Who is talking about arresting parents or putting them in leg irons?
Qayak is talking about fines.
Don't you think the Dawkins piece is a good piece for all parents to read?
http://www.fortunecity.com/emachines/e11/86/dawkins2.html --and worth discussing or even posting in schools?
Yes, it's a good read. Assigning it in school, or discussing it in school, IMO, would be a violation of the first amendment. It's fine to discuss "how do we know what we know" and make the connection to evidence. It's fine to discuss what constitutes good evidence, and how to identify it. It's fine to learn about logical fallacies.
Making a connection to religion in the classroom is not okay. I'm sorry, but that's one of the things I give up in exchange for not having the more numerous Christian teachers using class time to tell my kids that Jesus died for their sins.
It is weird how people step around the topic to make it into this issue where people are under arrest for taking their kids to church. Is anyone suggesting that?
Qayak is suggesting fines.
Do you want government to stay out of peoples' religious practices if it means more young girls married off to old men and raped?
No, this is a strawman. Forcing someone into marriage is wrong at any age. Sex with children is a crime.
Isn't it sick that our troups were going to have that horrible "left behind" video game sent to them in a care charible care package--that's a videogame where the goal is to convert non-Christians or kill them! That's disturbing... and not talking about it or bringing our laws to bear on the topic allows the ugliness to fester.
Another straw man. Talking about it is likely what got the idea squelched.
If not "scrutinizing faith" means that kids are routinely told the earth was 6000 years old, then that is wrong and immoral, isn't it?
Wrong, yes. Immoral is overstating, I think. As long as this lie isn't being taught in public schools, I think it's between the parents and their children.
Where do you draw the line with what religions allow and how?
At the point children are physically harmed.
These institutions get huge tax breaks which means that tax payers pay for them.
No, it doesn't.
Can't we at least have a public mottos, proclaimations and discussions about the value of faith, feeling, beliefs, and religion versus facts, critical thinking, the good of the whole, and truth?
Isn't that what we're having here?
Neither Dawkins nor anyone else is advocating locking people in jail.
Qayak is advocating fines.
It's raising public awareness and responsibility to children that we are advocating.
Fine. That's what discussions like this do. Qayak has one viewpoint -- that teaching religion to one's children should be discouraged by the government. I have another viewpoint -- that the government should teach English, science, math skills, history, and critical thinking, and that standards should be in place so that children who are home-schooled get an adequate education in those areas as well. Beyond that, my reading of the first amendment is that the government should keep its hands off.