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A Baphomet statue at the Satanic Temple in Salem, Massachusetts, on October 8, 2019. Minnesota’s State Capitol allowing a Satanist holiday display has sparked outrage from some in the state.
A Satanic holiday display at the Minnesota State Capitol has some sounding the alarm but Gov. Tim Walz says he can't take it down as it is protected by the First Amendment.
Minnesota Satanists is similar, although it recently severed ties with a national group, the Satanic Temple. The Minnesota group, which has legal status as a church, does not worship Satan or ...
What does The Satanic Temple stand for? The organization has fought legal battles in Indiana, Idaho, Kentucky, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, and Texas over its right to offer services and programs ...
A similar fight is occurring in Minnesota, where members of The Satanic Temple contributed to the holiday display at the State House in St. Paul. Greaves said Concord, N.H., Mayor Byron Champlin ...
The Satanic Temple insisted that Oklahoma erect their statue of Baphomet, a winged-goat-like version of Satan, ... Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson (28) ...
Many Satanic Temple members objected to their leader posing with such a ... including chapter heads from California, Alabama, Texas, Minnesota, and elsewhere. This was “the result of deep ...
Unlike the Church of Satan, founded by Anton Szandor LaVey in the 1960s, the Satanic Temple does not claim to be politically neutral, and its congregants regularly meet to engage with political ...
Minnesota Satanists severed ties with the Satanic Temple earlier this year. In an FAQ on its website, the Satanic Temple writes that it does not worship Satan or "believe in the existence of Satan ...
Similar to the Minnesota Satanists, the Satanic Temple says it doesn’t believe in Satan but describes itself as a “non-theistic religious organization” that advocates for secularism.
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