Voss wrote:
Only four to six percent of the population are atheists. For the sake of six percent of the population we change our laws?Voss, if it was any arbitrary law, perhaps public consensus should be the guiding light.
This, however, is a constitutional matter. Separation of church and state was of great concern for the founding fathers.
If 90% felt it would be OK to remove the right to free speech, it couldn't be done.
In the case of religion in school, it's not a case of changing a law - it's a matter of rectifying an offense - someone have done something unconstitutional, and are now being hold accountable.
Our country is based on tolerance, yet we are caving in to the intolerant? Just once I'd like to see a judge tell one of these litigants to find their own solution. If, they can't accept public education as it is, then they are free to find an alternative.Tolerance is NOT showing a religious preference down someones throat. Tolerance is respecting others faith, or lack thereof. The solution is already there - and it's been there since the founding fathers wrote the constitution. It is more modern individuals who've created the problem. And other individuals see the problem and are trying to fix it.
I take it you wouldn't be pleased if the Taliban version of Islam was taught in all public schools, alongside encouragement to experiment with drugs, and instructions in how to have sex orgies. If you have the funds, you can send your child to private school. if you do not, you'll either have to educate it yourself or send him to that public school. I don't this to be a 'love it or leave it' situation, especially as the school IS public.. if it had been a private school, it'd been a different matter.
You don't make the masses conform to the individual.And you don't let the masses ignore the constitution.
For heaven's sake - watch your government. And protect ALL constitutional matters, even those that you might disagree with, for it is your constitution that laid the foundation for where you are today.
Kieran, around 5% of the world population are atheists. In Denmark, most aren't atheists, but rather totally indifferent to religion - perhaps there is a god, perhaps there isn't, doesn't help me decide what ice cream to buy.
If anything, organised religion is expanding world wide. For some, there's been a shift from the religion of their parents to another one, and it is perhaps this you are referring to.
Or are you talking about less Christian influence in the media?