Sloth7d
Escapist
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- Jun 18, 2006
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First of all, ouch, what's with the sting in that statement?Seems a bit nasty to call me self centred when my only point was whether or not I'D be comfortable as a parent sending MY kid to a school that had a similar sort of christian influence. If it were the best school, I PERSONALLY wouldn't be put off by the fact it was CofE.
I said nothing about whether people of other faiths would or should.
Obviously I'm not saying people of different faiths should be fine with it, or that it should be present in all schools or even be a major part of the school system. And TBH, since I don't have a kid and haven't been in primary school for a very long time, I have no idea how much things have changed and if they even still do things like that in that school anymore.
It was just a comment on my personal lack of worry about it.
Although I'm an atheist, I have no problem with a child of mine being raised in a similar way to how I was, because I don't think it neccesarily brainwashes children into being christian... But like I said, I could be wrong and end up with a kid who believes it all heartily because of what they are told in school and I'll eat my words!
That's all I was saying I might be naïve about.
Think you took my thoughts the wrong way![]()
Perhaps I did take it the wrong way. The implication that came across from your reply, at least to how I interpretted it, was that you have no problem with religion being introduced to kids in public schools because you, as a child, had an okay experience with it, but you understand another person's beef with it. If this wasn't the implication then I rescind my previous comment. If it is, then I wonder how you can understand another person's problem with it without being against it yourself. It seems like a contradiction, or at the very least, you are using your own experiences as a child as a an excuse not to care. That's why I said your view seemed self centered.
You also say that your experience and stance on this issue is not indicative that others should want to send their children to schools that allow religious influence in the class rooms. But if you acknowledge that they should have the right to be free from religious influences being pushed to their children, you must also acknowledge that it is best that the government make sure all schools remain secular in the case of those who don't have much choice on which school to send their children due to finance issues or location. Thus, wouldn't it be best for everyone if we kept the class rooms secular?
You say one reason you have no problem exposing your child to superstition is faith that he or she, whether they become influenced or not, will one day break out of the belief in pursuit of truth. But whether your child becomes converted to a set of beliefs you personally don't hold is only one potential outcome you may have to deal with. A worse problem is if, in a particular religious setting, your child does not take to that particular religion, and feels, or in fact, becomes ostricized because of the prejudicial setting such as in the cases of this girl in Hardesky Public School who was ostricized by her peers and teachers after not participating in a prayer circle, or Jessica Alquist a Jewish girl who felt excluded in her school for a the endorsement of another religion over her own by the school's banner.
If you say, it wasn't a big deal and that these students should just try to fit in, you contradict yourself. For if it wasn't a big deal, asking for a banner to be taken down or not going along with group prayer should not have gained these two the animosity they recieved for not conforming with the herd; in the case of Jessica, she has been harrassed by her peers on facebook and in school. The other girl appears to have faced ridicule according to her youtube page (unfortunately I can't find the old news clip that went with it.) Thus, again, your view seemed self centered to me because you naturally assumed your child would just play along until he broke out of that way of thinking like you did, but you never considered that he may make a target out of himself like the previous two students did.
But then again, maybe this is more a problem in America rather than the U.K. since we do have a Seperation of Church and State claus in our Constitution, and thus it's a bigger issue here. That's not to say I don't think this is ideal for every country to have, in fact, I think in any multicultural population the schools should remain secular as well as the government in general, but if it is the case that most parents and students in the U.K. just kind of go along with whatever traditions any school may have, I guess I'll simply stay mum on the matter as far as I can say to your situation. I really don't know too much about the modern laws or any (if any) cultural tensions in the U.K. So it seems I'm being too self centered in my thoughts as well.
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