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I got a “lovely” reply from the Mission for America people when I wrote to them my thoughts all about it.
Hi,I got a “lovely” reply from the Mission for America people when I wrote to them my thoughts all about it.
The way I see it, most of the schools are public schools, and if you have problems with that day, keep your kids out of school that day. However, I think teaching kids a little bit of tolerance is a good thing. I think parents can use it an opportunity to teach their children morality. You don’t have to condone the day, but at the same time you can tell your kids why.
Which “view” of right and wrong ought they cater to?If you don’t like it, well you don’t have to send your children to a public school. Public schools do not cater to religious based view on what is right and wrong. So if you don’t agree, that’s your right and opinion, but the day should stay.
no, this is something the schools should not be involved in. If they spent as much times actually teaching maybe we would have better graduation rates.If you don’t like it, well you don’t have to send your children to a public school. Public schools do not cater to religious based view on what is right and wrong. So if you don’t agree, that’s your right and opinion, but the day should stay.
If public schools cannot “cleanly” define right and wrong then why are we to accept their understanding of “tolerance”?Well you couldn’t really define it so cleanly that way - but they shouldn’t take away the day because of religious objections. The point of the day is to try to promote tolerance and acceptance in people who don’t know much about homosexuality and to create openmindedness - if that’s not gonna happen for you, oh well. Nobody’s gonna tell you what to believe or not to believe.
Exactly correct.If public schools cannot “cleanly” define right and wrong then why are we to accept their understanding of “tolerance”?
EXACTLY!!what they are doing goes way beyond simply having guidelines for tolerance, it is advocacy.
when you move from simply having a tolerance policy to having a special day of observation it has turned into an advocacy movement.
I love it because more of my students have to refrain from speaking!!! LOL. In all seriousness, I think that the Gay straight Alliance is an insidious organization. It causes kids to identify themselves with something that they might otherwise have grown out of. How sad. How very sad that our schools allow organizations that glorify vice and mental disorder to meet on campus.
That’s not the message to confused teenagers. It gives them the idea that a moral disorder is normal, respectable, and healthy. It drills into their heads an ideology that is profoundly dangerous.To the last few posts - you are confusing advocating the gay lifestyle with advocating equal treatment of people who are different. The day of silence is not to say: hey you should think being gay is ok. It is to say: you shouldn’t treat people any differently because they are different - in the same way they promote tolerance for people who are minority races, mentally retarded, overweight, etc. Nobody is asking you to change your morals. And also, the Gay Straight Alliance doesn’t make people gay or say you should be gay if you’re not.