Atheist teen forces school to remove prayer from wall

Mave

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CRANSTON, R.I. — She is 16, the daughter of a firefighter and a nurse, a self-proclaimed nerd who loves Harry Potter and Facebook. But Jessica Ahlquist is also an outspoken atheist who has incensed this heavily Roman Catholic city with a successful lawsuit to get a prayer removed from the wall of her high school auditorium, where it has hung for 49 years.

A federal judge ruled this month that the prayer’s presence at Cranston High School West was unconstitutional, concluding that it violated the principle of government neutrality in religion.

In the weeks since, residents have crowded school board meetings to demand an appeal, Jessica has received online threats and the police have escorted her at school, and Cranston, a dense city of 80,000 just south of Providence, has throbbed with raw emotion.

State Representative Peter G. Palumbo, a Democrat from Cranston, called Jessica “an evil little thing” on a popular talk radio show. Three separate florists refused to deliver her roses sent from a national atheist group. The group, the Freedom From Religion Foundation, has filed a complaint with the Rhode Island Commission for Human Rights.

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“I was amazed,” said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the foundation, which is based in Wisconsin and has given Jessica $13,000 from support and scholarship funds. “We haven’t seen a case like this in a long time, with this level of revilement and ostracism and stigmatizing.”

Written by seventh grader
The prayer, eight feet tall, is papered onto the wall in the Cranston West auditorium, near the stage. It has hung there since 1963, when a seventh grader wrote it as a sort of moral guide and that year’s graduating class presented it as a gift. It was a year after a landmark Supreme Court ruling barring organized prayer in public schools.

“Our Heavenly Father,” the prayer begins, “grant us each day the desire to do our best, to grow mentally and morally as well as physically, to be kind and helpful.” It goes on for a few more lines before concluding with “Amen.”

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46160046/ns/us_news-the_new_york_times/#.TyYq_SOhBUN
 
"Freedom of speech only applies on opinions that align with MY opinions."
Fuck, I'm no fan of the Church either, but if some people get strength or solace from that verse, let it be. You aren't obliged to read it. They don't make you read it.

See God as Twilight. We don't hate it because we really hate it. Fine, the acting is horrible, the books are simple and designed for teenage girls to be drawn into, but someone actually put a lot of work in it. Really, the worst part of the entire Twilight craze for me is the hordes an HORDES of screaming girls going absolutely berserk because some dude is playing in a movie as a quite obvious sexually confused vampire. There are tons of people who like Twilight because they loved the books, or find it romantic or some crazy shit. They like them in their head, not in the world. (by which I mean, they don't go in a full on frenzy when Twilight is mentioned).

Same with religion. The origin of the Catholic Church is great, Love thy neighbor, no violence, respect each other and don't screw everyone over. It's the Pope and all his stupid ass 12th century thinking that I hate. If they would really want the church to be big again, they would have to accept woman in their ranks, be more supple with some of the more outdated ideas (I mean c'mon, pope hating on condoms because they anger God into giving you VD's? That's bullshit and they know it).

Same with this prayer. If some kids like it, and read it everyday in silence on their way to class, using to get strength out of it to face bullies, or whatever, let them be. They don't try to shove it down your throat.

Tl;dr: some people overreact, and some people need to think about other people who need thinking about.
 
Yeah, uhm, as an agnostic, I apologize for the hardcore athiests even though I'm not affiliated.
 
GPow69 said:
Yeah, uhm, as an agnostic, I apologize for the hardcore athiests even though I'm not affiliated.

You can't be sure you're actually apologizing, you should have said "Yeah uhm, as an agnostic, I maybe apologize for these maybe living hardcore atheists even though we might not be affiliated but we can't prove it."
 
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