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Author Topic: Big Trouble For Homeschoolers  (Read 4943 times)

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Offline copticruiser

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Big Trouble For Homeschoolers
« on: March 22, 2012, 12:45:04 AM »
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  • The big bullies are at it again. Been busy forwarding this to homeschoolers in Alberta and British Columbia but these laws will ultimately affect everyone. PLEASE SEND TO ANY CANADIANS YOU KNOW
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     Subject    Fwd: Bringing soft totalitarianism into the classroom, National Post, March 8, 2012 article
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    Subject: Bringing soft totalitarianism into the classroom, National Post, March 8, 2012 article

    > Raymond J. De Souza, National Post · Mar. 8, 2012 | Last Updated: Mar. 8, 2012 2:06 AM ET
    >
    > Who decides what children get taught when it comes to moral and religious questions? Parents or the state?
    >
    > These questions are being asked in Alberta, as a result of the provincial government's proposed new Education Act. The bill incorporates the Alberta Human Rights Act into the law governing schools and education, presumably giving aggrieved students, parents and teachers the right to file complaints with the Alberta Human Rights Commission (HRC). Why the government of Alison Redford would wish to bring the thoroughly discredited bureaucratic apparatus of the human-rights commission into the education system is baffling.
    >
    > The Alberta HRC was the kangaroo court exposed by Ezra Levant when he was prosecuted for more than two years for publishing the Danish Muhammad cartoons, and which ordered a Christian pastor in Red Deer never to speak about ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖity again - including in private correspondence - because someone complained about his letter published in a local newspaper.
    >
    > The real courts slapped the human rights commission senseless on that one, but not until the accused had been comprehensively abused by the onesided process. Freedom of the press, freedom of religion, fundamental legal rights of due process - none of these carry much weight at the human rights commissions. Sensible people around the country are endeavouring to have their pernicious scope restricted. Alberta's government, on the other hand, seeks to expand their purview so they might be able to harass every teacher in every classroom in the province.
    >
    > Which led to an odd protest at the legislature here on Monday by several hundred home-schooling families, worried that the new Education Act's drafting would expose parents to human rights prosecutions if determined activists didn't care for their religious and moral teaching. The protest was odd because the education minister showed up at the rally himself, saying that his proposed law would do no such thing; and affirming the principle that the parents were advocating, namely that the parents' right to teach their children should not be impeded by the state's various bureaucratic arms.
    >
    > But sweet words are no match for a determined bureaucrat of ideological zeal. Alberta's parents - home-schoolers and otherwise - are right to be vigilant. Ill winds are blowing across the land when it comes to parental rights, religious liberty and education policy.
    >
    > Quebec's new "ethics and religious culture" curriculum aims to promote religious tolerance by teaching that religious differences don't matter. If you are a Muslim parent who wants to teach your child that Islam is superior to being an atheist or being a witch, the education system will be undermining that view in class. Quebec will brook no exceptions to the new groupthink: No child is permitted to be exempt from class when the teacher instructs her that her pious parents are teaching her falsehoods. The Supreme Court of Canada affirmed this soft totalitarianism last month, saying in effect that parents ought to get with the program and get over their religious, moral and cultural obligations to instruct their children. That is the narrowing of liberty to the point of eliminating it; everyone is free to teach his kids what he wants at home, just as long as the state gets to teach the little ones the opposite at school
    >
    > In Ontario, a battle is going on between the province and Catholic school boards and various private schools about bullying. The province's position is that stopping bullying in the schools requires that schools sanction the view that their moral teaching about sɛҳuąƖity, especially ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖ acts, is wrong. The schools' position is that if you want to stop bullying, then teach the children not to bully each other, and sanction them when they do. But the bureaucratic state is never satisfied with merely proportionate measures. So Ontario proposes, in effect, forcing schools that exist for a religious purposes - whether Catholic or otherwise - to compromise that mission on the diktat of the education bureaucracy.
    >
    > It's a battle that will only grow more intense in the years ahead. Education policy has for several generations now been creeping into ever more sectors of civil life. Having done such a bang-up job of teaching little Edith to read and write and do algebra, the education bureaucracy is eager to ensure that she has proper eating habits (first graders sent home shamefacedly when they bring brownies rather than celery sticks for snack time) and the correct ideas about social policy (high schools facilitate access to birth control but make bottled water contraband).
    >
    > And those parents who do not wish to lazily hand over the formation of their children to the state? They now have to fight to discharge the duties that are properly theirs, as they did here in Edmonton on Monday.

    CHECK THESE SITES ON WHATS HAPPENING

    http://www.aheaonline.com/index.php/political-updates               
     
    This one is not Homeschool related but a guy lost his farm over this one
       
    Unknown to virtually all Albertans, Under the quietly created

    (Alberta Emergency Management Act),  Google this one


    Im concerned about what this will all mean 5 years from now!!!!!

     :facepalm:


    Offline Exilenomore

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    Big Trouble For Homeschoolers
    « Reply #1 on: March 22, 2012, 07:50:25 AM »
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  • The real battle is between the true faith and the lies of the prince of this world. When the one and true faith is no longer taught in classrooms, the enemies of the Catholic faith enforce their filthy doctrines in them. That is what is, and always has been, behind the idol of masonic 'freedom' to which modern man dedicates his altars and monuments; it is a lie used to enable the children of the devil to, among other things, turn schools and systems into their indoctrination camps through which they instill their perverse teachings into coming generations.

    Since home schooling provides a way to flee from such satanic indoctrination, the destroyers of the youth seek to eradicate this practice from society.

    They forget Who truly has the last word, however, and all their evil works will be reduced to ashes.


    Offline copticruiser

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    Big Trouble For Homeschoolers
    « Reply #2 on: March 25, 2012, 01:38:39 AM »
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  •  :whistleblower:  couldnt agree with you more.

    Here is another link to what Americans are saying about this whole thing. TTFN  ta ta for now!!


    http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=37381