a_majoor said:
Frankly Iterator, your position is the one that is not appropriate for a democracy.
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...the social collapse and economic ruin in the former USSR...
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...the disintegration of social mores and general run down of the UK economy...
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...To stubbornly insist that parents must only follow your choice or should be economically punished for accessing a wider range of options (through what amounts to double taxation) reveals a petty and authoritarian streak which seems to be the common denominator among many of the opponents of this scheme in particular and school choice in general.
I think you’ve confused the similes.
In my opinion, the right way:
- Government provides a good (secular) police force for the public good
- If you have the means, you can hire (for example) the services of a private security firm
- Government provides a good (secular) health care system for the common good
- If you have the means, you can hire (for example) the services of a private Doctor
- Government provides a good (secular) education system for the public good
- If you have the means, you can hire (for example) the services of a private school
- All private services will have some restrictions such as monitoring, accreditation, and limited powers.
- All private services must function without public money and must pay for government services such as monitoring and accreditation
In, my opinion, the wrong way:
- Government services formerly provided for the public good are allowed to rot
- People purchase private services they cannot afford and force the state to fund them
- Religious organizations set up exclusionary services and (even though the religious organizations have their own money) force tax payers to fund them
I’m calling for responsible government, individual choice and individual responsibility. You seem to be advocating government as an absentee landlord and people using tax money as their own private bank account.
ex-Sup said:
My point is that you are basing everything on your own opinion...
Yes; it is in my opinion that publicly funding religious schools are a subsidization of religion. I have stated why I hold that opinion, and provided an analogy to counter suggestions that it is not.
ex-Sup said:
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It's clear that our students need more moral and ethical guidance; if religion provides that, so be it....
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It is not a “so be it” situation. The public (secular) school system is perfectly capable of handling the day-to-day business of “everyone needs to play nicely together” and any requirements of right and wrong that would apply equally in any school setting.
It is the responsibility of the parents to handle non-secular moral and ethical issues. If some parents want to farm this responsibility out to some religious group – fine, but that has nothing to do with education, and nothing to do with tax money.