Based on just the article linked, it sounds more like they’re prohibiting the use of publicly owned property or public funding to enable religious expression. In the context of a French legal tradition I don’t really see how prohibiting the use of public property in religious expression is the same as banning expression generally except in private. I think conflating the two is a bit of a tortured analogy grounded in American legal thought, although I do agree that it seems motivated, at least in large part, by Islamophobia.
Based on just the article linked, it sounds more like they’re prohibiting the use of publicly owned property or public funding to enable religious expression. In the context of a French legal tradition I don’t really see how prohibiting the use of public property in religious expression is the same as banning expression generally except in private. I think conflating the two is a bit of a tortured analogy grounded in American legal thought, although I do agree that it seems motivated, at least in large part, by Islamophobia.