Trump Issues New Weapons Systems for Ukraine
We Know Who Controlled the Biden Autopen...and This Scandal Just Got Worse
Gavin Newsom Had a Total Meltdown Over JD Vance's Disney Visit. The VP's...
Ghislaine Maxwell Is Ready to Spill the Beans on Epstein's Sex Trafficking Operation
Trump's About Had It With Putin
This Republican Thinks We Should 'Move on' From Jeffrey Epstein
Explosive Report Reveals Secret Service Knew About Threat Against Trump's Life—Why Didn’t...
Newsom Unveils His Newest Plan to Fix California's Housing Crisis
Obama Tells Dems to Get Out of Their 'Fetal Positions'
Noem Destroys Liberal Narrative on Alligator Alcatraz
Watch Homan Tear Into Heckler During Student Summit Speech
Will This Tweet From AOC About Trump Land Her in Legal Hot Water?
How New York Managed to Waste $100 Million on a Single Dead-End Project
Did You Catch What Mamdani Said About the NYPD Responding to Domestic Violence...
Florida Lawmakers Denied Access to Alligator Alcatraz Sue DeSantis
Tipsheet

Atheist Groups Sue Mississippi Over 'In God We Trust' License Plates

AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis

A coalition of church-state separation activists has sued Mississippi over the four words displayed on its license plates since 2019: “In God We Trust.”

Advertisement

The plaintiffs in this case — including the American Atheists and the Mississippi Humanist Association— allege that the state of Mississippi is violating its residents’ right to religious freedom by forcing them to display these license plates.

“Wherever I use my trailer, I am forced to profess a religious idea that I do not believe,” plaintiff Alan Griggs said in a statement. “Imagine a Christian having to drive around with ‘In No God We Trust’ or ‘In Allah We Trust.’”

In another statement, Ocean Springs, Miss. attorney Dianne Herman argued that Mississippi must provide a free alternative to the “In God We Trust” license plate. Currently, the state’s vehicle owners can pay $32 for a specialized plate without the phrase, but the state offers no other options for motorcycles, RVs, and disability plates.

“Mississippi car owners should not be punished with higher fees for refusing to promote an exclusionary and divisive message,” Herman said in the statement. “They are entitled to an alternative.”

The suit also mentions Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves (R), a strong supporter of the state’s license plate redesign. In June 2019, the then-gubernatorial candidate Reeves released a campaign ad titled “In God We Trust,” which shows him attaching the new license plate to the back of a vehicle.

Advertisement

“Mississippi has a brand new license plate, but the out-of-state liberals hate it. It’s because of these four words: ‘In God We Trust,’” Reeves said in the ad.

“In God We Trust” has been the official motto of the United States since July 30, 1956, when President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed a bill that unanimously passed both the House and Senate. Beginning the following year, all new banknotes in circulation displayed the phrase.

As such, the motto has been challenged several times over the years. In 2018, a federal appellate court in Minnesota rejected an atheist group’s challenge to its appearance on banknotes. The group was led by church-state separation activist Michael Newdow, who has argued that the inclusion of the phrase “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance renders it unconstitutional.

The case eventually went to the Supreme Court, which upheld the lower court’s decision in 2019.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement