For millennia, the proper interaction between religion and government has been a topic of debate in nations around the world. In America, the debate rages perhaps strongest in the public-school context. Noting that the State compels children to attend school and that students are especially susceptible to religious indoctrination, the United States Supreme Court has been leery of permitting religious speech within public-school classrooms during school hours. However, the Court has been more willing to uphold policies providing for religious speech on school campuses after school hours, so long as such policies contain two “special ingredients.” First, the policy must provide for both religious and non-religious speech on equal terms. Second, the policy’s provisions must ensure that any resulting religious speech would be attributable to the private choices of individuals and not to the government.