In a West Virginia community of fewer than 50,000 people, students were ushered into an assembly between their calculus and European history classes, 16-year-old Cameron Mays told ABC News.
They were told to close their eyes in prayer and urged to turn their lives over to Christ to avoid the ever-popular threat of eternal damnation, Mays said.
When Bethany Felinton's Jewish son asked to leave, a teacher told him he couldn't because the classroom was locked. “Is this legal?” one student reportedly texted to his father. “My mind was blown,” Max Nibert, a senior at the school, Huntington High, told WCHS. “I couldn’t believe it.”
When Cabell County Schools spokesperson Jedd Flowers was asked how an
evangelical revival became a requirement during the school's daily COMPASS "noninstructional break," he said teachers mistook the voluntary event organized by the school's chapter of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes as required.
burning books, getting all that nasty slavery stuff out of the classrooms, claiming creationism explains the universe and you better apologize to god for being born.....sick fucks, thanks again Trump