not the same thing, but … When I was a young teenager I went through a phase for a couple of years of taking my (Catholic) religion seriously.  Reading the Bible, reading about Catholic theology and actually thinking. about it.  (Thinking?  That was my problem.).  As a result, by the time I was 17 I had abandoned all religion.  I haven’t looked back since.

      Reply
    37. 37.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:29 am

      @Harrison Wesley: It has already led to states like Ohio draining into massive voucher programs a big chunk of the money that should be going to public schools, putting the latter under severe financial stress. (And yet I almost think it’s worth it to get racist / fundie parents away from the public schools. Well not really but you can see what I mean.)

      Reply
    38. 38.

      narya

      June 28, 2025 at 10:30 am

      I want to see this decision implemented the same way that things like “work requirements” (i.e., job loss penalties) are implemented for Medicaid. Bury any request in paperwork and red tape. You want your kid to sit out this class? Great; come pick them up and make sure they’re back in time for the next class. You can pay for a private aide to sit with your student–here’s the cost of that, because we must approve that person. Make sure there are plenty of forms to fill out, too.

      Reply
    39. 39.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:31 am

      @TONYG: It’s notorious that the number one way conservative seminary students lose their faith is serious study of the Bible. Which is why the ones run by denominations like the SBC heavily police what their faculty teach.

      Reply
    40. 40.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 10:32 am

      @different-church-lady: That’s right.  Ever since the election of Reagan almost 45 years ago, stupidity and ignorance have been treated as proof that a person is a Real American.  Trump is just the latest and most extreme manifestation of that.

      Reply
    41. 41.

      sab

      June 28, 2025 at 10:34 am

      And now some idiots in Ohio are trying to get a measure on the ballot to make propety taxes unconstitutional. We are also switching to a single income tax bracket.

      Property taxes fund our schools, our libraries, children’s services, disability service, public parks, mental health and drug/ alcohol treatment…

      The state used to help out on a lot of that, but it cannot afford to any more, because of state tax cuts.

      Apparently the only government functions these guys want is police and fire.

      Reply
    42. 42.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:34 am

      @narya: A district that tries that will be in court all the time at ruinous expense.

      Reply
    43. 43.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 10:35 am

      @narya: Yes; I’d like to see that.   AND MAKE SURE THAT THE KIDS ARE TESTED AND GRADED ON THE CONTENT OF EVERY GODDAMN MINUTE OF CLASS TIME THAT THEIR IDIOT PARENTS HAVE FORCED THEM TO MISS.

      Reply
    44. 44.

      Lobo

      June 28, 2025 at 10:36 am

      Malicious compliance:  Schools have two tracks, the wonder bread track, which has nothing offensive to anyone and the whole grain track, actual education.  Let the wonder bread kids stare at their virtual lessons all day in safety, while the rest learn.

      Reply
    45. 45.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 10:37 am

      @sab: In a world where the political climate would allow property taxes to be replaced by progressive local income taxes that would be a good thing. Of course we don’t live in anything remotely resembling that world.

      Reply
    46. 46.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 10:38 am

      @Baud:

      They’re version of Christianity calls on them to become Caesar.

      That would certainly save them the trouble of having to evangelize.

      But again, if their religion is so great, why does it need government assistance?

      Reply
    47. 47.

      rikyrah

      June 28, 2025 at 10:40 am

      Good Morning Everyone 😊 😊 😊

      Reply
    48. 48.

      p.a.

      June 28, 2025 at 10:40 am

      Can’t speak to other monotheist religions but don’t large swaths of Xtianity (which I struggle to really consider monotheist) consider the very existence of other thought a threat?  A deadly temptation to the believers.  Then put xtianists in charge of education and…

      Reply
    49. 49.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 10:40 am

      @Steve LaBonne: Yes.  The Old Testament, in particular, is absolutely insane.  The God of the Old Testament is a really crazy, cruel asshole who should have switched to decaf.  One thing that might be noteworthy is that during my long-ago Catholic church-going days the priests almost never talked about the Old Testament.  Just a lot of talk about that hippie Jesus guy and his (benign) miracles.  The Evangelicals, on the other hand, seem to be obsessed with the Old Testament.  I have a very low opinion of the Catholic Church, but the Evangelicals seem to have taken it to another level.

      Reply
    50. 50.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 10:41 am

      @rikyrah:

      Good morning.

      Reply
    51. 51.

      different-church-lady

      June 28, 2025 at 10:42 am

      @TONYG:

      The God of the Old Testament is a really crazy, cruel asshole who should have switched to decaf.

      NOMMMMMMMM-MINATED!

      Reply
    52. 52.

      Lobo

      June 28, 2025 at 10:45 am

      Malicious compliance:  Schools offer two tracks, the wonder bread track, that contains no offensive material at all and the whole grain track, the education track.  The wonder bread track allows the kids to stare at the screens immersed in their virtual lessons where they are not challenged at all.

      Reply
    53. 53.

      Spanky

      June 28, 2025 at 10:45 am

      @TONYG: Apparently, none of the Christianists have heard of the New Covenant.

      Reply
    54. 54.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 10:45 am

      @sab: ​

      Their version of Christianity is a cult, not a religion. It requires early brainwashing and rigid enforcement.

      Oh, I know that. But I also know what they say, what they claim about themselves and the power of God in their lives. I’ve spent decades of my life being at least evangelical-adjacent, so to speak.

      Reply
    55. 55.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 10:46 am

      @Steve LaBonne: The property tax “system” is deliberately awful.  In my own state (New Jersey) it’s a way of prevent people in wealthy suburbs from paying for schools that Those Other People’s Kids go to in Newark and Paterson and Camden.

      Reply
    56. 56.

      Geminid

      June 28, 2025 at 10:48 am

      @TONYG: From what I can tell, the part of the New Testament that a lot of Evangelicals fixate on most is the Book of Revelations. That, and Paul’s various cranky Letters.

      Reply
    57. 57.

      bbleh

      June 28, 2025 at 10:50 am

      @lowtechcyclist: @sab: @Steve LaBonne:  The inevitable backlash by kids in all but the most isolated and homogeneous communities is gonna be borderline hilarious.

      What better way to get late primary / secondary school kids to want something — especially something as tame as reading a book — than to make a BIG point of saying it is Forbidden?

      This is just gonna accelerate the division of the country into a few backward islands in a sea of increasing modernization.

      “You can fence yourselves in, but you can’t fence the world out.”

      Reply
    58. 58.

      Glidwrith

      June 28, 2025 at 10:52 am

      @lowtechcyclist: Because their version of Christianity is white male supremacy. Religion as a fig leaf for their hate and true education reveals their bigotry.

      Reply
    59. 59.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 10:54 am

      @Lobo: That could work.  And then the high school diplomas for kids who took the dumb track could get a special sticker.  What will probably happen in reality is this: In a handful of wealthy, “liberal” towns the school systems will actively resist this bullshit — not really for idealistic reasons but so that Jimmy and Becky will continue to have a good chance of getting into Harvard.  (Admissions office already know the relative value of diplomas at different high schools.).  Most towns, however, will take the path of least resistance and just dumb everything down.).  And differences in education and wealth will increase accordingly.  Another feature, not a bug, of this nonsense.

      Reply
    60. 60.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 10:55 am

      @Spanky: I’m pretty sure that most of the Christianists have never even heard of Christ!  Just that angry guy smiting people.

      Reply
    61. 61.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 10:55 am

      @Lobo:  I like your idea of malicious compliance.  Let the teachers teach those students whose parents value an actual education.

      The wonder bread types can stare at screens.  (To their detriment.)

      Reply
    62. 62.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 10:56 am

      @Geminid: That’s right.  Bitching and moaning — and finally Jesus coming back to kick ass.

      Reply
    63. 63.

      Lobo

      June 28, 2025 at 10:56 am

      @TONYG: ​
        One can hope.

      Reply
    64. 64.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 10:57 am

      @nary: ​

      Fking auto incorrect changed my nym.

      I have nary_a clue of what your usual nym is. ;-)

      Reply
    65. 65.

      Glidwrith

      June 28, 2025 at 10:58 am

      @sab: There’s a county in Oregon that basically did that. Josephine, I think. Result was they have no services, not even police or fire department and they have to rely on adjacent counties for help.

      Reply
    66. 66.

      Suzanne

      June 28, 2025 at 11:00 am

      @Lobo:

      Schools offer two tracks, the wonder bread track, that contains no offensive material at all and the whole grain track, the education track. 

      Much of the right-wing Christian cohort are already pissed that they have no influence in academia. LMAO.

      Reply
    67. 67.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 11:01 am

      @lowtechcyclist:

      But again, if their religion is so great, why does it need government assistance?

       
      I don’t know. Why does God need a starship?

      Reply
    68. 68.

      Another Scott

      June 28, 2025 at 11:02 am

      @TONYG: Made me look.

      Genesis 3:

      3 Now the serpent was more subtil than any beast of the field which the Lord God had made. And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?

      2 And the woman said unto the serpent, We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden:

      3 But of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die.

      4 And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die:

      5 For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.

      6 And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto her husband with her; and he did eat.

      7 And the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves aprons.

      8 And they heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day: and Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God amongst the trees of the garden.

      9 And the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou?

      […]

      Lots of things are going on there.

      Talking serpents asking leading questions to make you think. Thinking is bad!!

      What the talking serpent said was actually right. They didn’t die – God lied to them (but that’s Ok because reasons). They did gain knowledge and become more like God, rather than being so childlike. Being an independent adult is bad!!

      Woman is weak. Easily tricked by talking serpents when they think for themselves and she messed up Adam’s easy life (and would be punished for it). Woman is bad!

      All powerful God that made the universe and everything is bad at playing hide and seek!

      :-/

      Seriously, it’s obviously a bunch of stories and not a factual representation of some ancient events. It’s not a universal instruction manual of how society should work for all time. And there’s lots of tools of oppression there. Unsurprisingly, as the books were written in times when reading and writing were controlled by those that wanted to hold onto power, as with those RWNJs today…

      FWIW.

      Best wishes,
      Scott.

      Reply
    69. 69.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 11:03 am

      @bbleh: That’s right.  The people that come up with this nonsense have either never met a kid or (more likely) never talk to their own kids.  Not to mention the fact that … Close to 100% of teenagers have access to a smart phone.  That means that any such teens have easy, immediate, confidential access to any variety of porn that they want.  Reading a book in class is nothing compared to that.  The idiot parents seem to think that the year is 1955, not 2025.  If they want their kids to grow up a certain way, then the parents need to get off their asses and do the hard work of (trying to) raise their kids.

      Reply
    70. 70.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 11:03 am

      @Geminid: Preferably the fake ones.

      Reply
    71. 71.

      Professor Bigfoot

      June 28, 2025 at 11:03 am

      @Steve LaBonne: We’re returning to a time when the white kids got good schools and the rest got whatever their parents and communities could gin up.

      Reply
    72. 72.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 11:05 am

      @p.a.: True since the very beginning of Christianity. And very much out of step with normal attitudes toward religion in the Roman world.

      Reply
    73. 73.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 11:07 am

      @Another Scott: Just crazy stories, written more than 2,000 years ago.  The Old Testament (like other books of mythology) is actually pretty interesting.  But it has about as much to do with modern notions of right or wrong as do other ancient texts of mythology.

      Reply
    74. 74.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 11:07 am

      @p.a.:

      Can’t speak to other monotheist religions but don’t large swaths of Xtianity (which I struggle to really consider monotheist) consider the very existence of other thought a threat? A deadly temptation to the believers.

       

      Reminds me of social media.

      Reply
    75. 75.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 11:09 am

      @Professor Bigfoot: Never stopped being that way in the South. Below the Mason-Dixon line you can bet your bottom dollar that any private “Christian” school started life as a seg academy and pretty much still is one.

      Reply
    76. 76.

      Suburban Mom

      June 28, 2025 at 11:10 am

      US housing prices tend to be tied to the perceived quality of local public schools.  In the middle and upper-middle class suburbs, families will over-extend themselves to pay for a house in a good district.  I’m surprised there isn’t more screaming more about this.

      Reply
    77. 77.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 11:12 am

      @TONYG:

      The Evangelicals, on the other hand, seem to be obsessed with the Old Testament.

      Or at least the parts of it that affirm their tribal beliefs that they want their religion to ratify.

      For instance, there’s a whole bunch of OT verses that say the foreigner in your land should be treated the same as everyone else there, and the Lord loves them and you must love them too: don’t forget that you were once aliens in Egypt.

      But do you see them in the streets protesting against this Administration’s plans for mass deportation? That would be a big nope.

      Reply
    78. 78.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 11:15 am

      @Spanky: ​

      Apparently, none of the Christianists have heard of the New Covenant.

      Oh they have, but it’s just “I’ve committed my life to Christ so no matter what happens, I’m going to heaven” and then they go back to being assholes to all the people they’re prejudiced against.

      Reply
    79. 79.

      different-church-lady

      June 28, 2025 at 11:19 am

      @Professor Bigfoot: ​Going back? Pft, we’ve been there for years.

      Reply
    80. 80.

      different-church-lady

      June 28, 2025 at 11:20 am

      @TONYG: ​2000 year old crazy stories after they’ve gone through a whole mess of lost-in-translation, that is.

      Reply
    81. 81.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 11:20 am

      @Suburban Mom: The right has been employing salami tactics for quite a while and too many people still haven’t grasped what the endgame is.

      Reply
    82. 82.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 11:20 am

      @Baud:

      Why does God need a starship?

      ???

      Not sure what I’m missing here.

      Reply
    83. 83.

      p.a.

      June 28, 2025 at 11:22 am

      Relates to the movement to castrate universities: if whole school systems are decertified by accreditation groups and SAT/ACT or whatever else is current (I’m old so out of the loop) and by colleges (under the table of course) the ruling could be DOA, unless the parents ALL want to send little Bobby & Jill to I-Memorized-the-Bible University.

      Reply
    84. 84.

      Tim C

      June 28, 2025 at 11:22 am

      Hey!  That’s me!  (cooptimo on bluesky!)

      So, one thing to mention is that there is also, in education, a huge tension between the “Our kids should be talented and know stuff” conservatives and the “Education is all a scam and they just need to know the bible” conservatives.   The six theocrats of SCOTUS simply can’t square the circle on this.   Likewise, it’s a lot like the “Kitty Litter in the Bathrooms” myth.   Likewise, I teach at a just-on-the-edge of a blue city district, I describe my district as Half San Francisco and half Arkansas.

      The right-wing kids are, in general, with exceptions, far more likely to be culturally bound to devalue education, hide in the bathroom, and to cheat.   Likewise, the pressure on teachers to pass kids who don’t do anything is one of the huge scandals in education already.    The real unknown is how many home “schooled” kids end up back in class for a short time before they flee again to the screens at home.

      Reply
    85. 85.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 11:22 am

      @Another Scott: This might not have any significance, but I’ve long thought that it was interesting that (at least in English translations) God in the Bible is usually referred to as The Lord.  A lord, of course, is a man who controls the lives and deaths of lesser humans (slaves, serfs and peasants).  A human lord can lie, steal and kill with impunity.  The same is true of The Lord in the Bible.  So it’s not a surprise that the people who want The Lord to be in charge of the world also want a human lord (Trump now; other men in other eras) to be in charge.  They really are stuck in the Bronze Age.

      Reply
    86. 86.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 11:23 am

      @lowtechcyclist: Obligatory “We Built This City” reference, perhaps.

      Reply
    87. 87.

      Mr. Bemused Senior

      June 28, 2025 at 11:24 am

      @Baud: Why does God need a starship?

      If you are referring to planet Earth the question answers itself.

      Reply
    88. 88.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 11:24 am

      @lowtechcyclist:

      https://youtu.be/WYW_lPlekiQ?feature=shared

      Reply
    89. 89.

      trollhattan

      June 28, 2025 at 11:28 am

      President Grant remains my go-to on federal $ for religious education. But what did he know?

      Reply
    90. 90.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 11:30 am

      @Baud:

      You’ve shared the reference, but I’m still perplexed.

      Reply
    91. 91.

      Mr. Bemused Senior

      June 28, 2025 at 11:30 am

      @Baud: hmm, one of the few I haven’t seen. Thanks.

      Reply
    92. 92.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 11:32 am

      @lowtechcyclist:

      Beings who need starships aren’t God.

      Beings who need the power of the state to support them aren’t God.

      Reply
    93. 93.

      different-church-lady

      June 28, 2025 at 11:37 am

      @Baud: Beings aren’t God.

      Reply
    94. 94.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 11:37 am

      Alaska senators bringing home the whale bacon.

      Call her Ishmael. New version of Senate BBB sneaks in a new tax break for…whale-boat captains.
      http://www.politico.com/live-updates...

      [image or embed]
      — Catherine Rampell (@crampell.bsky.social) Jun 28, 2025 at 11:34 AM

      Reply
    95. 95.

      New Deal democrat

      June 28, 2025 at 11:37 am

      @sab:

      Kagan, Brown, Alito went to public schools. Everyone else on the court went to parochial schools.

      Ironically, yesterday’s decision undercuts the entire rationale for Pierce vs. Society of Sisters, the 100+ year old case that allowed parochial schools to be attended in lieu of public schools, because the teaching in public schools (allegedly) conflicted with Catholic doctrine.

      But if religious freedom mandates that parents must be allowed to let their public school children to opt out of anything they think conflicts with their religious dogma, what’s the point?

      Or, more cynically, I’ve been wondering how this Court could nuke the right to privacy without overruling Pierce. Yesterday’s decision gives them the legalistic framework to do so, since now it could fit under the non-establishment clause instead.

      Reply
    96. 96.

      Gin & Tonic

      June 28, 2025 at 11:38 am

      @TONYG: Kind of tangential, and not going to link to Twitter because the crowd here doesn’t like it, but some dude from Chicago who posts from time to time as “@Pontifex” just put up a couple of very nice tweets, in Ukrainian, supporting Ukraine and Ukrainians. Partly “I share your pain for the prisoners and victims of this pointless war.”

      I like this guy better than his predecessor.

      Reply
    97. 97.

      Mr. Bemused Senior

      June 28, 2025 at 11:38 am

      @Baud: Alaska senators bringing home the whale bacon.

      It’s in the job description.

      Reply
    98. 98.

      Professor Bigfoot

      June 28, 2025 at 11:40 am

      @Glidwrith: God over Man, Man over Woman, White over Black, Christian over Jew or Muslim or Hindu or (God forbid!) an atheist.

      White Christian male supremacy over all others.

      The others “have no rights a white man must observe.”

      Reply
    99. 99.

      Spanky

      June 28, 2025 at 11:43 am

      @Glidwrith:

      There’s a county in Oregon that basically did that. Josephine, I think. Result was they have no services, not even police or fire department and they have to rely on adjacent counties for help.

      Moochers!

      Reply
    100. 100.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 11:43 am

      @Gin & Tonic:

      I’m glad the first American pope has been a better American and a better Pope than most Americans and Popes.

      Reply
    101. 101.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 11:44 am

      Here’s youtube channel for live coverage of Melissa and Mark Hortman funeral, which has just begun.

      It may be a good resource for learning more about their lives and careers too.

      Former Pres Biden and MVP Kamala Harris are in attendance.

      Beautiful music, and I should know this piece.  It’s famous …

      Reply
    102. 102.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 11:46 am

      @Elizabelle:

      Glad to hear Harris is there too. Makes sense given Walz.

      Reply
    103. 103.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 11:48 am

      To stay with topic of this thread:  the Hortman murder is what happens when you divide and frighten and polarize people so much.  They send messages to their wife that “Dad went to war last night,” when they shot two couples in their own homes, plus one goofy sweet Golden Retriever who flunked out of service dog training.

      Killer was a prepper and a weird religious fanatic.  He had been frightened and terrorized his whole life by false messages, which he could not see past.

      Rightwing owns this.  Which is why the story disappeared from the MSM for weeks.  Meanwhile, the images of Felon47 and his damaged ear; you could not get away from those.

      Reply
    104. 104.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 11:49 am

      @Gin & Tonic:  Pope Leo may be less constrained by his times than the late Pope Francis was.

      And yes, Leo is a breath of fresh air.

      Reply
    105. 105.

      Mr. Bemused Senior

      June 28, 2025 at 11:50 am

      @Elizabelle: Which is why the story disappeared from the MSM for weeks. Meanwhile, the images of Felon47 and his damaged ear; you could not get away from those.

      The MSM is not our ally.
      [I know, “duh!” Still, it bears repeating.]

      Reply
    106. 106.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 11:51 am

      @Baud: I truly don’t want to see the Senators load that BBB up with so much local pork that it passes, however narrowly, and destroys the rest of us.

      Hope it goes down in flames.  Whale boat captains can benefit from a subsequent bill.

      Reply
    107. 107.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 11:52 am

      The latest version of the Senate’s BBB is a death sentence for US energy leadership and a giant gift to China.
      It eliminates tax cuts for solar that have been around since 2005, adds a new tax on solar after 2027, and creates a new direct subsidy for coal.

      — Zeke Hausfather (@hausfath.bsky.social) Jun 28, 2025 at 11:23 AM

      Reply
    108. 108.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 11:53 am

      @Elizabelle:

      It’s going to pass.

      Reply
    109. 109.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 11:53 am

      Love it.  The presiding priest welcomed President Biden and VP Harris.  No “former.”

      Reply
    110. 110.

      New Deal democrat

      June 28, 2025 at 11:54 am

      A current summarization of Constitutional law:

      Supreme Court, 1857: “[Blacks] ha[ve] no rights which the white man [i]s bound to respect”
       
      Supreme Court, 2025: “the American born children of illegal immigrants have no rights that society is bound to respect.”
       
      Trump: “It is hereby ordered that all Black people may be lynched.”
      “It is hereby ordered that all Brown people may be deported without any notice or hearing.”
      “It is hereby ordered that all gay people may be imprisoned.”
       
      Supreme Court: “Tut tut, whatever shall we do about all these nationwide injunctions staying Executive acts?”
       
      Supreme Court, Democratic President: “The major questions doctrine means that the President may not undertake any action, even if it specifically allowed by the text of a law, unless the current Congress specifically re-authorizes that act.”
       
      Supreme Court, GOP President: “The unitary executive doctrine means that the President may undertake any action, even if it is specifically forbidden by the text of a law, unless the current Congress specifically renews that prohibition.”

      Reply
    111. 111.

      trollhattan

      June 28, 2025 at 11:54 am

      @Mr. Bemused Senior: ​
       
      Once they rounded up fat white middle-age guy in field the possibility of swarthy possibly foreign-born criminal suspect drained away. IOW no story.

      Reply
    112. 112.

      RevRick

      June 28, 2025 at 11:54 am

      @Professor Bigfoot:

      Billionaires: we want cheap labor so we can get richer.

      Also billionaires: we want a nation of consumers with enough money to buy all the goods and services we provide.

      Also billionaires: we don’t want to pay for the taxes necessary to build a solid infrastructure (including public education)) that will enable goal two.

      Christian Nationalists: ooh, ooh, can we play this game too? We’d love to f*ck up public education.

      End result: first an erosion, then a series of cascading economic failures leading to complete collapse making the Great Depression seem like a mild recession and the evaporation of all wealth.

      Reply
    113. 113.

      Citizen Alan

      June 28, 2025 at 11:56 am

      @Steve LaBonne: more like an added bonus, actually.

      Reply
    114. 114.

      Downpuppy

      June 28, 2025 at 11:58 am

      There’s one possible outcome that could be at least a little amusing:
      P: I don’t approve this homosexual material based on my religion.
      T: And what religion is that?
      P: Christian.
      T: That’s a large & diverse group. Can you be more specific?
      P: Ummm…Methodist?
      T: Thanks. Now I can look this up and be sure to help you. Hmmm – Methodists perform gay weddings..

      Reply
    115. 115.

      Matt

      June 28, 2025 at 12:04 pm

      My take: indoctrinating children into the manipulative and perverted nonsense that is modern fundamentalist “Christianity” is child abuse, point-blank.

      We can solve those parents’ concern and save their kids from abuse in one simple step: take the kids away.

      Churches should be regulated and taxed the same way as every other adult-oriented enterprise that specializes in selling lies to suckers, from gambling to go-go-dancing.

      Reply
    116. 116.

      zhena gogolia

      June 28, 2025 at 12:06 pm

      @Gin & Tonic: He is fantastic.

      Reply
    117. 117.

      Kayla Rudbek

      June 28, 2025 at 12:09 pm

      @lowtechcyclist: James T. Kirk in one of the Star Trek movies when the rogue probe V’ger was posing as a god and asking for the Enterprise

      Reply
    118. 118.

      Citizen Alan

      June 28, 2025 at 12:09 pm

      @lowtechcyclist: i am of the opinion that the majority of American Christians and the overwhelming majority of Evangelical christians are just people who got dunked in a magic bathtub as children because their parents pressured them into it. And then,  having been  dunked in the magic bathtub, they were better than everyone else and could be absolutely hateful and still get into heaven.

      I would remind them that jesus christ only ever talked about hell twice. And on one of those two occasions, he made a point of saying that that, come judgment day, a lot of people who claim to be Christians would be condemned because “I never knew you.”

      Reply
    119. 119.

      Kayla Rudbek

      June 28, 2025 at 12:13 pm

      @Baud:

       

      @lowtechcyclist: if God is all-powerful, what does he need of any created thing (starships, money, political power, etc)?

      Reply
    120. 120.

      Another Scott

      June 28, 2025 at 12:13 pm

      @New Deal democrat: Consistency doesn’t matter to these monsters.

      I’m reminded of the demands that many RWNJs seem to have that their home-schooled darlings must be able to participate in public school team sports and similar events.  Because to exclude them is unfair and against their sincerely held religious beliefs and such like.

      The only fair thing to do is to allow everyone to pick and choose however they want on their say so.

      Every societal system must be broken to accommodate these noisy monsters, no matter the lack of logic (or standing or facts or the plain black letter of the law and regulations say).  Otherwise is oppression, according to the Roberts SCOTUS.

      Grr…

      Fight for 15!!

      Best wishes,
      Scott.

      Reply
    121. 121.

      Not that proud

      June 28, 2025 at 12:14 pm

      @TONYG:

      I grew up in Springfield, Missouri.  I no longer live there and the state has become more conservative since I left, but Springfield has become more liberal.

      Reply
    122. 122.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 12:15 pm

      The pastor informs that the children gave him permission to go political with his homily.  He brought up Yeats’ “The Second Coming” and that George Floyd was murdered just a few miles away.

      Stripping away the religiosity, it’s an interesting homily.  And I think he has taken a few stabs at Felon47 (praising those who showed up in person to mourn) and the ugliness he has fomented and unleashed.

      Truly.  Where is God when Felon47 survives an attempt on his life, and we lose far better people to violence

      ETA:  The pastor mentioned he is also a professor at St. Thomas Law School.

      Reply
    123. 123.

      Not that proud

      June 28, 2025 at 12:16 pm

      Tony, I grew up in Springfield, Missouri.  I no longer live there, and the state has become more conservative since I left, but the city has become somewhat more liberal.

      Reply
    124. 124.

      Matt McIrvin

      June 28, 2025 at 12:16 pm

      @lowtechcyclist: Captain Kirk knew that the “God” he was talking to was an impostor, because it was demanding control of his starship. A God who makes petty demands like that doesn’t sound like much of a God.

      (It’s a nice moment in an otherwise ludicrous movie, one of the worse outings in the Star Trek series.)

      Reply
    125. 125.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 12:17 pm

      @Citizen Alan: The Pew Foundation periodically does surveys of knowledge about the major religions. Atheists and UUs always come out ahead of Christians even on knowledge of Christianity.

      Reply
    126. 126.

      japa21

      June 28, 2025 at 12:17 pm

      @Elizabelle:  Pope Francis prepared the ground for Pope Leo.  By filling the Church with Bishops and Cardinals who are more progressive Francis gave more backup for Leo.

      NB: I do not expect any major changes in the Church’s view of homosexuality or abortion.  I do expect there to be less focus on those two issues however.  And Trump is actually making that easier.  The Archbishop of San Diego came out very strongly against the ICE roundups.  He is also an immigrant.

      I do expect to see more change in terms of the role of women in the Church.  Francis led the way on that and I fully expect Leo to expand on it.  Not for priesthood, but there has been a call for women bishops and that may be happening within the next decade.

      Reply
    127. 127.

      Professor Bigfoot

      June 28, 2025 at 12:18 pm

      @Citizen Alan: I remember very little of Hell being talked about growing up in a Black church.

      But then, we were specifically taught that it was the Romans who killed Jesus, not the Jews.

      Reply
    128. 128.

      Professor Bigfoot

      June 28, 2025 at 12:20 pm

      @Kayla Rudbek: As a species we’re now well aware that there are billions and billions of galaxies, each filled with billions of starts.

      I want to know, why would the Creator of ALL THAT have ANY concern about what a bunch of monkeys on a backwater planet in a backwater solar system in a backwater arm of a backwater galaxy do with their privates? Like, doesn’t He have bigger fish to fry?

      Reply
    129. 129.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 12:20 pm

      @japa21:  Agreed. All good points.

      Reply
    130. 130.

      Matt McIrvin

      June 28, 2025 at 12:21 pm

      @Kayla Rudbek: V’Ger was a different superbeing. This general sort of thing happened to them a *lot*.

      Reply
    131. 131.

      Not that proud

      June 28, 2025 at 12:22 pm

      @sab:

      That’s a fair point.  I meant more from a legal perspective.  If you recall about 15 years ago, there was a move by liberal states to ban gay conversion therapy.  Those laws have been largely upheld, though it looks like there is a new challenge at the Supreme Court.  I think it’s likely that if blue states can ban conversion therapy on the grounds that it’s harmful to children, red states can likely ban medical transition on ground that it’s harmful to children, but using their own view of harm.  I don’t agree with their view, but law is always going to cut both ways.

      Reply
    132. 132.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 12:23 pm

      @Professor Bigfoot:  I think that is why T. Jefferson and other Founding Fathers and others were deists, seeing God in nature.  They believed in science and using one’s curiosity and intelligence.

      Religion is pretty much men controlling the rest of us.  Often, rules for thee, but not for me.

      Reply
    133. 133.

      Not that proud

      June 28, 2025 at 12:26 pm

      Sab, fair point about cancer treatments.  If you recall, a lot of blue states have banned conversion therapy for LGBTQ on the grounds that it’s harmful to children.  Those laws have largely been upheld, though there is a new case at the Supreme Court to be heard in the fall. I just think if we can ban certain treatments due to the harms they cause, it’s likely they can also ban certain treatments based on their own views of harm.  I don’t necessarily agree with those views, but the law cuts both ways.

      Reply
    134. 134.

      narya

      June 28, 2025 at 12:27 pm

      @Steve LaBonne: I resemble that remark . . .

      Reply
    135. 135.

      Not that proud

      June 28, 2025 at 12:28 pm

      @Baud:

       

      The lead plaintiffs in this case are Muslim.

      Reply
    136. 136.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 12:29 pm

      @japa21:  Looking at your comment again:  women bishops before women priests?  Interesting.

      Reply
    137. 137.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 12:30 pm

      @Professor Bigfoot:

      You don’t know what kinds of crazy rules he’s imposed on other planets.

      Reply
    138. 138.

      Hoodie

      June 28, 2025 at 12:34 pm

      @Elizabelle: Women run a lot of day to day things in Catholic parishes, hospitals, etc., so it would make some sense.

      Reply
    139. 139.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 12:36 pm

      @Gin & Tonic: ​

      some dude from Chicago who posts from time to time as “@Pontifex”

      Sure that isn’t @Pontifexpetasum? ;-)

      (petasum = Latin for ‘hat’)

      Agree that Leo seems like an improvement over Francis. And given that Francis was the best Pope since at least John XXIII, that’s saying a lot.

      Reply
    140. 140.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 12:38 pm

      @Baud: ​

      Call her Ishmael. New version of Senate BBB sneaks in a new tax break for…whale-boat captains.

      They kept on blubbering to her until she gave in. ;-)

      Reply
    141. 141.

      Harrison Wesley

      June 28, 2025 at 12:38 pm

      So the big match will be Pope Leo vs. Leonard Leo?

      Reply
    142. 142.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 12:43 pm

      @Hoodie:  Yes. Was thinking it would be administrative.

      Reply
    143. 143.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 12:48 pm

      @Downpuppy:

      T: That’s a large & diverse group. Can you be more specific?
      P: Ummm…Methodist?
      T: Thanks. Now I can look this up and be sure to help you. Hmmm – Methodists perform gay weddings..

      Nah, P (pupil? parent?) would be specific about which Methodist denomination they were from.  It would have a specific name, and it would not be the United Methodist Church, which performs gay weddings.

      Just like if P was Lutheran, it would be the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod (or some other even more RW synod) and not the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America which performs gay weddings.

      Reply
    144. 144.

      Betty

      June 28, 2025 at 12:49 pm

      @Gin & Tonic: Yes. Pope Leo is someone the world needs right now. He is not afraid to take on all the haters and evildoers, but does it using the language of peace and love.

      Reply
    145. 145.

      Captain C

      June 28, 2025 at 12:49 pm

      @Geminid: Hence the complaints of Jesus’ own words being too ‘woke’.

      Reply
    146. 146.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 12:50 pm

      @Kayla Rudbek:

      James T. Kirk in one of the Star Trek movies when the rogue probe V’ger was posing as a god and asking for the Enterprise

      So I saw. But whatever point Baud was trying to make still eludes me.

      Reply
    147. 147.

      trollhattan

      June 28, 2025 at 12:55 pm

      @Kayla Rudbek: ​
      Have always treasured the species that mastered intergalactic travel and not Scotchbrite technology. Priorities.

      Reply
    148. 148.

      Chacal Charles Calthrop

      June 28, 2025 at 12:57 pm

      @Baud: thks for the link,  I thought maybe “why does God need a space ship” was a reference to Elon Musk’s failed space program on which our vicious government still wants to spend money.

      Reply
    149. 149.

      MagdaInBlack

      June 28, 2025 at 12:58 pm

      @Another Scott:

      [ “What the talking serpent said was actually right. They didn’t die – God lied to them (but that’s Ok because reasons). They did gain knowledge and become more like God, rather than being so childlike. Being an independent adult is bad!! “]

      Sounds a wee bit like they became “self-aware” doesn’t it ?

      Reply
    150. 150.

      Captain C

      June 28, 2025 at 1:01 pm

      @lowtechcyclist: In other words, a get-out-of-hell-free card so they can sin all they want.

      Reply
    151. 151.

      Harrison Wesley

      June 28, 2025 at 1:04 pm

      @MagdaInBlack: As God warned them, FAFO.

      Reply
    152. 152.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 1:08 pm

      Tim Walz speaking.

      I am so intensely grateful that Felon47 stayed the eff away from all of this.  He has no class, and would have diminished the service by his presence.

      Reply
    153. 153.

      Elizabelle

      June 28, 2025 at 1:14 pm

      Walz’s praise of Melissa and Mark is a slap at what is in the oval office today.  He is drawing such a distinction between them and what is going on, now, without ever saying it.  The listeners and readers can draw the inference.

      Reply
    154. 154.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 1:15 pm

      @Citizen Alan: ​

      i am of the opinion that the majority of American Christians and the overwhelming majority of Evangelical christians are just people who got dunked in a magic bathtub as children because their parents pressured them into it.

      Having married a woman who grew up Southern Baptist, I’ve got somewhat of a different take. First of all, the pre-teen years seem to be the typical age when they choose to answer the call at the end of the service, go up to the altar rail, and make their commitment to Christ, as their parents and the congregation beams with pride. Second, parental pressure isn’t really needed – it’s something they grow up anticipating as a rite of passage, but one where they get to choose the circumstances. But third, there’s rarely anything remotely transformational about it: afterwards, life goes on pretty much like it always did for them. Nothing that would remotely live up to the phrase “born again.”

      I imagine that many of them feel a bit disillusioned afterwards, and as someone whose conversion experience was every bit as transformational as the phrase ‘born again’ suggests, I can’t help but feel sorry for them.

      And then, having been dunked in the magic bathtub, they were better than everyone else and could be absolutely hateful and still get into heaven.

      I’m sure a lot of them go that route. And many others get disillusioned and ultimately leave.

      Reply
    155. 155.

      Another Scott

      June 28, 2025 at 1:19 pm

      Mrs. Betty Bowers
      ‪@mrsbettybowers.bsky.social‬

      If Christian Nationalist parents are allowed to have their kids opt-out of any books that dare mention anyone gay, then all the other parents should be allowed to let their kids opt-out from the Ten Commandments.

      June 28, 2025 at 8:18 AM

      +1

      Or, hey, we can compromise. We can use these.

      ٤. Do not laugh too much,

      Finally! A religion for us Eeyores!!

      ;-)

      Best wishes,
      Scott.

      Reply
    156. 156.

      WTFGhost

      June 28, 2025 at 1:30 pm

      Everyone in Texas should suddenly become Catholic and say that going to a school that displays the *wrong* decalog undermines their religious instruction. After all, protestants are all going to hell for wandering away from the one holy catholic and apostolic church.

      As soon as they are done with that fight, turn protestant, and insist they’re wrong *AGAIN*. You can become Jewish next time, and say they’re *still* wrong.

      There really are three different versions, you know. Catholics have no problem with graven images, that are not worshipped, protestants do. That’s why protestants wear a cross, not a crucifix (with Jesus on the cross). Of course, most people think the Ten Commandments were brought down from a movie set by Charlton Heston, so….

      Reply
    157. 157.

      WTFGhost

      June 28, 2025 at 1:37 pm

      @lowtechcyclist: There’s another way people can go. They can start to fake religious ecstasy, proclaiming that they are in constant communication with the lord, that they pray over every decision, and the lord responds to them.

      People who do this, and know they’re faking, will probably leave sooner or later, but, they might back people like the next type. See,  if you do this hard enough, you can become an EmptyG (Marge T’s preferred backronym) and think your own cray-cray inner voice is The Word Of The Lord, and ignore how it always tells you to do what you think will cover you, personally, in the most glory.

      This is how and why so many evangelicals can support Trump. He is, quite simply, what they want, with all of their dreams of POWER and glory and POWER and god and POWER and Jesus and, uh, faith, and POWER and hope, and POWER and what’s that third thing? Faith, hope and something, and the greatest of these is, uh, FAITH, because it came first!

      Oh, yes, and POWER. And you’ll always know you’re right, just like a serial killer does.

      Reply
    158. 158.

      Enhanced Voting Techniques

      June 28, 2025 at 1:41 pm

      @bbleh: The inevitable backlash by kids in all but the most isolated and homogeneous communities is gonna be borderline hilarious.

      Back in the day with Landover Baptist we would get a constant stream of kids from these religious schools coming in and complaining how useless the education they were getting. Mostly the teachers would spend the class preaching, never get around to English or math.

      There have been plenty of surveys commission by the Evangelicals showing the best way to make a child into a hard core atheist is screaming the Bible at him all day.

      The failure of the Evangelicals is the context this is being done in.

      Reply
    159. 159.

      Enhanced Voting Techniques

      June 28, 2025 at 1:51 pm

      @lowtechcyclist: Pontifex = Bridge Inspector.

      From “Pontus” Latin for Sea.

      Bridges were a big deal in Rome and those river gods needs to be pleased.

      Reply
    160. 160.

      Enhanced Voting Techniques

      June 28, 2025 at 1:53 pm

      @lowtechcyclist: So I saw. But whatever point Baud was trying to make still eludes me.

      In Christianity God is a perfect, all knowing, all powerful being who transcends the universe.  Any being who is so limited as to need a space craft isn’t God.

      Reply
    161. 161.

      TONYG

      June 28, 2025 at 1:54 pm

      @Gin & Tonic: good

      Reply
    162. 162.

      Enhanced Voting Techniques

      June 28, 2025 at 1:55 pm

      @Another Scott: allowed to have their kids opt-out of any books that dare mention anyone gay.

      So what, these people chop out any mention of King David in The Bible?

      Reply
    163. 163.

      p.a.

      June 28, 2025 at 2:07 pm

      Everyone convert to Catholicism and demand our bishops defend the often-but-not-always (evangelical inroads) Catholic immigrant neighbors: a potential wedge between Cathofascism and Rethuglican evangelical bigots.

      Reply
    164. 164.

      Gretchen

      June 28, 2025 at 2:21 pm

      @Not that proud: why do you think banning transition meds is minor? Going through puberty or not is a major difference for a trans kid that can’t be completely redone later.

      Reply
    165. 165.

      Harrison Wesley

      June 28, 2025 at 2:23 pm

      @p.a.: That just happened in California.

      Reply
    166. 166.

      Kent

      June 28, 2025 at 2:33 pm

      @lowtechcyclist: Is this the case in Arlington that we are talking about?

      I thought it was Muslim parents who were the anti-LGBT bigots who sued here, not Christian parents.

      Or do Muslim bigots become honorary Christians when they hate on LGBT people?

      Reply
    167. 167.

      p.a.

      June 28, 2025 at 2:36 pm

      @Kent: The W admin allied with Muslim nations to try (can’t remember success or fail) denying international birth control/women’s health measures through UN & WHO.

      Reply
    168. 168.

      Kent

      June 28, 2025 at 2:37 pm

      @Not that proud: You might have a point.

      Liberal bans on conversion therapy and conservative bans on gender-affirming care for minors are both premised on the state knowing what is best for children and not the parents (both overrule parental rights).

      Allowing conversion therapy might be the price for overturning bans on gender-affirming care for minors.

      Now I agree entirely that they aren’t the same thing.  But both could be argued legally as a violation of parental and family rights.

      Reply
    169. 169.

      TerryC

      June 28, 2025 at 2:54 pm

      @TONYG: OMG! Stuck in the BRONZER age?

      Reply
    170. 170.

      Baud

      June 28, 2025 at 2:57 pm

      Budapest sees record Pride turnout despite government ban and threats to participants

      Reply
    171. 171.

      Citizen Alan

      June 28, 2025 at 3:02 pm

      @Enhanced Voting Techniques: Heretic! David and Jonathan were just really good friends!

      Reply
    172. 172.

      zhena gogolia

      June 28, 2025 at 3:04 pm

      Lalo Schifrin, RIP.

      Reply
    173. 173.

      Lyrebird

      June 28, 2025 at 3:11 pm

      @Baud:

      @Steve LaBonne: And when that fails it fails spectacularly. The past president of my congregation is a young female-presenting nonbinary person married to a woman. They grew up in a fundie family and went to Liberty University! They made a point of reading every book on the “warning do not read these books” list that students were given.

      Oh, YES!

      One of my classmates in middle school history had a note from home that she was not allowed to read “The King Must Die” by iirc Mary Renault.  EVERYONE ELSE read it way more thoroughly than they read other assignments, to make sure they found whatever those parents were objecting to.  The teacher later in the year said something like, “I could NEVER assign Renault’s book Persian Boy, because too many parents would object.  There are some copies on that shelf over there by some happenstance, but I am NOT ASSIGNING IT.”

      Both books were amazing.

      I still fear for every LGBTQ kid’s safety, and anyone else who just doesn’t look the way some haters want them to look, but I am so happy for the authors of the books with the gay characters and all that, because nothing drives up teen readership like banning a book!

      Reply
    174. 174.

      japa21

      June 28, 2025 at 3:17 pm

      @Elizabelle: ​
        my error, I meant deacons

      Reply
    175. 175.

      cain

      June 28, 2025 at 4:50 pm

      @TONYG:

      Ironically, if people read the Bible instead of it being told to them .. the religious forces would have to ban reading the Bible because it would have the effect it had on you.

      Instead they will make you read the old testament.

      Reply
    176. 176.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 5:02 pm

      @Enhanced Voting Techniques:

      In Christianity God is a perfect, all knowing, all powerful being who transcends the universe. Any being who is so limited as to need a space craft isn’t God.

      Agreed. Still not connecting. Nevermind.

      Reply
    177. 177.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 5:14 pm

      @Another Scott: ​

      If Christian Nationalist parents are allowed to have their kids opt-out of any books that dare mention anyone gay, then all the other parents should be allowed to let their kids opt-out from the Ten Commandments.

      That was one of my first thoughts too. And since what they usually do with the Commandments is post them on the walls of all the classrooms, it’s not like the objecting students can just leave the room for a little while – they’re there all the time. So they’d have to take them down. That should be a pretty easy win under this decision.

      Reply
    178. 178.

      lowtechcyclist

      June 28, 2025 at 5:37 pm

      @WTFGhost: ​

      @lowtechcyclist: There’s another way people can go. They can start to fake religious ecstasy, proclaiming that they are in constant communication with the lord, that they pray over every decision, and the lord responds to them.

      People who do this, and know they’re faking, will probably leave sooner or later, but, they might back people like the next type. See, if you do this hard enough, you can become an EmptyG (Marge T’s preferred backronym) and think your own cray-cray inner voice is The Word Of The Lord, and ignore how it always tells you to do what you think will cover you, personally, in the most glory.

      That brings back memories from such a distant part of my Christian life that I rarely think about it anymore. Back in the summer of 1971, a bunch of us found a Pentecostal fellowship that a woman led in her house. Lots of speaking in tongues, and Sister R. would prophesy, always starting off, “O my people, o my people…” before launching into her alleged prophecy.

      One aspect of that fellowship that I recall was that people did seem to pray about the smallest things in their lives – not quite at the level of praying about whether to go to the bathroom now or later, but almost.

      A bunch of us grew out of that fellowship and its overall dynamic together, and continued fellowshipping together in a more normal way, no tongues, no prophecies, no obsession with praying over trivial decisions. So I have no experience with people who don’t grow out of that latter sort of behavior early on in life.

      This is how and why so many evangelicals can support Trump. He is, quite simply, what they want, with all of their dreams of POWER and glory and POWER and god and POWER and Jesus and, uh, faith, and POWER and hope, and POWER and what’s that third thing? Faith, hope and something, and the greatest of these is, uh, FAITH, because it came first!

      I’ve only become aware of Christian Dominionists and the like in the past several years, and to say I don’t grok them is an understatement. “Love not the world,” says John in his first epistle. And what could be more worldly than seeking power and dominion over others? “The Son of Man came not to be served but to serve.” What, that was just about him, but he gave his life so we could order others around?

      I just don’t get it. I’d love to have a conversation with Russell Vought or someone like that and ask, “where the hell do you get this crap from? I don’t see it in my Bible.” Sure, if you can’t get people to open their hearts to the love of the Lord, just have everybody act in the way you think such people should act. Create lots of hollow ‘Christians’ like the ones evangelicals used to deride the mainline churches for cranking out. I really don’t get it.

      Reply
    179. 179.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 5:38 pm

      @lowtechcyclist: “Should” is doing an awful lot of work there.

      Reply
    180. 180.

      Steve LaBonne

      June 28, 2025 at 5:41 pm

      @cain: For most of its history the Catholic Church strongly discouraged laypeople from reading the Bible and translating it it into a vernacular would get you executed for heresy.

      Reply
    181. 181.

      dnfree

      June 28, 2025 at 5:51 pm

      @Citizen Alan: Many of the most devout evangelical Christians I know grew up either in a mainstream branch of Christianity (I know former Catholics) or were raised with no religious background.  They are CONVERTS, with the level of belief and dedication that sometimes implies.  And some move on from evangelicalism to Orthodox Christianity (the eastern branch of Christianity), believing it to be even more restrictive.

      Reply

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