Citing religious liberty, Supreme Court allows parents to opt out of LGBTQ books

On Friday, in a major decision, the United States Supreme Court reassured itself with parents in a case involving religious freedom and public education.

The judges judged that a group of parents from Maryland could withdraw their children from the program which, according to them, violates their religious beliefs while their trial against the school district continues. The decision broke out 6-3 along the ideological lines of the court.

The opinion of the High Court intervenes in the midst of current clashes on cultural issues and parental rights and, more broadly, the fundamental objective of American public schools. In this case, Mahmoud c. Taylor, the conservative majority decided that the Montgomery County School Board has violated the rights of the parents’ first amendment by preventing them from withdrawing their children from teaching involving books on the theme of the LGBTQ.

Why we wrote this

In a case closely observed on religious freedom and public education, the Supreme Court reassured itself with parents who wanted to remove their children from the theme of the LGBTQ.

Muslim, Catholics and Ukrainian Orthodox parents who have submitted the trial maintains that the Council policy violates their right to freely exercise their religion. In the opinion of the majority, judge Samuel Alito said they should succeed with their complaints.

The Supreme Court has long recognized the rights of parents to direct “religious education” of their children, “he wrote. “And we have judged that these rights are raped by government policies which” interfere considerably[e] With religious development “children”.

The decision is a step in the right direction, explains Neal McCluskey, director of the Center for Educational Freedom at the Cato Institute.

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