Patriots, we're witnessing a pivotal moment in the fight to reclaim America's Judeo-Christian heritage. On Tuesday, the full 17-judge U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit heard oral arguments in a case that could finally end the left's decades-long war on religious expression in public spaces.
The consolidated case involves laws from Texas and Louisiana requiring displays of the Ten Commandments in public settings - legislation that has sent secular liberals into their predictable frenzy of constitutional hysteria. But here's what the anti-God crowd doesn't want you to know: our Founding Fathers never intended to scrub Christianity from the public square.
This case is virtually guaranteed to reach the Supreme Court, where Trump's constitutional conservative majority could deliver a knockout blow to the radical secularists who have systematically erased our nation's Christian foundation from classrooms, courthouses, and government buildings.
The very fact that displaying the moral foundation of Western civilization has become "controversial" shows just how far we've fallen from the Founders' vision. These are the same principles that guided the men who declared our independence and wrote our Constitution - yet today's woke establishment treats them like toxic waste.
America's Christian Heritage Under Attack
For too long, activist judges have twisted the First Amendment's Establishment Clause into a weapon against religious expression, while completely ignoring the Free Exercise Clause that protects it. The result? A generation of Americans who don't even know the basic moral principles that built the greatest nation in history.
Meanwhile, these same courts have no problem with drag queen story hours in public libraries or transgender ideology being forced on kindergarteners. Apparently, the only speech that's "dangerous" is acknowledging the God who blessed this nation.
With Trump back in the White House and constitutional conservatives firmly in control of the Supreme Court, we finally have a real chance to restore sanity. The question isn't whether government can acknowledge our religious heritage - it's whether we'll let a vocal minority of atheist activists continue dictating what the vast majority of Americans can see in their own public spaces.
It's time to ask ourselves: in a nation founded "under God," who exactly should be afraid of the Ten Commandments?
