Ask Question
2 March, 05:37

The government gives public funds to low-performing

schools for new computers. They decide to give more

money to the lowest performers, some of which happen to

promote multidenominational religions.

According to the establishment clause, how would a court

rule on this case?

as a direct violation of the clause because government

institutions cannot support religious institutions for any

reason

as a violation of the clause because the government

gave more money to religious schools than public

schools

as in compliance with the clause because the

government's action was for a secular purpose did not

advance a particular religion, and was unentangled

as in compliance with the clause because the

government gave money to fewer religious schools than

public schools

+5
Answers (2)
  1. 2 March, 05:52
    0
    According to the establishment clause, the court would rule out the government action as in compliance with the clause because the government's action was for a secular purpose did not advance a particular religion, and was unentangled

    Explanation:

    The establishment clause holds the limitation of the united states congress which prevents it from making legislation that force the establishment of a particular religion. In the above case, the government had no intention to promote multidimensional religion, it was performing its duty, and in that course, it could not be biased on grounds of some religious schools promoting multidimensional religion.
  2. 2 March, 06:06
    0
    c

    Explanation:

    on edge
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “The government gives public funds to low-performing schools for new computers. They decide to give more money to the lowest performers, ...” in 📗 Social Studies if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers