ADF Attorney Joseph J. Martins has this new post on the ADF Center for Academic Freedom blog. He reports:
Indeed, government hostility towards religion takes on many unpleasant forms and attorneys at CAF are fairly used to public colleges and universities finding creative methods to cleanse religious expression from campus. Nonetheless, officials at SSU brought a new spin to the old evil of religious bigotry. SSU suspended C2L on the grounds that its members’ practices of washing one another’s feet constituted “hazing.” Let’s be clear, “hazing” is defined by Georgia law and SSU policy as the following:
“Haze” means to subject a student to an activity which endangers or is likely to endanger the physical health of a student, regardless of the student’s willingness to participate in such activity.
Am I missing something here?