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Ban religious schools? (Read 44489 times)
Acid Monkey
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #165 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 10:47pm
 
But I guess there's no pleasing you.

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freediver
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #166 - Jun 19th, 2008 at 8:45am
 
I was the one who introduced this tangent and I was talking about NM. Yes they are taught other theories that are only 'probably' wrong, but NM has already been disproven.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #167 - Jun 19th, 2008 at 11:56am
 
There is no such thing as an objective or unbiased view of religion. It is a matter of faith, not logic or evidence.

Atheists like Mozz for example might see religion as a mere academic curiosity, to be taught as a series of quasi historical factoids in the absence of spiritual significance. Or they may see it as a cultural meme, parasitising society’s consciousness.

A Christian on the other hand might see religion as more than what people believe, but as a revelation of absolute truth. To teach that it is anything other than truth is to deceive. The Deceiver denies the existence of God, heaven and hell, even his own existence. His agents practice hedonism and adopt pleasing or apparently benign forms.

A Christian might believe that you give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar, and to the Lord what belongs to Him. Children do not belong to Caesar, they belong to the Lord and must be protected from evildoers. The Deceiver’s agents may try to use the law of man to take their precious children away from them, so that they can sink their vile claws into children’s souls. But like a good shepherd, they must shoot these agents, then forgive them their sins. For they know not what they do.

Many modern societies have a facade of peace and harmony. But just below the surface, bubbling away, is a violent rampage. What keeps this in check is not government imposed conformity, but respect for human rights and personal freedoms. If you want to release the monster, try chipping away at these rights and freedoms, one by one, bit by bit. The monster will hide itself from you, because it knows it is repulsive. Maybe you will get away with it for longer if you tell people it is for their own good, because society cannot possibly function if people think different thoughts or do different things. We mustn’t allow chaos to reign. But eventually you will strike the monster, and it will strike back. It will rear its ugly head and swat you and your society into oblivion.
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muso
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #168 - Jun 20th, 2008 at 10:06pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 19th, 2008 at 11:56am:
Many modern societies have a facade of peace and harmony. But just below the surface, bubbling away, is a violent rampage. What keeps this in check is not government imposed conformity, but respect for human rights and personal freedoms. If you want to release the monster, try chipping away at these rights and freedoms, one by one, bit by bit. The monster will hide itself from you, because it knows it is repulsive. Maybe you will get away with it for longer if you tell people it is for their own good, because society cannot possibly function if people think different thoughts or do different things. We mustn’t allow chaos to reign. But eventually you will strike the monster, and it will strike back. It will rear its ugly head and swat you and your society into oblivion.


The real problem is that there are so many 'One True Religions' and in the guise of personal religious freedom, we unleash some of the most reactionary paradigms of thought that have ever existed.  Freedom of religion means freedom to catch small children and indoctrinate them with some of these ideas in such a way as to stifle individual freedom of thought. At all costs that small flame of free thinking must be extinguished before it leads to the demise of the religion itself.

The overall result of this stifling of individual freedoms is dysfunction in society. It is all too obvious if we take the example of the USA, that paragon of religious virtue. It's true that correlation is not equivalent to causation, but the causation is all too obvious when individual freedoms are repressed. Contrast that if you will with the largely secular societies in Europe - including Norway, Sweden and Germany. Crime rates and all the rest of the factors are down. Is this Satan a peaceful and law abiding guy too?

We see these correlations time and time again. It's related to the more fundamental forms of religion.  Under 5 mortality per 5000 births, life expectancy, all age and 15-19 year old gonorrhea infection rates, syphilis rates, 15-19 year old abortions per 1000, 15-17 year old births and pregnancies - All show a correlation with fundamentalist religion characteristics including  "Take Bible Literally" and "Attend religious services several times per month".

http://moses.creighton.edu/JRS/2005/2005-11.html

Any freedom of religion should, like the European Commission on Human Rights, contain a 'Freedom from Religion" clause as well as a freedom to leave one's religion clause.   

OK, fundamentalists will point out that such things are the work of Satan, that they practice hedonism and all the other things, but the true evil is much closer to home. Theirs is a religion of exclusion - of hate. If you want to find 'Satan', you need look no further than the TV evangelists and their religion of hate. Forget about the bible itself. You just accept Jesus into your heart (and send $50).

It's the same problem with Islam. At least they don't have the same evangelizing vitriol, but the treatment of women in Islamic societies, minority religions and minority groups such as homosexuals show the same reactionary zeal as the Christian Fundamentalists. As for those people who change their religion from Islam - well they'd better watch their backs. 

So to summarise, religious freedom is like any freedom. As soon as it starts to impinge on the rights of other people, it ceases to be a freedom. We don't as a society allow people the freedom to racial vilification or vilification based on age or sexual orientation, because such 'freedoms' work against the whole concept of freedom.

Freedom has to have its boundaries. People should be free to practice their own religion, or even teach it to their own children, but when it comes to using taxpayer funding to prop up faith based schooling and introduce real divisions as a result, that's where the problem lies.

Satan comes from an ancient Hebrew word meaning the opponent. To the US Fundamentalists, Islam is the great Satan. To Islam, the US is the Great Satan and Israel is the lesser Satan. One man's god is another man's satan.

Some might even call me Satan for stating the obvious. It just highlights their hypocrisy.

However as I've said before, I have no problems with the more mature forms of religion, such as the Anglicans and the Catholics. They have generally handled their religious schools very well. I'd probably add the Lutherans to that group. Unfortunately the new kids on the block display more than a little arrogance. The danger is that all faith based schools will suffer as a result of their selfishness.
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Acid Monkey
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #169 - Jun 20th, 2008 at 10:48pm
 
muso wrote on Jun 20th, 2008 at 10:06pm:
Some might even call me Satan for stating the obvious. It just highlights their hypocrisy.



Is that you, Lord?

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muso
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #170 - Jun 21st, 2008 at 8:22am
 
Acid Monkey wrote on Jun 20th, 2008 at 10:48pm:
muso wrote on Jun 20th, 2008 at 10:06pm:
Some might even call me Satan for stating the obvious. It just highlights their hypocrisy.



Is that you, Lord?

Wink


Damn no. I've already joined the local Chamber of Commerce Management committee, and I don't have time in my life now to play the role of Satan too. My wife would kill me if I took on anything else.

Besides, my ethical standards are too high for that.

If there was a devil, he'd probably delegate such tasks to the more fundamentalist faith schools. They would have more of a constitution for it, and they already have the experience of torturing poor school kids.
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freediver
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #171 - Jun 21st, 2008 at 8:37am
 
Freedom of religion means freedom to catch small children and indoctrinate them with some of these ideas in such a way as to stifle individual freedom of thought.

No, you have to breed them yourself. You can't go round catching other people's children. That's what Mozz wants to do.

All education stifles individual freedom of thought. The less educated a person is, the crazier the ideas they come up with. Education is about trying to limit people's perceptions to reality.

The overall result of this stifling of individual freedoms is dysfunction in society.

No it isn't. Society needs diversity to function. Creating homogenous societies always harms them in the long run. That's why for example, China had a minor spurt of technological advancement, then went pretty much unchanged for millenia, whereas Europe continued to develop. Both places had pretty much the same set of natural resources, the difference being that China's geography allowed people like you to impose their views on others.

Of course, China was much more peaceful than Europe throughout this time, but peace through imposed conformity is only one step up from slavery. Our society functions far better than those with imposed conformity.

It is all too obvious if we take the example of the USA, that paragon of religious virtue.

I've never heard anyone else call the US a paradigm of religious virtue. Blaming America's violence on religion is absurd. Not only are you confusing correlation with causation, but you are ignoring the far more obvious causes that have nothing to do with religion. And besides, it is not religion you have a problem with, it is competition between them. You could achieve the same peace and harmony by imposing a government approved form of Christianity on others. Your idea of what should be imposed is no better.

Any freedom of religion should, like the European Commission on Human Rights, contain a 'Freedom from Religion" clause as well as a freedom to leave one's religion clause.

That's just stupid. Freedom of religion is freedom from religion. You are free to choose. Imposing your choice on others does not grant them freedom, it takes it away.

So to summarise, religious freedom is like any freedom. As soon as it starts to impinge on the rights of other people, it ceases to be a freedom.

Attending a religious school of your choice is not impinging on the rights of others.

Freedom has to have its boundaries. People should be free to practice their own religion, or even teach it to their own children, but when it comes to using taxpayer funding to prop up faith based schooling and introduce real divisions as a result, that's where the problem lies.

Are you now saying you oppose this ridiculous ban on religious schools, and prefer to rely on discrimination based on religion? If religious people are going to get inferior treatment from the state, should they be paying less tax? Or should you drop this absurd discrimination and treat everyone equally, regardless of their religion? Taxpayer funding arrangements are not propping up these schools. They already get less funding per student. Rather, religious schools are propping up secular education. By any objective measure, secular education is still inferior. But further discrimination is not going to improve the situation, just make both religious students and secular ones worse off.
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muso
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #172 - Jun 21st, 2008 at 2:05pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 21st, 2008 at 8:37am:
No, you have to breed them yourself. You can't go round catching other people's children. That's what Mozz wants to do.


Children have rights too, or at least they should have. At one of these 'born again' schools, what would happen if a 14 year old or a 16 year old decided that they didn't want to attend religion classes? At what age should they be free to choose for themselves? -  18? 

Should kids be entirely subject to their parents wishes right up until they reach 18 as far as schooling is concerned? I know that the family court will usually consider what children themselves want to do in cases of divorce etc, so it's not exactly some revolutionary concept that children have rights.

I can tell you the answer as far as Catholic schools are concerned, but I'm not so confident that the same would apply to Islamic schools or Baptist schools.
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freediver
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #173 - Jun 21st, 2008 at 3:57pm
 
Children have rights too, or at least they should have.

Yes they do. Mozz is trying to take those rights away.

At one of these 'born again' schools, what would happen if a 14 year old or a 16 year old decided that they didn't want to attend religion classes?

They would probably get kicked out.

At what age should they be free to choose for themselves? -  18? 

At any age they choose. That is a matter between parents and children. It has nothing to do with government. Where a child is too young to decide for themselves, parents make the choice. Not some sticky beak do-gooder who thinks that their indoctrination is somehow superior to someone else's indoctrination.
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muso
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #174 - Jun 21st, 2008 at 5:47pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 21st, 2008 at 3:57pm:
At any age they choose. That is a matter between parents and children. It has nothing to do with government. Where a child is too young to decide for themselves, parents make the choice. Not some sticky beak do-gooder who thinks that their indoctrination is somehow superior to someone else's indoctrination.


At the Catholic School my two sons attended, they had the option to opt out of religion classes, albeit with parental approval. I only found that out this week. My wife (the Roman Catholic) gave this approval for one of my sons. He didn't ask me, because he knew that I would not have given approval at the time, because I knew the course material, and understood that it provided an overall view of the main world religions. I considered it to be important.

As far as choice is concerned, the parent is not the sole arbiter, especially when they are in their teenage years. In fact once they reach 16, they can legally have sex without talking to their parents. That may vary slightly between States.

It is a basic human right to be treated fairly by others, regardless of your age, race, religion or where you were born. If a student decides that they do not agree with the religion being taught, they deserve to be treated with respect. Being treated with respect does not mean being kicked out of school.

That should equally apply to a teenager who has decided that they do not share the same religious values as their parents. To do otherwise is a serious infringement of basic human rights.

These basic rights are legislated (Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986) and enforced by the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission.  Australia is a signatory of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Article 26 of this declaration states that:

"Education shall be directed to the full development of the human personality and to the strengthening of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms. It shall promote understanding, tolerance and friendship among all nations, racial or religious groups, and shall further the activities of the United Nations for the maintenance of peace."

That's all I'm asking. It's basic stuff.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #175 - Jun 21st, 2008 at 6:54pm
 
With your son's school, are you saying that you supported the particular subject, but your son didn't want to do it? Was this just because he couldn't be bothered, or did he have a religious or ethical objection?

If a student decides that they do not agree with the religion being taught, they deserve to be treated with respect.

Fair enough. I'm happy for a child to have a right to refuse religious education, against the wishes of the parent. I think that's a bit of a moot point though, as either the parents or the priest are going to take a step back long before it gets to the point of legal action.

Being treated with respect does not mean being kicked out of school.

I think a private school should be able to choose who can attend. That's one situation where religious discrimination may be appropriate. Respect is not a human right. Obviously your school's example is the more mature approach and should be encouraged, but never mandated.

However, none of this points towards banning religious schools or discriminating against them by distributing the education budget unfairly. None of it points towards forcing students to undertake a government approved course on religion.

"Education shall be directed to the full development of the human personality and to the strengthening of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms. It shall promote understanding, tolerance and friendship among all nations, racial or religious groups, and shall further the activities of the United Nations for the maintenance of peace."

This sounds a bit wishy washy. I'll respond to it again when I'm sober.
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« Last Edit: Jun 21st, 2008 at 7:18pm by freediver »  

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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #176 - Jun 21st, 2008 at 10:02pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 21st, 2008 at 6:54pm:
With your son's school, are you saying that you supported the particular subject, but your son didn't want to do it? Was this just because he couldn't be bothered, or did he have a religious or ethical objection?


We went through the subjects with him at the beginning of the year. I strongly felt that he should do religion because I think kids deserve to get as much information as possible on the subject so that they can make up their own mind as they grow up. He was less enthusiastic than I was, but agreed to it. He always had problems with religion. When he found it wasn't working out, he asked his mother to sign the papers opting out of the classes. She was the soft option. He knew that I would have a problem with it because I have always tried harder than most not to impose my own beliefs.

Quote:
However, none of this points towards banning religious schools or discriminating against them by distributing the education budget unfairly. None of it points towards forcing students to undertake a government approved course on religion.


I don't want to ban any religious schools. I just want to make it compulsory to provide factual and objective teaching about other religions to increase awareness of other members of society. The reason is that there is too much division, and I feel that we need a way to improve the cohesion in society. The segments on the major religions could be sanctioned by the major religions, and perhaps have a humanist segment. The government need not be involved with the content.

This kind of thing has been in operation at many (if not all) Catholic schools, but I can't speak for others. 

I'm not sure if you've come across the Toledo Guiding principles, but they have been widely adopted in the US for public teaching of religions. Many private schools have adopted the same principles.

They make for interesting reading and reiterate some of the principles that I brought up in my previous post.

http://www.oslocoalition.org/documents/toledo_guidelines.pdf


Just an extract from the European Parliament (Recommendation 1720)
- again it's worth looking it up:

Quote:
Recommendation 1720 (2005)1

Education and religion

1. The Parliamentary Assembly forcefully reaffirms that each person’s religion, including the option of having no religion, is a strictly personal matter. However, this is not inconsistent with the view that a good general knowledge of religions and the resulting sense of tolerance are essential to the exercise of democratic citizenship.

2. In its Recommendation 1396 (1999) on religion and democracy, the Assembly asserted: “There is a religious aspect to many of the problems that contemporary society faces, such as intolerant fundamentalist movements and terrorist acts, racism and xenophobia, and ethnic conflicts.”

3. The family has a paramount role in the upbringing of children, including in the choice of a religious upbringing. However, knowledge of religions is dying out in many families. More and more young people lack the necessary bearings fully to apprehend the societies in which they live and others with which they are confronted.

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Acid Monkey
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #177 - Jun 22nd, 2008 at 11:35am
 
Acid Monkey wrote on Jun 20th, 2008 at 10:48pm:
muso wrote on Jun 20th, 2008 at 10:06pm:
Some might even call me Satan for stating the obvious. It just highlights their hypocrisy.



Is that you, Lord?

Wink


Actually, I should have said....

"My Lord? Is that you?"

Wink
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #178 - Jun 22nd, 2008 at 3:10pm
 
Muso, should scientology be included in the madatory teaching? How many Christian groups should be included as separate entities? What about atheist groups, and religions without a clear representative bidy?

He knew that I would have a problem with it because I have always tried harder than most not to impose my own beliefs.

He thought you would try to coerce him into doing the class because you don't try to impose your views? That doesn't make sense.

I just want to make it compulsory to provide factual and objective teaching about other religions to increase awareness of other members of society. The reason is that there is too much division, and I feel that we need a way to improve the cohesion in society. The segments on the major religions could be sanctioned by the major religions, and perhaps have a humanist segment. The government need not be involved with the content.

So now we have gone back to the government providing a captive audience for religious groups, where they can teach them anything they want? If it is compulsory, doesn't that undermine separation of church and state? It seems to me that the private religious schools, such as yours, are the appropriate way to solve the problem.
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« Last Edit: Jun 22nd, 2008 at 3:15pm by freediver »  

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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #179 - Jun 22nd, 2008 at 4:08pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 22nd, 2008 at 3:10pm:
So now we have gone back to the government providing a captive audience for religious groups, where they can teach them anything they want? If it is compulsory, doesn't that undermine separation of church and state? It seems to me that the private religious schools, such as yours, are the appropriate way to solve the problem.


That's where I've been all along. I don't understand what your objections are here. Let's leave out the word religion. It's really about culture, and religion is wrapped up in that culture. I suggest that we have a growing problem in Australia as manifested by the Cronulla Riots and other signs and symptoms of conflicting factions within society. All that I am proposing here is to anticipate and counter the worsening culture clash by providing an opportunity for future citizens to learn the facts about other groups in society. This would provide a means of reducing suspicion and division, and increasing trust within our society.

Some of the principles I propose come from recommendations from the Parliament of Europe, parts of which have already had much worse experiences than Australia in that respect and have legislated in an attempt to mitigate the effects of the culture clash. I suggest that we learn from their experiences and take a proactive rather than a reactive approach to the problem.

Now what could you possibly have against improving understanding and trust between groups within society?
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