Truronian said:
I disagree. I say its the state's job, with the support of the parent. THis way children have as equal a start in life as is possible.
Than here is the root of our divergence . I say it is the job of the parent . If the job of the state was to give everyone an equal start , then private schools for rich kids should be outlawed , because it gives them an unequal advantage over those who go to the state system . You are talking basically about curtailing the rights of a person who has worked hard all his life to pass on the fruits of the same hard work to his children .
Truronian said:
I don't really see an advantage to growing up in religion, and its pretty hard not to grow up in "a culture".
But I see one . Who is right ? It is definitely not the state which decides .
And trying to stop me from communicating this to my children through the medium of their schooling is curtailing my freedom to practice and propogate my religion .
Truronian said:
So whats the harm in making the Christian elements optional? If they're all Christians then they'll all go to the assemblies/services etc.
It changes the atmosphere of the school . I'll explain further .
Imagine that this school is academically better than others in its area ( as private schools usually are ) . This means that lot of people will want to join it for academic reasons . But they do not want a lot of people - they want devout Christians . If they make them compulsory , it provides an incentive to a Christian child who might be too lazy to do them on his own to attend the school , and it provides a dis-incentive to other , non-Christians form coming to the school . If the activities are optional , the incentive and dis-incentive , both of which are vital to the maintainance of the atmosphere of the school as the founders want it .
Secondly - who are you to dictate what they can or cannot do as long as they are not abusing children ? They provide a perfectly good secular education , better than the state system's , which they supplement with a religious education befitting their own beliefs . They have a right - yes , a fundamental , inalienable RIGHT - to teach anything which does not constitute child abuse .
As I told you - the responsibility lies with parents . You are objecting to the very existence of such a school - which was not my criticism at all . The should not , must not , and does not have a right , to intevene .
Truronian said:
Well, in a democracy the people are the state
Not all the people - only a majority of people - and that is why we have a concept of rights , which no democracy can take away - to prevent abuse of the powerless minority by the majority which controls the state apparatus .
Truronian said:
A neutral viewpoint is one devoid of opinions.
And who decides whether or not a certain viewpoint is devoid of opinions ? You or me ? Fundamentalist Christians or Muslims ? Atheists ? Or some governmental committee ( which point I've just refuted in the last paragraph ) ? You can't get away from the fundamental difficulty that
somebody has to decide , and this freedom ( to decide what is appropriate for
their children ) is given to every man by the nature of the rights flowing from the right to life itself .
You do not seem to realise that even if you are presenting facts , there are ways in which purely factual statement can be used , simply by shifting the language and the ordering of statements , to serve an agenda . You want them to serve your agenda . I don't want all of them them to serve any agenda , I simply want to let people decide what way the facts will be presented do their wards .
Another point - are you against parents being allowed home-schooling their children ? The fundamental debate is the same in both cases .