No one is forced to read or believe any literature placed in hotel rooms, but atheists are so pathetically fragile that they need smelling salts or grief counselling at the thought of even being in the same room as anything that mentions God.
Courageous University Administrations could be the title of a very thin book. Here we go again, as reported by Peggy Fletcher Stack of the Salt Lake Tribune, October 1, 2018 (links in original):
After a complaint from a group that tracks what it sees as violations of the separation of church and state, Dixie State Inn, a hotel associated with the state-owned southern Utah university, removed all copies of the Bible and the Book of Mormon from guest rooms.See also my post University of Windsor caves in to whiny atheists and removes prayer from convocation ceremony (December 20, 2012)
The Freedom From Religion Foundation alerted Dixie State’s president about the problem in June, who then turned it over to the St. George school’s lawyers to consider.
The group reminded Dixie that the establishment clause of U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment forbids public schools from promoting, endorsing or advancing any religion.
After an in-depth analysis by Alison Vicroy, the university’s assistant general counsel, the school asked the inn to take the religious texts out of individual guest rooms.
That was “an appropriate course of action,” Dixie State spokeswoman Jyl Hall said Monday. “The university doesn’t want either the appearance or the reality of advancing one religion over another.”
Copies of the Bible and Book of Mormon, the latter being The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ signature scripture, Hall said, are still available at the front desk.
Bibles, often supplied by Gideons International, are commonly found in privately owned hotels. Marriott International, whose founders are Latter-day Saints, bought Starwood (which includes Sheraton and Westin outlets) two years ago and plans to place copies of the Bible and Book of Mormon in 300,000 rooms in its newly acquired hotels by year’s end, according to The Associated Press.
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