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Originally Posted by
jlisenbe
Read more carefully. That was not my premise; it was Wondergirl's premise.
I am often mistaken, MAYBE this is one or maybe I was confused by the next quote from you. I'm not adverse to be corrected when wrong.
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It was a simple question. Since we took prayer and the Ten Commandments out of school, which direction has the country, and young people in particular, taken?
I thought that was your premise to which I have commented about. The two are not related in my mind, a notion you can ignore, or dismiss. I'm just not convinced.
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A very simple solution would be going to educational vouchers and allowing parents to make the choices of whether or not their children should be taught religious principles (such as prayer) in school. It always amuses me that the same people who argue that women should have the "choice" to have their unborn child killed in abortion will then deny school choice to parents once the surviving children are ready for school.
You want your child to go to a private religious school, then pay for it. You expect taxpayers to use their tax dollars to educate your kids in religious principles of your choice? Does that extend to vouchers for kids of ANY and ALL religions? I think vouchers and school choice are a sneaky way to starve the public schools of needed funds and does not even address the real issue of making a quality public school system. A quality public school system would be preferable to vouchers for private school choice. That's where public money taxpayer money should go.
I don't support abortions or school choice with taxpayer money though I recognize many homes are sold on the basis of good schools in the neighborhood. All neighborhoods should have a great school for the community regardless of class income or status.
Some of those private schools have long waiting lists and some are very selective and discerning about who they admit. What of those kids that cannot get in?