Are you saying that we should teach discrimination or how to avoid discriminating.
2006-12-18 03:00:40
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answer #1
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answered by Frank R 7
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How about teaching people that its OK for someone to look different than you, to have a different religion or background than you. How about introducing people to other cultures and letting them make their decision about it. I'm all for not discriminating against jews or arabs, problem is people need something to hate. So we have to find something other than those two, and it probably shouldn't be blacks, they've done their time. If only their were some outer space alien who didn't come by all that often that we could hate, then we might actually get along here on Earth. Until then, we've got to have someone to blame everything on, might as well be the jews and the arabs.
2006-12-18 03:03:26
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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No discrimination should ever be taught in schools. Do you mean teaching that discrimination exists?
2006-12-18 03:02:06
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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convinced that is real. I puzzled about this myself, and did some study. maximum of that is extremely minor, yet you do get some stand out circumstances. My own 'conventional' develop into an interview with George Bush (senior). He develop into requested: "truly you recognize the equivalent citizenship and patriotism of those who're atheists?" and replied "No, i don't recognize that atheists should be seen as voters, nor could they be seen patriots. it is one usa less than God". then you actually have the media (and the a number of protection stress) who make the fact "there are not any atheists in foxholes". a uncomplicated declare contained in the US and one which very few broadcasters are prepared to apologise for. there develop right into a pollcondcted by technique of Newsweek which confirmed in effortless words 37% of people may vote for an atheist operating for president - no count their credentials. So convinced, there is clearly discrimination adverse to atheists. in spite of the undeniable fact that, to positioned this in context, it truly is unlike Nazi Germany at the same time as atheists were despatched to the most objective camps alongside with the Jews, homosexuals, gypsies, and so on.
2016-11-27 02:05:30
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't think we should teach people what to 'think', but rather teach history, as it happened. And lots of it. that way, people can't go in and rewrite it, like they are trying to do with the holocaust...and something else we might consider would be to let people know that others dies as a result of Hitler's ideals as well...many catholics, for example. Then we won't be so quick to write it off as 'someone else's' problem. But the hatred comes from home, not schools, so it is the parent's responsibility to address tolerance at home. It might help if our elected officials practiced tolerance as well...instead of fear of someone's religion (muslim) or the way they look (racial profiling)
2006-12-18 03:24:08
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answer #5
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answered by hichefheidi 6
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The schools all teach anti-discrimination!
With this feel-good political correctness that is in our schools, they teach that no one can be discriminated against at all on the basis of religion, race, country of origin, legal or illegal immigration status, gender, sexual orientation or anything.
2006-12-18 03:07:19
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answer #6
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answered by ItsJustMe 7
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I think we should teach anti-terrorist discrimination. And anti-murderer discrimination. And anti-gang banger discrimination. Discriminate against the people who deserve it. I am tired of giving rights to criminals.
2006-12-18 03:04:27
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answer #7
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answered by i hate hippies but love my Jesus 4
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No kind of discrimination should be taught or endorsed, period.
2006-12-18 03:08:17
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answer #8
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answered by Huey Freeman 5
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Snowshoe, Hate of any kind shouldn't be taught in schools.
2006-12-18 03:02:45
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answer #9
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answered by Mikira 5
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no
2006-12-18 03:01:50
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answer #10
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answered by ? 6
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