Virginia Democrats are pushing legislation that would essentially criminalize blasphemy against certain protected religions, and the American Civil Liberties Union — long considered the watchdog of free speech rights — has suspiciously remained silent on what amounts to a direct assault on the First Amendment.
The bill, which critics are calling "blasphemy-light" legislation, would create special criminal protections for religious speech, effectively establishing a two-tiered system where some faiths receive government protection from criticism while others do not. This represents exactly the kind of government establishment of religion that the Founders explicitly warned against.
Where is the ACLU's outrage? For decades, this organization has fought tooth and nail against any perceived government endorsement of Christianity — filing lawsuits over nativity scenes, Ten Commandments displays, and prayer in schools. But when it comes to protecting other religions from criticism through criminal law, they've mysteriously lost their voice.
This isn't happening in a vacuum. Across the country, we're seeing a disturbing pattern where progressive politicians invoke religious language to shield their policies from criticism. New York's Zohran Mamdani recently invoked Muhammad while defending Democrats' disastrous open-border policies, then became the first NYC mayor to skip the installation of a Catholic archbishop.
The message is clear: some religions deserve government protection from offensive speech, while others — particularly Christianity — remain fair game for mockery and derision in the public square.
Patriots, this is how religious freedom dies — not through outright bans, but through selective enforcement and politically motivated protections. The First Amendment doesn't pick favorites among faiths, and neither should our criminal code.
Will real civil libertarians stand up to this attack on free speech, or has the ACLU become just another partisan political organization? The silence speaks volumes.
Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.
Source: Next News Network