Project Blitz – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Fri, 18 Jul 2025 14:50:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Project Blitz – 社区黑料 32 32 28 Bills, Ten Commandments and 1 Source: A Christian Right 鈥楤ill Mill鈥 /article/state-laws-requiring-ten-commandments-in-schools-are-the-product-of-a-far-right-bill-mill/ Fri, 18 Jul 2025 11:59:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1018020 Political operative David Barton held up with years of wear on its dark brown cover and proclaimed its pages put of the country鈥檚 very foundation. 

鈥淭his is actually printed by the official printer of Congress,鈥 said Barton, a best-selling author and . Barton has spent the last 40 years arguing that the separation of church and state is a myth 鈥 and has built a multimillion-dollar media and lobbying operation to influence public opinion and shape laws around the belief that the United States was founded as .听


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At in April, Barton appeared before the Texas House education committee and testified in favor of legislation, since signed into law, requiring that posters of the Ten Commandments be placed inside every classroom in the state鈥檚 nearly 9,100 public schools by September. With him, Barton brought a small collection of books he claims were foundational to the country鈥檚 public education system until the 20th Century.

Barton isn鈥檛 just a primary pitchman for the Ten Commandments law in Texas, his home state, an investigation by 社区黑料 reveals. His fingerprints appear on 28 bills that have cropped up before the legislatures in 18 states this year. A data analysis of the bills exposes how their language, structure and requirements are inherently identical. In dozens of instances, they match model legislation pitched by Barton verbatim. 

David Barton speaks at a 2016 rally in Henderson, Nevada, alongside U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz and conservative pundit Glenn Beck. (Gage Skidmore)

At the Texas hearing, Barton鈥檚 eyes fixated on the cover of the rare 1782 Aitken Bible. 

鈥淚t also says it鈥檚 鈥榓 neat Edition of the Holy Scriptures for the use of schools,鈥欌 he continued. 鈥淚t has the Ten Commandments.” 

In actuality, Barton lifted language calling on Congress to sanction a Bible that could also be for Christian nationalists have for years  the Revolutionary-era printing includes a government promotion of Christianity. Barton has long been accused of , and in 2012, the Christian publisher of his bestselling book on Thomas Jefferson because “basic truths just were not there.”

Texas is one of three states in the last two years to pass a law requiring that the Ten Commandments be posted in public schools. The mandates are part of a coordinated nationwide effort to overturn forbidding Kentucky from requiring Ten Commandments displays in classrooms. 

As the influence of Barton and the burgeoning Christian nationalist movement find favor in state legislatures, and with 鈥 who cites Barton as a 鈥減rofound influence鈥 鈥 the lobbyists and lawmakers behind the state Ten Commandments bills told 社区黑料 they鈥檙e confident the current Supreme Court鈥檚 conservative super-majority is on their side, too.

The analysis by 社区黑料 reveals how language in virtually every state bill matches model legislation created by Project Blitz, a Barton-steered Christian 鈥渂ill mill鈥 that鈥檚 long  with legislative templates that promote Christianity in public schools, and restrict abortion. 

A dozen bills specify, for example, that the Ten Commandments displays must be hung in a 鈥渃onspicuous鈥 location. Another 11 specify they should be at least 11-by-14 inches in size. Nearly all of the bills 鈥 25 鈥 mandate a Christian version of the religious and ethical directives be displayed as a 鈥減oster or framed.鈥 社区黑料 tallied 96 instances where bills introduced this year match Project Blitz鈥檚 model legislation, including template bills to require the or the phrase in public schools.

Among the architects of Project Blitz is the Barton-founded influence machine, The flurry of state bills were introduced after WallBuilders 鈥 the name is an Old Testament reference to 鈥  convened its annual national conference of state legislators in November where the model legislation was promoted.  

After Louisiana passed its first-in-the-nation Ten Commandments law last year, new mandates approved in Arkansas and Texas this year follow the same Project Blitz template.

鈥楴o such thing as separation of God and government鈥

Texas state Sen. Mayes Middleton is the joint author of  the state’s new Ten Commandments law and the author of another new law permitting a in public schools statewide. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott signed both in June. 

Texas Sen. Mayes Middleton

Middleton, whose district southeast of Houston includes his hometown of Galveston, acknowledged Barton’s influence over not just his own legislative agenda, but Texas’ broader conservative movement. Barton previously served as vice chair of the state Republican Party. 

鈥淥f course, WallBuilders is very supportive of the bill,鈥 Middleton told 社区黑料, as were the conservative legal groups and the . 鈥淎nd, of course, all of their missions is to advance religious liberties, especially in the public realm where there is no such thing as separation of God and government.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Founded by Barton in 1988, WallBuilders promotes theories 鈥 鈥 about Christianity鈥檚 central role in the formation of the United States through its podcasts, books and a museum with 鈥渙ne of the largest private collections of United States historical documents.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Through WallBuilders鈥 lobbying arm, the Pro-Family Legislative Network, Barton leads and at its annual conferences at a four-star waterfront resort in suburban Dallas. It was at this gathering where Indiana Rep. J.D. Prescott, a Republican, got the idea for Ten Commandments legislation in his state, he told 社区黑料. 

Prescott   requiring a 鈥渄urable poster or framed picture鈥 of the commandments in each library and classroom at all public schools statewide. The legislation ultimately failed to garner support. Bills in other states also failed to gain traction, including in South Dakota where the bill鈥檚 critics 鈥 including some Republicans 鈥 said a government mandate was the wrong way to spread Christianity and ran afoul of the Constitution. 

鈥淥ur early common school system was really designed to teach biblical principles in the Bible, so it鈥檚 just getting back to that point,鈥 said Prescott, who described himself as a 鈥渟tudent of history.鈥&苍产蝉辫; 

The Pro-Family Legislative conference offers lawmakers scholarships and discounted hotel rates to attend the event. In at least one instance,   filed a disclosure form reporting that he had received $859.47 from the Pro-Family Legislative Network, including $500 reimbursing him for air fare, to attend the November 2024 conference. 

Prescott told 社区黑料,  鈥淚 learned a lot of it at a WallBuilders conference hosted by David Barton. They鈥檝e got a great conference for legislators down in Texas every November. I did look at the WallBuilders model legislation and it鈥檚 a good place to start.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Not everyone鈥檚 Ten Commandments

Experts said the bills seek to do more than require 鈥渄urable鈥 Ten Commandments posters in every public school classroom. The campaign is part of a broader, well-organized and deep-pocketed assault, they argue, on the separation of church and state.

Although WallBuilders isn鈥檛 required to disclose its donors, the nonprofit Center for Media and Democracy analyzed federal tax filings with the Internal Revenue Service to . In 2021, WallBuilders reported $5.9 million in revenue and $6.3 million in total assets. 

The group relies heavily on , a tax loophole that allows anonymous supporters to contribute to contentious causes without scrutiny.  For example, donor-advised funds have been exploited by far-right activists to of women and the LGBTQ+ community, according to a 2023 investigation by openDemocracy.

Pundit Glenn Beck speaks during the 2021 Conservative Political Action Conference in Dallas, Texas. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

Mercury One, a nonprofit founded by high-profile conservative pundit and media personality Glenn Beck, is both and primary sponsor of Barton鈥檚 annual Pro-Family Legislative Conference to brief elected officials 鈥渙n pressing issues from a constitutional perspective.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Barton, who didn鈥檛 respond to multiple requests for comment, describes himself as a self-taught historian and the owner of the largest private collection of historical documents about the Founding Fathers. His critics pan the graduate of the Oral Roberts University as a discredited pseudohistorian and propagandist. 

Barton is 鈥渢he granddaddy of Christian nationalist disinformation,鈥 constitutional attorney Andrew Seidel, who serves as vice president of strategic communications at Americans United for Separation of Church and State, told 社区黑料.

Jonn Fea

John Fea, an American history professor and history department chair at Messiah University, a private evangelical Christian institution in Pennsylvania, accused Barton of cherry-picking historical information to present a misleading portrayal of the past, one that bolsters his own present-day political agenda. 

鈥淭his is clearly an attempt by Christian nationalists to try to advance their own version of what America should be,鈥 Fea said, noting that even as historians challenge Barton, he鈥檚 amassed influence among Republican lawmakers interested in leveraging a distorted accounting of history for political gain. 

鈥淏arton provides that history for these lawmakers. It adds a certain depth, even though it鈥檚 hollow.鈥

Darcy Hirsh, the senior director of government relations and advocacy at the nonprofit National Council for Jewish Women, said the Ten Commandments laws present an attack on 鈥渢he strict wall of separation鈥 between church and state. 

鈥淎ny efforts to perpetuate the falsehood that the United States is a Christian nation is something that we find deeply alarming,鈥 Hirsh said. Requiring a protestant Christian version of the Ten Commandments in schools, she said, is 鈥渆xclusionary and coercive鈥 to children from diverse backgrounds. 
鈥淎 Protestant interpretation of the Ten Commandments is different than the Jewish interpretation of the Ten Commandments, in fact, they are numbered differently,鈥 she said. Constitutional protections separating church and state, she said, are critical to the country鈥檚 democratic society.

鈥淚t’s that protection that has really allowed the Jewish community and other minority faith communities to flourish in the U.S.鈥

The laws successfully passed in Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas now face lawsuits from parents alleging they violate the separation of church and state. The issue could soon appear again before the nation鈥檚 highest court. In June, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, among the nation鈥檚 most conservative, struck down Louisiana鈥檚 Ten Commandments display mandate, finding it 鈥減lainly unconstitutional.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Parents with diverse religious identities are being backed by the American Civil Liberties Union and Americans United for Separation of Church and State in challenging the laws. In a complaint filed in Arkansas, parents allege students will be 鈥渦nconstitutionally coerced into religious observance鈥 and 鈥減ressured to suppress their personal religious beliefs.鈥

Fea, the evangelical historian, told 社区黑料 the far-right campaign isn鈥檛 about the Ten Commandments鈥 place in the nation鈥檚 founding but about advancing the influence of Christianity in society. 

鈥淭hey鈥檙e using this historical argument to disguise the fact that they believe that somehow 鈥 and I don鈥檛 know how this happens, by osmosis or whatever 鈥 a student sitting in a classroom where the Ten Commandments is displayed will somehow buy into those ideals and values and become more Christian,鈥 he said. 

鈥楾he hostility is gone鈥

At the Texas House education committee hearing in April, Barton held up a second book. This one was much smaller than the first, but just as old and, Barton testified, just as significant.

Barton lectured the Republican-controlled state legislature on The New England Primer, a widely used . The book, he said, drilled first graders with 43 questions about the Ten Commandments. 

Then he introduced a third book, and a fourth. 

鈥淭he courts have pointed to the Ten Commandments as the reason we have all types of laws,鈥 Barton testified. 鈥淪o there鈥檚 a lot of history and tradition for that document that鈥檚 not there for other documents.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Barton鈥檚 prop-focused presentation isn鈥檛 just scripted 鈥 it鈥檚 well rehearsed. This year, the 71-year-old has traveled across the country with his books and a small team of collaborators to spread the gospel of Christian nationalism. Like the bills before the state legislatures, Barton鈥檚 speech was replicated again and again. 

As Barton testified on the Ten Commandment bills nationally, legislative sponsors routinely parroted his talking points, not just about Christianity鈥檚 role in the country鈥檚 origin, but the Supreme Court鈥檚 support for their movement.

During his recent appearances in Nebraska and other states, Barton鈥檚 testimonies invoked the court鈥檚 2022 opinion upholding the rights of a Washington state high school football coach to lead prayers with his team on the 50-yard line after games. 

Prescott, the Indiana lawmaker, said he became interested in introducing his bill after learning of the implications of the coach鈥檚 Supreme Court victory. 

To Barton and other members of his coalition, the court鈥檚 opinion in creates a clear path to require Ten Commandments in schools 鈥 and inject Christianity into other facets of public life 鈥 by proving they鈥檙e part of a longstanding traditional practice. 

In finding for Coach Kennedy, the Supreme Court its 1971 opinion ruling that religious displays don鈥檛 violate the Constitution if they have significant secular or nonreligious purposes. The court鈥檚 new standard revolves around whether the religious displays are part of historical practices. In other words, the heart of Barton鈥檚 pitch. 

鈥淭hat is the new standard, so the hostility is gone,鈥 he . 鈥淪howing that this is something that is longstanding practice, you go back to The New England Primer.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Bought and paid for 鈥 according to specs

Even as bill proponents championed states鈥 rights as one legal justification for their Ten Commandments display mandates, Middleton, the Texas legislative leader,  said there is a key benefit to the near-identical requirements in the bills across the 18 states. 

鈥淲e just wanted uniformity in these displays. We thought that was important,鈥 the oil company president and cattle rancher told 社区黑料. 鈥淥bviously, these are primarily going to be donated as well, so it鈥檚 probably going to be primarily private funds funding these.鈥

Project Blitz model legislation devises a funding scheme that revolves around donated displays without the reliance on public funds 鈥 a provision that appears in 16 states鈥 bills. Others invoke the model legislation by encouraging donated displays, but broaden the mandate so schools are also free to spend taxpayer dollars to comply.

Mirroring the Project Blitz model legislation, the new Arkansas law requires the Ten Commandments display be composed of a 鈥渄urable poster or framed copy鈥 of the document and that it be 鈥減rominently鈥 positioned in each public classroom and library across the state. The law also stipulates that the posters should be donated by outside groups, meaning the same private entities who had a hand in crafting the specifications, supporting the bills and getting them on legislators’ radars, will also be the ones buying the versions of the Ten Commandments that wind up in schools.

Even as the Louisiana law is caught up in federal court, religious groups who lobbied for the law鈥檚 passage and have close ties to the WallBuilders have plans to donate the displays set to appear in classrooms across the state. 

In April, First Liberty Institute and The Louisiana Family Forum announced that Patriot Mobile, which describes itself as 鈥淎merica鈥檚 ONLY Christian conservative wireless provider,鈥 had donated 3,000 Ten Commandments displays 鈥渁s part of a project to provide, at no cost to the Louisiana taxpayer, displays in schools throughout Louisiana.鈥

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