Alabama passing meaningful legislation - The Zombie Commandants
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Workers pause before removing a Ten Commandments monument from the rotunda of the state judicial building in Montgomery on Aug. 27, 2003. Federal courts ordered the monument removed.
Alabamas voters will decide in November whether the Ten Commandments can be displayed on state property.
The states House of Representatives voted 66-19 on Thursday to advance a ballot provision that would amend Alabamas constitution to allow the monuments. The state Senate has already approved the Republican proposal, which does not need the governors signature, The Associated Press reports.
The move comes 15 years after Roy Moore, then the chief justice of Alabamas Supreme Court, lost his job for refusing to enforce a federal court order to remove a Ten Commandments display from a state judicial building.
Under the proposed amendment, the Ten Commandments may be displayed on property belonging to public schools and in other state-owned buildings in a manner that complies with constitutional requirements. Those include placing the commandments alongside historical or educational items as part of a larger display
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/alabama-ten-commandments-ballot_us_5ab506bae4b054d118e22785