Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) this week signed a strange bill into law this week. Apparently hoping to solve a problem that doesn’t exist, the governor put his signature on a bill that says “a school district may educate students about the history of traditional winter celebrations, and allow students and district staff to offer traditional greetings regarding the celebrations, including ‘Merry Christmas,’ ‘Happy Hanukkah,’ and ‘happy holidays.”
At an event to celebrate the new measure, Perry declared, “I’m proud we are standing up for religious freedom in our state. Freedom of religion doesn’t mean freedom from religion.”
My friend Rob Boston had a good take responding to the argument.
[R]eligious freedom must, by its very nature, include the right to reject all religion or else it isn’t really religious freedom. […]
Consider this as well: Under the right conditions, we all want freedom from religion — or at least freedom from certain religions. A Methodist is not a Muslim for a reason. If the public school system or some other arm of government began imposing Islam, Scientology, Zoroastrianism (or even liberal Christianity) onto people against their will, I’d expect Gov. Perry and his followers would immediately demand to be free from that religion.
This has long been one of the right’s more inane talking points: “The Constitution guarantees freedom of religion, not freedom from religion.”









