mozzaok
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OzPolitic
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Melbourne
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Well no surprise here, the religious have things all arse backwards as usual.
So let us start at the start shall we, and that is just what religions teach to kids. They teach them that god is real, and he created them, and everything else in the universe, and keeps an eternal vigilant eye on them, and everyone, and everything else. He needs us to worship him, and we do that by following the rules he has handed down through obscure ancient middle eastern men thousands of years ago. If we do all that, then we go to heaven when we die, so look upon your life as a test from god, the ultimate entrance exam if you like.
Now the penalty for failing the test is not just not getting into heaven, you are actually given eternal detention in a place more horrible, more painful, more distressing than your worst nightmares, and that is called hell, so follow the rules, and do as you are told, or that is where you are going, forever, and ever, and ever. This is a one shot test, you are either in or out.
It goes on with a lot of detail about the rules, and so forth, but that is the basic message they push on to kids as soon as they are old enough to sit still long enough, usually 4 or 5 years old.
For those poor sick bastards that actually were so brainwashed as kids as to still actually believe that absolute load of tommy rot, on into their adulthood, then they desperately want their kids to learn the rules as early as possible, so they can go to heaven with them, and so the sick, sad cycle of delusion continues.
Religious education is not education "about" religion/s, it is plain straight out indoctrination from believers, seeking to make their students believers, and that is proselytising, and doing that to little kids in school is totally freakin' sick, and very, very wrong.
The point that Soren makes about learning the historical significance that religion played in our evolution from pagan vilages through to secular societies is a valid point, and one I agree with, but it should be taught from an objective historical perspective, not as an opportunity to proselytise.
So the simple fact is that we can recognise that many parents could hold very extreme and anti-social views, and could seek to indoctrinate their children into accepting and sharing those views, so it only seems fair that in a modern secular society, we could, and should provide a system of education free from any religious indoctrination or prosyletising.
History, ethics, and social responsibility can, and should be, taught, without attaching any bias for supporting individual ideals without objective worth.
Education should primarily concerning itself with providing children the ability to employ individual, critical reasoning, and certainly not just to inculcate the ideas and ideals of their families.
The whole definition of "Freedom" of religion should be looked at in the context of just how free an uneducated, small child could possibly be to actually "choose" a religious faith? The answer is that of course they cannot freely choose any such thing.
The fact that religions refuse to entertain the idea of allowing children to grow up free from religious indoctrination shows me how little respect that these religions really show for religious freedom, and perversely it is only secularists who truly respect the principle of religious freedom at all.
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