The difference between what I wrote and this is what?
The difference is that you said the only diffference was for French Protestants. They secularized the
entire public school system, so it's different for
everybody... except in some schools where administrators and teachers are refusing to implement some of the changes. A plain English reading of your post suggests that you think the Catholic system was untouched, and that simply isn't true.
Actually, I'm not sure what's confusing you about what I wrote. Are you sure you read it?
True I didn't spell it out in excruciating detail. But given what I posted prior to this it should be clear that given the realities on the ground there is going to be nothing legislative, hence those who object are going to have to attempt something on their own and are going to run into significant constitutional problems. See #6.
If we're being intellectually honest, it's not the constitution that's the stumbling block -- it's the intransigence, mendacity and political cowardice of legislators who claim they have "no choice" when the truth is clearly the opposite.
In my experience, the people who say "we have no choice, the constitution prohibits any change" are people who have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo but lack the honesty to say so openly.