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They didn’t even round to the closet decimal. 3.1 is closer to pi than 3.2.
They had no idea they couldn't legislate math and force it to obey. You are crediting them with an overabundance of brain function in relation to what evidence suggests.
They can legislate education and enforce the curriculum through hiring of staff and purchasing of educational material. That said, this isn't what was at issue with the legislation.
In my personal experience as a kid who took Calculus and Physics, we were never really expected to use more precision than 3.14 for grading purposes.
Unless you're getting into a professional degree of engineering or foundational mathematics, there's no notable utility in establishing Pi past the first decimal or three.
If you get into the actual meat of the article
This is incredibly dated news and largely a commentary on how easily a state legislature will rubber stamp a bill without reading the fine print.
All the numbers after the 3.1 I bet they thought it made it bigger
Well, there are a lot of them...
...uh oh
Was a lot of them
My first thought as well
Because it was a mistake in a proof, not legislation aimed to change pi