Click each dot on the map within the article to see how much each school received in federal funds on 2014, mostly or wholly through grants and student aid. I would call that a public asset.If they are Christian AND private, then I have a hard time giving a fuck, provided they don't use public school system assets such as books or buses.
"...if you will just sign here promising you will not take any of these items onto an airplane, please."Particularly the second one: "Well, you're too dangerous to allow on an airplane, but you can go ahead and buy an assault rifle and some dynamite."
Yep, that's going to the Supreme Court.Dozens of Christian schools win Title IX waivers to ban LGBT students, by Andy Birkey (1 Dec 2015)
Here's a request letter one of the waived schools sent. Note on page 2 they're asking for exemption where their beliefs conflict with admission, recruitment, education, and employment of people based on the school's views on marriage, sex outside marriage, sexual orientation, gender identity, pregnancy, and abortion.
The reaction to this will be interesting on all sides. I'm guessing these exemptions will be challenged in court in not too long.
I don't agree with most of what you say on Gun Control Bubble, but I completely agree with this stance when approaching crimes, mental health, and whatever else. If something is so heinous that you are "marked for life" as being dangerous, then why aren't you still in prison? The first role of law enforcement (which should be public protection) is obviously failing in this case. Anything beyond your sentence itself is then "extra-legal" and therefore should be IMO not allowed. Or it should be right there in sentencing: "I sentence you to 1 year in prison, and 10-15 years of not being able to get any non-minimum wage job until a pardon comes through. Good luck in your life not sucking, though I know it will!" And yes, that up-front about it, or we're just kidding ourselves, kind of like has been happening with legal representation and legal recourse for years now (ie: the rich can afford lawyers and get what they want, and others can't, and thus don't).I have to say, and I know I'm late to the party, that, while I'm all in favor of gun registration and more gun control, being institutionalized once shouldn't mean you're banned for life. it's perfectly possible to have a breakdown, depression, whatever, be treated, and come out a stronger, better individual. Just like I don't think "having been jailed" should mean anything afterwards - once you've served your time, you deserve a new start. Once declared mentally OK, you're...supposedly mentally OK.
I do think that, like losing your civil rights in some cases, losing the right to carry a gun temporarily could be a part of a sentence... In very specific cases. YI don't agree with most of what you say on Gun Control Bubble, but I completely agree with this stance when approaching crimes, mental health, and whatever else. If something is so heinous that you are "marked for life" as being dangerous, then why aren't you still in prison? The first role of law enforcement (which should be public protection) is obviously failing in this case. Anything beyond your sentence itself is then "extra-legal" and therefore should be IMO not allowed. Or it should be right there in sentencing: "I sentence you to 1 year in prison, and 10-15 years of not being able to get any non-minimum wage job until a pardon comes through. Good luck in your life not sucking, though I know it will!" And yes, that up-front about it, or we're just kidding ourselves, kind of like has been happening with legal representation and legal recourse for years now (ie: the rich can afford lawyers and get what they want, and others can't, and thus don't).
If the government is going to require schooling, and dictate the level of schooling required, then the government should pony up funds. If the state allows charter schools, letting parents choose where to educate their children, then as long as the schools are teaching to the standards why prevent them from choosing institutions that fit their needs? Particularly if they are expressing a first amendment protected religious belief.Click each dot on the map within the article to see how much each school received in federal funds on 2014, mostly or wholly through grants and student aid. I would call that a public asset.
If the government is going to require schooling, and dictate the level of schooling required, then the government should pony up funds. If the state allows charter schools, letting parents choose where to educate their children, then as long as the schools are teaching to the standards why prevent them from choosing institutions that fit their needs? Particularly if they are expressing a first amendment protected religious belief.
And?
- Students that are part of protected groups may be excluded from the institution due to their protected group membership.
- Potential workers of protected groups may be excluded from the institution due to their protected group membership.
Are you suggesting I'm suggesting anything? I've been answering questions and have not stated my position(s) on this issue (except to say that I consider grants and student aid to constitute government funding, which I don't think is a controversial position).And?
Are you suggesting we get rid of all boys schools and all girls schools?
[DOUBLEPOST=1449358925,1449358759][/DOUBLEPOST]To further clarify, the two items I gave you are the two main drawbacks I see to schools that are allowed to discriminate against protected classes in employment and education. Whether those are worth the benefits obtained from the discrimination is something I'm not set on.The reaction to this will be interesting on all sides. I'm guessing these exemptions will be challenged in court in not too long.
Unless I'm mistaken, I don't think there are sex-separated public schools or charter schools.And?
Are you suggesting we get rid of all boys schools and all girls schools?
I see a lot of parallels with the Planned Parenthood discussion that happened a week or two ago. People may not want their fungible tax money being spent on schools that reject students for being part of a protected class. Couldn't private organizations fund those efforts when the parents can't afford it?Which essentially means the poor would not be able to put their kids into a private school. The advantage of charter schools or vouchers is that it enables everyone to participate in specialized schools regardless of income because they are able to use the funds that are already earmarked for their child on a variety of schools.
Because the school has a duty of care to its students. Just because the parents might agree with the school that being gay or transgender is somehow "wrong" does not mean that the student will not be LGBTI. And for the school to expel the student over that, potentially harming their education while they try to get into a new school, for something that is now perfectly legally acceptable - if sadly not considered morally acceptable by some societal groups - is to fail that duty of care.If the government is going to require schooling, and dictate the level of schooling required, then the government should pony up funds. If the state allows charter schools, letting parents choose where to educate their children, then as long as the schools are teaching to the standards why prevent them from choosing institutions that fit their needs? Particularly if they are expressing a first amendment protected religious belief.
But you're also de-facto segregating these institutions by allowing the schools to exclude these people. There really isn't much difference between this and excluding blacks, whether the basis for doing so is religious or bigotry. The government has already ruled that this kind of thing is illegal... fuck, it's one of the reasons parents were given vouchers to begin with, so they would have equal access to private education.Which essentially means the poor would not be able to put their kids into a private school. The advantage of charter schools or vouchers is that it enables everyone to participate in specialized schools regardless of income because they are able to use the funds that are already earmarked for their child on a variety of schools.
The supreme court is going to consider affirmative action again pretty soon.Still the same idea though. Once you get federal funding, you shouldn't be allowed to discriminate.
I'm sort of worried about this, mostly because I feel like we're going to be yo-yoing on this forever. The moment we loosened the shackles on the South in regards to voter oversight, they immediately sought to subvert and suppress black and minority votes... if we do the same in regards to employment/education, I feel like we're going to see a lot of the Ivy League close it's doors to minority students again and allow big business/government to become even whiter again. Then we'll try to undo it again in 50 years and try to undo THOSE changes in another 50. The issue will never get resolved and the animosity will just keep building on both sides.The supreme court is going to consider affirmative action again pretty soon.
Well, a few hundred years ago, this strategy might have actually saved the native american population from being so close to statistical annihilation as makes no real difference...