Bob Blaylock
Forklift Operator
I don't think there is anything wrong with anyone educating a child about their or other folk's religion. Religion after all, whether you personally like it or not, forms a part of most of our societies so not to educate a child about religion would be doing the child a disservice.
However indoctrination is not education, indoctrination's goal is to shut down thought, it is to prevent someone from forming their own opinions and being able to learn for themselves, that is wrong whether it is done to an adult or a child.
You teach a child not to steal, that's “coercive indoctrination”. You don't give the child that much choice. If the child is caught stealing, the child is punished for it, and thus “coerced” hopefully into not stealing.
You don't just “educate” the child. You don't teach the child “I think stealing is wrong, but it's up to you to make your own choice and I won't interfere.” You do what it reasonably takes to force the child to understand that stealing is something that won't be tolerated.
Whether you like it or not, for most people, religion forms a major part of what is right and what is wrong, and what they are therefore obligated to try to pass on in a similar manner to their children.
Yes, it happens, once in a while, that some form of religious thought comes along that is destructive. It's tragic to have such beliefs “coercively indoctrinated” into children, but the alternative to allowing that would be even worse. The alternative would be to have some government agency that has the power to determine what beliefs parents are or are not allowed to try to instill in their children. Do you really want to go there?