My former fellow-Missourians have a special election tomorrow to send Christians home from their long road trip.

Rev. Terry Hodges of First Baptist Church in Odessa, said that if Amendment 2 passes, it will “level the playing field.”

Hodges said Christians “enjoyed home-field advantage” for the country’s first 150 years. “That’s changed, and now there’s a hostility toward Christians,” he said.

I think what’s changed is that Protestants miss having unchallenged supremacy. Interesting that they managed to get Missouri’s four Catholic bishops to sign on. But my experience in Iowa has told me they will be far from likely to get their public school students to lead other Christians in the Rosary.

I don’t know that this will be a “jobs bill for lawyers.” But it sure seems like a solution in search of a problem to me. As a parent of a public school student, I’m relieved that high school faculty and staff aren’t coercing my daughter with evangelical Christian prayers of the squinty eyed concentration sort. A right-to-pray law will have to provide some sort of equal access, I would think. How many evangelicals would welcome the Prayer of St Michael every tenth prayer? Or something Wiccan their way coming every so often.

Let the voting begin. Then the legal challenges. Then the lawyer fees. Then the Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, Pagan, and whatnot prayers to follow.

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