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I truely believe that putting God back into schools will help achieve lessoning the crime in schools and the world by showing people they are accountable to a higher being then just our government.

2007-01-14 07:49:29 · 23 answers · asked by marzie_dotes@sbcglobal.net 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

23 answers

Religion has no place in the government, or any government-sponsored event.

Did you know that the phrase 'under God' wasn't even in the original pledge of allegiance?

If you are so concerned, you can go to a private school of your choice...you don't have to go to public school.

2007-01-14 08:01:52 · answer #1 · answered by mesquitemachine 6 · 5 0

Sorry, I can handiest talk to the universities I attended plus what I've heard from different pupils over the final forty or years. Then once more there are broad editions from college district to college district. I've not ever attended a public college wherein magnificence lead prayer or a second of silence was once practiced, nevertheless my daughters' colleges in VA do mandate a second of silence at the same time those (so far as I can recall) in CA didn't. The pledge nonetheless has "underneath god" in it, although it was once further 7 years earlier than I was once born. I've obvious colleges difference the Christmas tune connection with "Parson Brown" to anything else at the same time making a song approximately Dradles. While there appears to be an over all lessened pressure on any precise faith, it additionally turns out that there's a extra heightened attention that pupils are composed of more than a few cultures and that faith is just a facet of the change that we must attempt to have an understanding of. While I feel that a few colleges have long past overboard on attempting to not advocate one faith, at the same time no longer information the change among faith and tradition for different cultures, it's transparent that our underfunded colleges are no less than making an attempt not to want or help a faith on the fee of others. Of path, handling enraged moms and dads is the bread and butter of faculties and on this mild, we as moms and dads have had an overly terrible outcome in how colleges educate our youngsters.

2016-09-07 22:08:38 · answer #2 · answered by delsignore 4 · 0 0

but not everyone believes in god. and for those who so they believe in different gods, not to mention different interpretation of said god.
if you don't believe in god, the threat of some god's wrath won't scare you.
your argument is lacking, what about the fact that people who are non-athiest (discluding asnostics, theists, ect as well) disagree about what is morally/spirtually wrong. some religions say turn the other cheek, others say defend your self, and others say stop people who offend god by any means nessacary.

this violates the first amendment.
although the pledge is a nice thing, it was originally written just to sell more flags- a cute little bonus. then it was made an official part of this country. the under god line was added in during war time. I see nothing wrong with taking it out.

you are trying to influence and indoctrine your beliefs into people. thats not what this country was founded on. especially the colonies that had multible religions living side by side along each other

we need more laws to creat unity. in most high schools they serve different lunchs do everyone can eat ( some religions won't let you eat meat period, other only certain meat or on certain days). this is a great thing. although it kinda of bad when some schools only offer a salad in leui of meat- I like salad, but I don't know how anyone can eat it everyday, five days a week.

I don't understand why anyone is amd about the Quran (thomas jefferson's quran no less) being used to swear in a senator- chistians use their bibles, why can't muslims use their book. and one day hopefully an athiest will swear on the constitution or something similar

- many people now and at the beginning of our government were atheist or doubted god, they were/are just quiet about it. Ben franklin is most famous of these closet non-religious peple

~ for those talking about spanking on here- I know many kids who were disiplined not punished (spanikng) and behave. and democratic parenting has proven to produce the best adults when the child grows up~

2007-01-14 10:32:37 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I don't think that any religion should be removed from schools or anywhere for that matter. Everyone has a religion whether its Islam, Hinduism, Christianity, Buddhism, Judaism, and Sikhism. It seems anymore like Christianity is the only thing being removed. (We are letting congressmen take an oath on the Quran) High schools generally offer a variety of elective courses which I believe should include studies on religious practices.

If there is a child in an elementary classroom that wants do draw a picture of Buddha, he should be allowed to do so. Same with the Christian child drawing a picture of Jesus. If someone wants to pray, or read their bible during school, as long as it's not disrupting classroom activities, so be it.

What should not happen is Teachers or students pushing any religion on anyone. Praying, or reading a Bible is a personal choice, just like praying to Buddha or Mary.

When I was in school, Catholics did not eat meat on Fridays. So, school lunches on Fridays were meatless. I was not harmed at all by this, nor was I made to feel that I had to be Catholic to fit in.

2007-01-14 08:17:41 · answer #4 · answered by Fish Lover 5 · 1 1

For all who want god back in school, I pose this;

Which one?

This will not happen in public schools. If you think it should be allowed there is a little document called the Constitution and its little sister called the Bill of Rights I would like to introduce you to.

Try reading it, then you will see why things are the way they are. Why don't parents take a more active role in raising, disciplining, and teaching their children about right and wrong. Teach them about respecting adults, authority, and people in general. Above all teach them as the parent you are in charge, and they are not.

You can start by making your children say yes sir and no ma'am. It is the quickest way to get kids to realize that they are not adults, and not equal to adults.

That is what will stop all of the problems with young people today, not allowing some fictition deity to be re-introduced into taxpayer funded public schools.

2007-01-14 08:12:02 · answer #5 · answered by ? 5 · 1 0

Which god are you refering to? My God? The God of Pat Robertson? Maybe the God of David Koresh? The Mormon God? Or how about the god of the american Indians?

You realize that the Pledge was written by a minister and DID NOT include the phrase Under God, right? You realize that was put in during the Red Scare of the 50's?

Maybe if we didn't all blame victims and actually practice what we preach, things would improve. I'm tired of hearing about how the Man is holding me down or how I have ADD and can't sit still.
I'm tired of watching kids run all over their parents because Doctor Spock said spanking was bad. Before that idiot mother ****** came along, kids learned that there were repercussions for their actions. Now, with all this time out bullshit, kids aren't learning that.

I was seeing one woman whose son was an undisciplined little brat. Everytime she went to punish him he would tell her that she was a bad mommy because he didn't have a daddy. She'd send him to his room with a cookie and tell him not to have his tv on.

I spanked him one time for trying to beat on my dog with a pipe. He never did that **** again and he showed me a lot more respect. But after that, I refused to see her again.

I've ran into her a couple of times since than and she can't figure out why he's now being kicked out of every school he goes to. He's attacked teachers and other students. And even today she won't punish him because all these so called "experts" are saying that we're teaching our kids to be violent.

BULLSHIT!

2007-01-14 08:15:19 · answer #6 · answered by darkemoregan 4 · 0 1

Any kind of religion has to begin in the HOME...EVERYTHING must be first learned in the home to children....they then can take it with them in their daily living where-ever they are. The morals and values have declined so far down that even if you put religion back in school it wouldn't matter much. Not to mention with all the different cultures and religions now, it wouldn't be your basic "morning prayer" as it once was and then the sensitivity issue would come into play that why is this God being mentioned and not this God...Know what I mean? Society has allowed morals and values to be put on the back-burner....but, hurt someone's feelings and everyone's in an uproar....Go figure!

2007-01-14 10:05:42 · answer #7 · answered by 2179 4 · 0 1

Which god? Yaweh? Allah, Budda, Jehovah, Dali Lama, Zeus? Would you be happy being forced to worship Zeus? What of us who consider god to be a misguided bit of propaganda? Our bill of rights allows us to worship or not worship any god we want. People don't remember, but when I was in grade school there was no "under god" in the pledge of allegiance. It was added in 1943. So taking it out would merely restore it to the original version. There is a long history of war and other hideous behavior done in the name of god. So putting god back in school is no guarantee of good behavior. Read some history!

2007-01-14 08:13:54 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Oh, yeah. God-people NEVER do anything violent!

Most of the kids going to our public schools alreadly know about God. What would your "putting God back into schools" consist of? Humiliating little Buddhist or Hindu children? Calling Jews "Christ killers"?

The government is not authorized to take a rooting interest in any religion. That is left up to us to decide for ourselves. That's the way it should be.

2007-01-14 07:59:09 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 7 0

Some people want to change the pledge to it's ORIGINAL form (with "God" removed). U.S. schools are "public" schools... not religious schools. All people have the right to believe what they want to believe and to practice what they want to practice. Schools are here to educate people in math, reading, social studies, and science.

2007-01-14 08:00:47 · answer #10 · answered by mJc 7 · 4 0

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