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On 12/31/13, 3:42 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/31/2013 3:27 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 12/31/13, 2:23 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 12/31/2013 10:04 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: Not at all. Slavery was just as wrong in the past as it is in the present. It is inherently wrong. There was and is no moral justification for slavery. You are trying to justify superstition, and you can easily do it among religious conservatives, because many of them believe that sort of thing, just as they believe "the bible" was divinely written and is the word of god, even though anyone with a brain and a read of history knows that isn't the case...oh, and those Matthew, Mark, Luke and John "books"? They weren't written by any of those four guys. Sorry. If there was (and is) no moral justification for slavery, then it and it's history should not be taught in school, just like any discussion or recognition to creationism theories according to your logic. I am not saying to preach it. I am saying that it should not be ignored as part of someones general education of the influences on society. It's a social awareness issue, not a course in how we got here. I'm not suggesting that teaching about slavery should be ignored in the public schools. Facts about it and its evils should be taught. Creationism is religion and shouldn't be taught as fact or reality. The only reality about it is that some people believe in it. I have no objection to it being included as part of a course on comparative religions in public high schools, so long as that course avoids advocacy of any particular religious beliefs. And of course, the course should include material for study and discussion on agnosticism and atheism, too. Hell, back in the dark ages of junior high, the eighth grade, I did a paper and presented on how Greek mythology evolved into Roman mythology. I didn't expert that anyone would convert, nor did I advocate for either the Greek or the Roman beliefs. When we were in junior or even senior high school, the world wasn't so uptight about what we were exposed to in school. Heck, if we were about to take a test we were unprepared for we could even pray for help. I see absolutely no reason that a class in social sciences cannot discuss the different belief systems from a historical point of view. One over another should not be emphasized or encouraged. Let people learn as much as they can and make up their own minds. You can still pray for help as an individual in a public school. When I was in grammar school we stopped saying the "pledge of allegiance" right after it was "modified" to include the "under god" bull****. There were lots of complaints about including that phrase from lots of parents, so the Board dropped it from the morning exercise. My mother was obliquely involved in that because a number of Republican voters called to complain and either wanted the phrase dropped or the pledge dropped. She was whatever the New Haven term for "ward heeler" was in the party, a minor functionary mostly concerned with GOTV efforts for Republican candidates. -- Religion: together we can find the cure. |
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