This is another example where faith views were marginalized and a school attempted to surpress them.
From NewsTimesLive.com:
Seven students attended an after-school club meeting at Danbury High School on Thursday afternoon to hear an anti-gay preacher who was allowed to speak only after the school was threatened with a lawsuit.
You can, of course, see the bias from the media in this "anti-gay preacher" statement. I doubt he's "anti-gay," but more likely wants to tell students the other side of the pro-homosexual propaganda that's forced on them.
Which brings me to something else. It isn't until far down in this story (beyond the point many people would bother to read) that you find out this lawsuit came up because the school was already promoting the pro-homosexual "Day of Silence" and other students just wanted equal access to counter that dangerous message (homosexuality does, after all, involve numerous health risks). The school, while allowing the pro-homosexual message, didn't want to allow other students to hold a "Day of Truth" event.
The Day of Truth does NOT constitute "Congress [making a] law respecting an establishment of religion." Nor does it constitute a "theocracy."
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