| ▲ | lapcat 6 hours ago | |
> I hear your viewpoint, but parents do have a right to teach their religious beliefs to their children. I didn't claim that they don't have a right. I just claimed to be skeptical of the idea that the primary motivation for homeschooling was educational outcomes rather than ideological outcomes. > At the end of the day, there are over 7 billion people in the world, it's okay if some of them believe differently. If only they believed differently. ;-) It's no coincidence that children tend to adopt the same beliefs as their parents, no matter the country or region. > I am more concerned that in the last 20 years we've progressed to the point where secularism has for some become as militantly evangelized as any religion. The last 20 years? The First Amendment of the US Constitution begins, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion". The principle of separation of church and state is more than 200 years old. > kids are not the communities children, they are their parents children I don't know what label you'd want to put on me, but I would say that kids do not belong to anyone. I find the notion of ownership to be noxious, practically slavery. We have a responsibility to take care of those who cannot take care of themselves (yet), but that doesn't mean children are simply the personal property and playthings of the parents. I think it's a disservice to a child to place them in a bubble and shield them from anything the parents don't happen to like. > The shift towards enforced collectivism, away from individualism "they are their parents children" is not individualism, or certainly not individualism from the child's perspective. Morover, from what I've seen and heard from homeschoolers themselves, they do tend to form, or indeed come from, specific communitites, and are not simply "lone wolf" homeschooling parents. | ||