3) Be aware that the same laws that keep
your religion out of public schools also keep other people from trying to convert your children to their religion at public schools.
Not exact matches
It's not that I disagree with you about keeping
religion out of schools (
public schools, ones not set up specifically by a religious community for their community and paid for by that community), but dogma is what you also both adhere to and propagate, so you might want to rephrase.
And only about one in three know that a
public school teacher is allowed to teach a comparative
religion class - although nine
out of 10 know that teacher isn't allowed by the Supreme Court to lead a class in prayer.
Keep
religion out of our
schools and
public lives to the greatest extent possible.
While it's probably acceptable that
public schools should go
out of their way to blacklist MAJOR religious holy days from exams or deadlines (some kind
of authoritative national list would be required, but I'll bet even with community involvement it won't please everyone, sheesh) I don't buy having our
public school system bend over backwards for
religion.
Keeping
religion OUT of the public debate would be most helpful, keeping religion out of schools, out of government, out of my bedroom, and out of the lives of those who don't fit in the «mold» of what the religious approve of — NOW we can begin to agree on somethi
OUT of the
public debate would be most helpful, keeping
religion out of schools, out of government, out of my bedroom, and out of the lives of those who don't fit in the «mold» of what the religious approve of — NOW we can begin to agree on somethi
out of schools,
out of government, out of my bedroom, and out of the lives of those who don't fit in the «mold» of what the religious approve of — NOW we can begin to agree on somethi
out of government,
out of my bedroom, and out of the lives of those who don't fit in the «mold» of what the religious approve of — NOW we can begin to agree on somethi
out of my bedroom, and
out of the lives of those who don't fit in the «mold» of what the religious approve of — NOW we can begin to agree on somethi
out of the lives
of those who don't fit in the «mold»
of what the religious approve
of — NOW we can begin to agree on something.
As the country becomes more ethnically and religiously diverse, there will be those who say the Church can only survive if we fight to the death to preserve our civic
religion — keeping prayer in
public schools, keeping the Ten Commandments in courthouses, and keeping mosques
out of our neighborhoods.
I believe the world would be a better place if everyone kept their
religion out of their politics,
out of their
public schools and
out of secular society.
My question to you is do you think then that
religion should be kept
out of government and
public schools.
As the legal specialist at the Indianapolis meeting remarked,
religion can not be taken
out of public education simply by court rulings; it will disappear from the
schools only if it ceases to live in the «thoughts and hearts
of citizens.»
A poll carried
out by Populus in May revealed that 80 %
of the
public are opposed to allowing
schools to select all their places on the grounds
of religion.