point, the first: as the "first amendment clearly only limits the Congress and the actions of Congress, it is in no way a bar to state actions
point, the second: many states (including New Jersey, New York, Massachussetts etc...) had an "official religion" for quite some time, Massachusetts only de-establishing theirs in 1833
point, the third: proposing a law is not the same as enacting a law. you know this. and considering the level of stupidity currently enjoyed by many laws in america, this particular movement is a breath of fresh air.
point, the fourth: prohibition of the establishemnt of, or using the nonsense from, sharia courts in american jurisprudence is entirely consistent with the first amendment, the application of sharia is contrary to the first amendment. do try to keep up.
point, the fifth: once again slipping in an ad hominem for no purpose save to display your inability to argue your position, thanks.
point, the sixth: any judge who attempts to use judaic or christian law in the courtroom would be pilloried, mostly by you. a judge cannot even donate ART with the ten commandments on it without the left shitting themselves in hyper-rage.
point, the seventh: considering that sharia is based on arbitrary and idiotic "Fatwas" and no code of law or justice as rational people understand it, considering sharia "precedent" should already be forbidden, however it HAS been used and cited in US courts.
point, the eighth: oklahoma's law (passed, enacted, struck down by a federal court) is vacated, and the rest of your list has nothing to do with sharia, they prohibit the consideration of FOREIGN OR RELIGOUS LA (all of them)
"The Pew Forum says the other five states still have their restrictions on court consideration of foreign or religious law. But the laws enacted in Arizona, Kansas, Louisiana, South Dakota and Tennessee are more neutral than the Oklahoma law and do not cite Sharia or other religious laws in particular."
~ http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2013/05/19/Under-the-US-Supreme-Court-Islamic-law-in-US-courts/UPI-64481368948600/#ixzz2fOjIHndq
"The study’s findings suggest that Shariah law has entered into state court decisions, in conflict with the Constitution and state public policy. Some commentators have said there are no more than one or two cases of Shariah law in U.S. state court cases; yet 50 significant cases were found just from the small sample of appellate published cases.
The Report’s Key Findings include:
• 22 trial court decisions refused to apply Shariah; 15 utilized or recognized Shariah; 9 were indeterminate; and in 4 cases Shariah was not applicable to the decision at the trial court level, but was applicable at the appellate level.
• 23 appellate decisions refused to apply Shariah; 12 utilized or recognized Shariah; 8 were indeterminate; and in 7 cases Shariah was not applicable to the appellate decision, but had been applicable at the trial court level.
• The 50 cases arose in 23 different states: 6 cases were found in New Jersey; 5 in California; 4 each in Florida, Massachusetts and Washington; 3 each in Maryland, Texas and Virginia; 2 each in Louisiana, Iowa and Nebraska; and 1 each in Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, Ohio and South Carolina."
~ http://publicpolicyalliance.org/media-kit/shariah-law-and-american-state-courts-report/