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West Point cadet who quit over ‘religious bigotry’ going home amid firestorm

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Page did not hide his feelings at West Point, where he became president of the West Point Secular Student Alliance, which Page said was refused recognition by the academy for two years. He filed an Equal Opportunity complaint against the academy, which is still under investigation.

Page was scheduled to graduate in May. Coming in the 11th hour of his studies, his departure was heralded as heroic by the head of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation. His decision to resign came after he was notified he would not be commissioned in the Army because of a medical issue related to clinical depression.

At the time he announced he would be leaving school, Page feared West Point could have demanded that it recoup several hundred thousand dollars in tuition or require him to return to the Army as an enlisted soldier. He found out recently that West Point will not pursue the costs and he will receive an honorable discharge.

“It really is an incredible act of sacrifice — not against Christianity or for atheists — it’s a sacrifice for the Constitution which allows everyone to celebrate their faith, or no faith,” said Military Religious Freedom Foundation founder and Air Force Academy graduate Mikey Weinstein of Page’s decision to resign so close to graduation. The group, which says it represents 30,500 members, is at the forefront of lobbying against what it describes as the “fanatical religiosity, the Christian version of the Taliban” in the American military and service academies.

West Point’s DeMaro pointed to the Secular Student Alliance as evidence that the academy does not discriminate against cadets who do not have religious beliefs. He said Page was meeting academic standards and was not undergoing any disciplinary actions. He declined to discuss specifics of Page’s other claims, citing the continuing investigation.

Finishing the paperwork to end his military career, Page, who graduated from high school in Georgia, will be traveling to Minnesota by the weekend to begin a new life. His grandparents have a home in Wright County and Page will be living with them for the foreseeable future. His grandmother is sick and he said he wants to spend time caring for her. He also plans on continuing to work on the issue of separation of church and state and is considering a degree in public administration, possibly transferring credits to the University of Minnesota or the University of Georgia.

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