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- From: cstone@husc8.harvard.edu (christopher stone)
- Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,alt.rush-limbaugh
- Subject: Re: Sex Education in Public Schools
- Message-ID: <1993Jan12.232650.19263@husc3.harvard.edu>
- Date: 13 Jan 93 04:26:48 GMT
- References: <1993Jan12.120430.19244@husc3.harvard.edu> <C0rLC6.MJB@vcd.hp.com>
- Organization: Harvard University Science Center
- Lines: 92
- Nntp-Posting-Host: husc8.harvard.edu
-
- In article <C0rLC6.MJB@vcd.hp.com> thatcher@vcd.hp.com (Garen Thatcher) writes:
- >christopher stone (cstone@husc8.harvard.edu) wrote:
- >: In article <C0p9Iy.Avr@vcd.hp.com> thatcher@vcd.hp.com (Garen Thatcher) writes:
- >
- > <<<<My original post deleted>>>>
- >:
- >: 1) The Puritans were not seeking religious freedom for anyone but themselves.
- >
- > All I am trying to say here is that religion is a very important
- > part of our national history. Under the guise of "seperation" there
- > are some who are tying to REMOVE the religious aspect and therfore
- > rewrite the history books. I am not sure which is worse, rewriting
- > the old books or burning the new ones. Both seem to accomplish the
- > same thing.
-
- I agree, providing you are truly talking about the teaching of history and
- not the policy question of whether or not school prayer is justified. But
- there is a difference between removing the religious aspect and pointing
- out that other philosophies, such as Deism in the case of the founding
- fathers, or trnascendentalism in the case of important philosphers such
- as Thooreau, have also influenced American politics and society. But on
- the whole I agree with you, the religious aspect of our nation's history
- should be studied. I would add the caveat that historians would say
- it should be studied, not promoted per se (though obviously it's
- legitimate to debate about whether religion has been a positive
- or negative force in US history.) But clearly the religious influences
- are there and should be acknowledged, studied, and analyzed critically.
-
- >: 2) If MANY MANY people believe in a God, then why can't they inculcate
- >: religious values at home, where they can be most successfully transmitted?
- >: Ah, you will object, the schools conspire against us by telling our kids
- >: our religious values are wrong. *BUT THAT IS PRECISELY THE POINT*. Religion
- >: menas nothing if it is not constantly questioned and challenged. Without
- >: being challenged, religion is nothing more than a "dead dogma," to quote
- >: John Stuart Mill, and not a living, breathing, meaningful truth. The role
- >: of the family and household is to rebut, and most emphatically not *hide*,
- >: these challenges to religion.
- >:
- > I am not sure why you think that religion mean nothing if not challenged.
- > Does that mean that my relationship with a God (none specified) is not
- > meaningfull unless there are those who are telling me that God does not
- > exist and that I am fooling myself? This is not the case. If you truly
- > feel that this is true, please call me or Email me. I would like to
- > talk to you personally about this. I do not need persecution in order
- > for religion to me meaningfull. You are very misled about this.
- >
- >: 3) IMHO you are confusing the free exercise of religion with the compulsory
- >: exercise of religoin. IMHO, people should be able to *voluntarily* pray in
- >: school. But voluntary means just that: voluntary, and not an officially
- >: sanctioned event with time set aside specifically for the purpose of
- >: praying. I do believe that the 1st amendment allows, and indeed even would
- >: endorse, things such as before-school prayer groups as they are voluntary
- >: and not coercive. But time set aside during the day for organized prayer
- >: is coercive because it sends students the message that *one specific creed*
- >: is officially sanctioned. People who are against condom distribution claim
- >: (perhaps correctly, perhaps not -- I haven't decided) that such
- >: distribution gives official sanction to sex. Please apply the same reasoning
- >: to school prayer. Organized prayer gives official sanction to a particular
- >: creed, in violation of the no-establishment clause of the 1st amendment
- >: which the Founding Fathers themselves wrote.
-
- > Who said anything about mandatory prayer. I grew up with it, you did
- > as well. Did it mess you up? NO! What I am talking about is the
- > removal of religious significance from the textbooks and replacing it
- > with "alternative lifestyle" information.
- > THAT IS THE ISSUE!
-
- Well, actually, no, I did not "grow up with it," as there was no prayer
- in my high school. As for the question of whether it "messes people up," I
- would say no in the case of Christians, except in the broad sense that
- people should analyze religion critically in instituions of learning.
- Analyzing religion dogmatically is the role of churches, though even
- they can analyze critically if they so choose. In the case of non-Christians,
- it may "mess them up" if they feel compelled to recite prayers contrary to
- their faith. And if one religion feels persecuted, all religions could
- potentially be persecuted.
-
- I would agree, however, the that the influence of religion in our nation's
- history must be addressed by textbooks. Other historical antecedents must
- be addressed too. (Moreover, it's not necessarily a zero-sum game: we can
- address both religion and "other lifestyles"). I will agree that the PC
- movement may have exaggerated the role of the "other lifestyles."
- (We must also take care to define "other lifestyles"...do you mean
- other *cultures* or lifestyles?)
-
- By the way, what I said above about religion also applies to the value
- of tolerance: people will only be convinced of its truth by a "full
- and frank discussion" and open debate, or else tolerance will be a dead
- dogma instead of a living, meaningful truth. Tolerance should not be
- accepted at face value any more than any other value should be. Only
- be critically questioning values such as tolerance will we come to
- accept their ultimate truth.
-