English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I wanted to apply to a university that I’ll leave un named to do a primary teaching course, but they would only accept Catholics who are approved by a priest because they make you work only in catholic schools. I am not a catholic and I have my own religion so because of this I am immediately thrown out as an option to accept for the course. Is this grounds for suing or pressing charges for discrimination?

2007-05-19 02:32:49 · 9 answers · asked by PaulC 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

It is a public university not private and it is only this course in the university that requires you to be catholic the rest is no denominaational. It is different from american schools.

2007-05-19 02:39:47 · update #1

9 answers

Hi,

You bet it is. First of all, get legal representation who are paid only if they win.

Second, go for a jury trial and set your sights high and sue in the high millions so any settlement will be mucho bucks.

There have been successful suites filed and won for much less justification that what you would be claiming.

Go for it!,

Darryl S.

2007-05-19 02:44:14 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

File a case of discrimination by the university for denying your application because of not being a Catholic. Educational institutions must be open to all students regardless of religion because it is one of the freedoms protected by the Constitution.

2007-05-19 02:40:21 · answer #2 · answered by FRAGINAL, JTM 7 · 0 0

a million. you could't "press quotes" against a cop. pressing quotes is a criminal subject, and you as a civilian don't have the capacity to press quotes, purely a District lawyer can press quotes. you could document wholesome, yet have not have been given any grounds to realize this consistent with this. I additionally do no longer understand what "failure of private accountability" even capacity. 2. As for the examining of your rights, you're fake effect this besides. officers are allowed to hunt you after a valid arrest, and asking in case you have something on you without examining you your rights isn't a contravention of Miranda, as this question is asked for protection purposes, they do no longer opt to be shocked by utilising a weapon or needles or something that could desire to wreck them. despite if it became a Miranada violation, your purely therapy may be to suppress any statements you produced from data, which may be the notice "no". the hunt became nevertheless valid, so the marijuana appropriate quotes will stick. they do no longer want your assertion to convict you of any of those quotes. 3. think of you're dashing down the limited-get entry to highway, 10 different automobiles are doing a similar, the cop can purely cost tag one person, might you argue discrimination then too? of path no longer. persons doing a similar ingredient isn't a criminal protection to against the regulation, it is beside the point on your guy or woman quotes, and the officer no longer ticketing others would not provide you status to document some style of discrimination lawsuit. 4. Handcuffs could be tight for protection motives. it is exceptionally beside the point. the nice and comfortable button is you chosen to antagonize a cop on a similar time as carrying weed, which became a foul determination, and now you will could pay for that mistake.

2016-11-25 00:10:11 · answer #3 · answered by headlee 4 · 0 0

No, a religious univeristy is a private organization and has the constitutional right not to accept anyone that is not of their faith. It is called freedom of religion.

2007-05-19 02:37:25 · answer #4 · answered by bottleblondemama 7 · 1 0

For legal questions seek answers from legal experts try
www.expertlaw.com

2007-05-19 11:43:15 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Are you sure it is because you are not Catholic? Or could it be due to your run-on sentences, fear of capitalization or spelling errors?

Opus Dei?

2007-05-19 03:05:17 · answer #6 · answered by 2jaxx 5 · 0 1

seems unlikely--religious institutions generally get plenty of room to set their own rules.

2007-05-19 02:39:37 · answer #7 · answered by njyogibear 7 · 1 0

Obviously it is a private school, so no.

2007-05-19 02:35:25 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

oh yes!

2007-05-19 02:41:57 · answer #9 · answered by tennessee 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers