mozzaok
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OzPolitic
Posts: 6741
Melbourne
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It is a bit sad when a society that chooses to exclude religious teaching from children's formal education would be likened to the khmer rouge.
Your analogy with literature totally escapes me, and the only way I could see a parallel would be if they started teaching that a particular group, or author, was divinely inspired, and everything he says is infallible and you must adopt all the moral precepts that they mentioned, and also worship them.
The first question you should ask about anything taught to our children is, "can it be harmful to their educational, and/or psychological development?", followed by, "what positives does it bring?"
Kids are naturally honest, tell them most religious stories in an environment where they are confident to freely express themselves and the obvious contradictions and follies of religious teachings are self evident to them, but they are told they must accept what they know makes no sense, or else they will be tortured for an eternity in hell. However if they accept it as true, then you will live forever in perfect happiness, greater than you could imagine.
If any sane person cannot identify the negative aspects of imposing that sort of disgusting rot onto children as young as 4 years old in our schools, then I say shame on you.
So we know there are many negative aspects to teaching religion to children, like the stick and carrot stories of heaven and hell, and then we have all the included teachings about what is right and wrong, which is very hit and miss, with lots of good morals, but also reprehensibly abhorrent ones as well.
So we can see the negatives, but what positives may come from it, could the positives outweigh the negatives?
You hear many claim that religion gives us our moral principles, but I am categorically certain that we could devise a far better book of moral lessons for children, which did not include the threat of eternal torture to provide them with value, than any of the religious books that people seek to teach to children, like the bible, or the koran.
So there is no reason why kids "NEED" to be taught religion, it is merely the current victims of religious indoctrination, enacting the behaviours they were programmed to.
So we can see that these methods of religious indoctrination have their built in plan for self perpetuation through compulsorily application to subsequent generations.
Should we allow our education system to be complicit in abetting this generational process of indoctrination?
Not in any way shape or form should we.
Schools, and the education system as a whole should be a safe bastion free from religious prejudice, and ideological dogma, and just a place where honest inquiry can be pursued, without caveats imposed by doctrines written by primitive goat herders.
Get religion out of our schools, it does not belong there. It is time we all tried to make ou
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