Oklahoma Governor defends Ten Commandments monument at state
capitol
Thursday, July 23, 2015
Recently, the Oklahoma Supreme Court ruled that a Ten
Commandments monument at the state capitol must come down. This ruling is
contrary to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2005 that a Ten Commandments
monument at the Texas state capitol was constitutional.
Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt said, "Quite
simply, the Oklahoma Supreme Court got it wrong...the court completely ignored
the profound historical impact of the Ten Commandments on the foundation of
Western law."
The state attorney general is appealing the ruling, and
Governor Mary Fallin has ordered the monument to remain on capitol grounds. She
said in a statement, "During this process, which will involve both legal
appeals and potential legislative and constitutional changes, the Ten
Commandments monument will remain on the Capitol grounds."
This assault on Oklahoma's Christian heritage is alarming.
Anti-God bullies have been fighting to remove religion from the public square.
This is about religious liberty and recognizing that the Ten Commandments are
the basis of all of our laws.
Tim Wildmon, President, American Family Association
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