Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Texas Rep. Slams Bill Forcing Schools To Display Ten Commandments As 'Deeply Un-Christian' In Powerful Rant

James Talarico; TikTok screenshot of James Talarico delivering speech
James Talarico/Facebook; @jamestalarico/TikTok

Rep. James Talarico, who is Christian, gave an impassioned speech in opposition to a bill that would force Texas schools to display the Ten Commandments in every classroom.

Texas State Democratic Representative James Talarico is earning praise after he reposted a powerful speech he gave in which he opposed a proposed bill that would require the display of the Ten Commandments in every classroom.

Since the spring, Talarico has been spearheading the opposition to the proposed Senate Bill 1515, accusing Texas Republicans of "trying to force public schools" to display the scripture. A Christian himself, Talarico has called such displays "idolatrous."


The bill, which failed to pass through the Texas Senate, aimed to mandate the display of the Ten Commandments in a "conspicuous place" in every classroom of public or charter schools.

In the video, Talarico directs his remarks toward Republican Candy Noble, who'd sponsored the legislation and could not adequately defend it, as demonstrated in the video.

You can hear what Talarico said in the video below.

@jamestalarico

Texas Republicans are trying to force public schools to display the Ten Commandments in every classroom. I told the bill author: “This bill is not only un-constitutional and un-American, it’s deeply in-Christian.” #txlege

He said:

“This bill to me is not only unconstitutional, it’s not only un-American — I think it is also deeply un-Christian. And I say that because I believe this bill is idolatrous, I believe it is exclusionary and I believe it is arrogant. And those three things in my reading of the Gospel are diametrically opposed to the teachings of Jesus.”

He quoted a version of Matthew 6:5, stating that public displays of faith to show off were hypocritical and emphasizing the importance of personal and sincere religious practice:

“Don’t be like the hypocrites who love to pray publicly on street corners,” Jesus says in the verse. “When you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your father who is in secret.”
“A religion that has to force people to put up a poster to prove its legitimacy is a dead religion. And it’s not one that I want to be a part of.”

Talarico also raised concerns about the bill's focus on religious matters over other important issues, highlighting the need to address topics such as hunger, clothing, and healthcare:

"You know that in Scripture, it says faith without works is what? Is dead. My concern is instead of bringing a bill that will feed the hungry, clothe the naked, heal the sick, we instead mandate that people put up a poster.”
"And we both follow a teacher, a rabbi who said, 'Don't let the law get in the way of loving your neighbor.'" Loving your neighbor is the most important law. It is the summation of all the law and all the prophets."
"I would submit it to you that our neighborhood also includes the Hindu student who sits in a classroom, the Buddhist student who sits in a classroom, and the atheist student who sits in a classroom. And my question to [Noble] is, 'Does this bill truly love those students?'"

Noble countered that Texas schools were done "a great wrong" after the 1980 Supreme Court decision in Stone v. Graham, which the Free Speech Center notes ruled that a Kentucky statute that required the Ten Commandments to be posted in school classrooms violated the First Amendment's establishment clause.

Talarico had a response to that, too:

"Every time on this committee that we try to teach students values like empathy or kindness, we're told we can't because that's the parent's role. Every time on this committee that we try to teach basic sex education to keep our kids safe, we're told that's the parent's role."
"But now you're putting religious commandments, literal commandments in our classrooms and you're saying that's the state's role. Why is that not the parent's role?

Noble could not answer that nor did she have a response to Talarico's point asking why "having a rainbow in a classroom considered indoctrination, and not having the Ten Commandments in a classroom."

Many have praised him for speaking out.




Talarico has made a name for himself speaking out against GOP attacks on public education.

In March, Talarico and his fellow Democratic Representative Gina Hinojosa were the sole two lawmakers on the House Public Education Committee who voted against House Bill 900, also known as the "READER Act."

This bill seeks to ban "sexually explicit materials" in schools and requires parental consent for their children to access any "sexually relevant material" within the classroom.

More from Trending

Screenshot of Neil DeGrasse Tyson
Club Shay Shay/YouTube

Neil DeGrasse Tyson Shares Powerful History Lesson In Viral Rant About Anti-Vaxxers—And He's Spot On

Speaking during an appearance on Shannon Sharpe's Club Shay Shay podcast, astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson gave a powerful history lesson about why he thinks anti-vaxxers will make the next pandemic even worse.

Tyson has made his name as one of the most prominent science communicators of the last few decades and regularly spoke out against misinformation and conspiracy theories that were all the rage throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. And he expressed frustration that "we still have anti-vaxxers running around" with the capacity to make even more trouble for public health officials.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Brooke Rollins and Roger Marshall
CNBC; Newsmax

MAGA Politicians Get Blunt Factcheck After Trying To Blame Biden For Screwworm Emergency In Texas

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins and Kansas Republican Senator Roger Marshall were called out after blaming a rise in screwworm infections in Texas cattle on former President Joe Biden—even though it was President Donald Trump's administration that cut funding for programs that track the parasite.

Earlier, the Department of Agriculture announced that a case of New World Screwworm—a flesh-eating parasitic fly—has been detected in a three-week-old calf near La Pryor, Texas, about 30 miles from the U.S.-Mexico border. The discovery marks the parasite's arrival in the U.S. after it spread northward through Central America and Mexico over recent years.

Keep ReadingShow less
Morgan Wallen throwing security guard's cell phone across stage
@nhoop34/TikTok

Morgan Wallen Sparks Controversy After Grabbing Phone From Security Guard And Throwing It Across The Stage During Concert

Country singer Morgan Wallen's rage against inanimate objects continued earlier this week during his show in Pittsburgh.

While working the stage during one of his songs, Wallen paced back and forth, lightly interacting with the crowd while regularly turning his attention back to one side of the stage.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Randy Fine
Newsmax

MAGA Rep. Dragged After Bizarrely Claiming Democratic Voters Went Dumpster Diving For Ballots To Rig California Primary

Florida Republican Representative Randy Fine was widely mocked after claiming during a Newsmax interview that Democratic voters in California went dumpster diving for discarded ballots to rig the primary election.

Republicans have alleged fraud took place but many of the fraud allegations appear to stem from a misunderstanding of how California counts votes, particularly the time required to complete the process.

Keep ReadingShow less
Savannah Guthrie
@jennasheinelle/Instagram

Savannah Guthrie Opens Up About What She Tells Her Kids Amid Her Mom's Disappearance In Emotional 'Today' Clip

Some say that parenting is an impossible job, with an unending list of decisions and possible missteps, but parenting might feel uniquely impossible to someone in Savannah Guthrie's position.

Guthrie's mother, 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie, went missing from her home at the end of January. Her absence was first noted when she did not appear at church service that Sunday. One of her doors was discovered ajar and a single image of a blurry figure was caught on camera, and there's been no sign of her or her whereabouts since.

Keep ReadingShow less