pawiz wrote:Was your banning reasonable?Seth wrote:
Of course it is. So is Ratskep. Why?


pawiz wrote:Was your banning reasonable?Seth wrote:
Of course it is. So is Ratskep. Why?
Not only that, these Private schools receive a bucket load of public funding.Robert_S wrote:If they want to have a small minded little club, that's fine. However; when they want the public to recognise their graduates as being somehow qualified, it becomes a different matter.
Welcome to libertarianism...Animavore wrote:But what's to stop states deciding they want to teach something like creationism instead of evolution or teach homeopathy as a valid science or teach lies for history and thus becoming a laughing stock churning out children unfit to work in any type of industry?Seth wrote:Education, and educational curricula are best left to the states, and to the local communities, where community standards will serve to prevent monolithic propagandistic indoctrination by the central government. Diversity of thought and teaching is necessary to prevent indoctrination on a wide scale. That's why states are best suited to regulate education. Yes, standards may vary somewhat from place to place, but that's far better than organized indoctrination, which is very, very dangerous to liberty and free thought.
Because exclusion of the former is generally illegal (although it appears it isn't in NSW) but exclusion of the latter isn't.Svartalf wrote:Not so much "okay" as "their school, their rool", they have no obligations to take any students that does not fit their criteria, even if said criteria are lousy and silly...pawiz wrote:Why does "private" make discrimination okay?Seth wrote:Er, they do have the same rights. What part of "private school" is unclear to you?affirmedatheist wrote:A friend posted this link on FB, and I'm appalled there's still such a law in force.
Naturally Jimmy Wallace says his bit about how church schools should be protected from teh 3bil gays*.Appalling' law lets schools expel gay students
David Marr
February 12, 2011
A SENIOR Anglican bishop calls it "appalling" and a gay and lesbian rights group condemns it as "deeply offensive", but the Attorney-General, John Hatzistergos, backs a NSW law that allows private schools to expel gay students simply for being gay.
Through a spokesman, Mr Hatzistergos, described the 30-year-old law as necessary "to maintain a sometimes delicate balance between protecting individuals from unlawful discrimination while allowing people to practise their own beliefs".
A relic of the Wran era when homosexuality was still a crime, the law exempts private schools from any obligation to enrol or deal fairly with students who are homosexual. An expulsion requires neither disruption, harassment nor even the flaunting of sexuality. Being homosexual is enough.
Full article: http://www.smh.com.au/national/educatio ... 1aqk2.html
Appalling that such a law is still on the books here in NSW in 2011, though sadly not surprising. And that the Attorney-General is actually DEFENDING this law!!!
*I personally think nothing of the sort, I have a friend who is homosexual and he's a good bloke. They should have the same rights as everyone else.
I've tweeted it on twitter (my name on there is the same as on here), feel free to retweet to get this out.
After all, nobody says a thing if students get rejected or expelled from institutions for insufficient academic results, and teh ghey can not help themselves any better than the moronic or the darn lazy... so if the latter can be excluded, why not the former?
Absolutely. Seth's version of libertarianism asserts that 'harm' can only be inflicted via physical force. That's clearly nonsense.Cunt wrote:Make no mistake, Seth. It IS force.Seth wrote:Given enough popular support, shunning can be quite effective in changing social behavior without the imposition of force or fraud.
That's the proper Libertarian exercise of morals and ethics, not force.
Fail. That's obviously not due to their creationist belief. It's due to their training in science.Seth wrote:Sez who? Do you have any idea how many medical researchers hold strong religious opinions and yet manage to still do science?Animavore wrote:It would be protected but what can they do with their "creationism"? Nothing. They're not going to invent new things or develop new life saving treatments.Seth wrote:They do. As I said, the state sets the basic core curricula for all schools. And any "creationist" teaching outside the core curriculum is an expression of religion, and therefore protected. That you don't like "bible-bashers" is beside the point. They have a right to bash bibles, and to teach their kids to bash bibles, and that creationism is true and evolution isn't.Animavore wrote: America already has a ridiculously high amount of creationists and you don't care if they become stronger if all schools become privatised and kids are given vouchers to pay tuition to private schools that may have previously been closed to them meaning, potentially, more kids are being churned out totally brain-washed into creationist thinking, more of them end up in government and, Bibe-bashers being naturally pushy, end up enacting all types of laws which are not suited to much of the general populace and the whole country goes down the pan.
No matter what way you look at it a country needs to have a core curriculum and schools have obligations to teach things, at least in subjects where applicable, based on evidence and fact.
Right. Let people fund and control their own military.Right. Let people fund and control their own schools, not the federal government.But fine, I guess the best that one could hope for is that they see everyone else progressing while they're still praying to their imaginary friend and decide to join in.
Funnily enough your way might actually work in this country because the creationists are so few and scattered they would not be able to pool the resources to create private schools.
I wouldn't see much hope for some of the Southern States in America if schools went private, though.
rEvolutionist wrote:Not only that, these Private schools receive a bucket load of public funding.Robert_S wrote:If they want to have a small minded little club, that's fine. However; when they want the public to recognise their graduates as being somehow qualified, it becomes a different matter.
Right. That's what I was saying. Religious belief does not preclude someone getting a scientific education or being productive in science or any other field.rEvolutionist wrote:Fail. That's obviously not due to their creationist belief. It's due to their training in science.Seth wrote:Sez who? Do you have any idea how many medical researchers hold strong religious opinions and yet manage to still do science?Animavore wrote:It would be protected but what can they do with their "creationism"? Nothing. They're not going to invent new things or develop new life saving treatments.Seth wrote:They do. As I said, the state sets the basic core curricula for all schools. And any "creationist" teaching outside the core curriculum is an expression of religion, and therefore protected. That you don't like "bible-bashers" is beside the point. They have a right to bash bibles, and to teach their kids to bash bibles, and that creationism is true and evolution isn't.Animavore wrote: America already has a ridiculously high amount of creationists and you don't care if they become stronger if all schools become privatised and kids are given vouchers to pay tuition to private schools that may have previously been closed to them meaning, potentially, more kids are being churned out totally brain-washed into creationist thinking, more of them end up in government and, Bibe-bashers being naturally pushy, end up enacting all types of laws which are not suited to much of the general populace and the whole country goes down the pan.
No matter what way you look at it a country needs to have a core curriculum and schools have obligations to teach things, at least in subjects where applicable, based on evidence and fact.
Right. Let people fund and control their own schools, not the federal government.But fine, I guess the best that one could hope for is that they see everyone else progressing while they're still praying to their imaginary friend and decide to join in.
Funnily enough your way might actually work in this country because the creationists are so few and scattered they would not be able to pool the resources to create private schools.
I wouldn't see much hope for some of the Southern States in America if schools went private, though.
Er, they do. Who do you think pays for the military and elects those who control it?Right. Let people fund and control their own military.
Force and fraud. How is not associating with someone an exercise in either force or fraud. For "shunning" to be using force against someone would require some sort of premise that claims that the individual being shunned has some prevailing right to associate with others against their will in voluntarily social or economic transactions. Is that what you're suggesting?rEvolutionist wrote:Absolutely. Seth's version of libertarianism asserts that 'harm' can only be inflicted via physical force. That's clearly nonsense.Cunt wrote:Make no mistake, Seth. It IS force.Seth wrote:Given enough popular support, shunning can be quite effective in changing social behavior without the imposition of force or fraud.
That's the proper Libertarian exercise of morals and ethics, not force.
One of them.rEvolutionist wrote:Seth wrote:No, pawiz, that would be inflicting physical harm on another person. Excluding them is not the same thing as that. Now go to bed.pawiz wrote:If it is private, can they rape babies?So "physical harm" is the standard for what's legal and what's illegal is it? Fuck me, do actually read what you write sometimes?
Fallacy. Your premise "any normal standards" is simply an affirmation of the consequent. You fail to define what "normal standards" are, or why "any" of them would preclude discrimination, when in fact many "standards" permit such discrimination to one degree or another for perfectly valid reasons.rEvolutionist wrote:
The difference here is that the reason IS known, and by any normal standards it is illegal to discriminate based on sexual preference.
Of course not, don't be stupider than you must be.rEvolutionist wrote:Oh here we go.Seth wrote:Er, they do have the same rights. What part of "private school" is unclear to you?affirmedatheist wrote:A friend posted this link on FB, and I'm appalled there's still such a law in force.
Naturally Jimmy Wallace says his bit about how church schools should be protected from teh 3bil gays*.Appalling' law lets schools expel gay students
David Marr
February 12, 2011
A SENIOR Anglican bishop calls it "appalling" and a gay and lesbian rights group condemns it as "deeply offensive", but the Attorney-General, John Hatzistergos, backs a NSW law that allows private schools to expel gay students simply for being gay.
Through a spokesman, Mr Hatzistergos, described the 30-year-old law as necessary "to maintain a sometimes delicate balance between protecting individuals from unlawful discrimination while allowing people to practise their own beliefs".
A relic of the Wran era when homosexuality was still a crime, the law exempts private schools from any obligation to enrol or deal fairly with students who are homosexual. An expulsion requires neither disruption, harassment nor even the flaunting of sexuality. Being homosexual is enough.
Full article: http://www.smh.com.au/national/educatio ... 1aqk2.html
Appalling that such a law is still on the books here in NSW in 2011, though sadly not surprising. And that the Attorney-General is actually DEFENDING this law!!!
*I personally think nothing of the sort, I have a friend who is homosexual and he's a good bloke. They should have the same rights as everyone else.
I've tweeted it on twitter (my name on there is the same as on here), feel free to retweet to get this out.![]()
Human rights need to be upheld EVEN on private premises. Should the school be allowed to kill their students too?
No. Shunning is force.Seth wrote:Er, not using force is force? Is that like not engaging in commerce is commerce?Cunt wrote:Make no mistake, Seth. It IS force.Seth wrote:Given enough popular support, shunning can be quite effective in changing social behavior without the imposition of force or fraud.
That's the proper Libertarian exercise of morals and ethics, not force.
How so?Cunt wrote:No. Shunning is force.Seth wrote:Er, not using force is force? Is that like not engaging in commerce is commerce?Cunt wrote:Make no mistake, Seth. It IS force.Seth wrote:Given enough popular support, shunning can be quite effective in changing social behavior without the imposition of force or fraud.
That's the proper Libertarian exercise of morals and ethics, not force.
What about it? Is turning your back on someone and refusing to associate with them using force against them? I don't see how. Does it have social effects? Of course it does. It's intended to do so. But the effects are generated entirely by the desire of the shunned person for social interaction. The purpose of shunning is to encourage acceptable social behavior by refusing to validate unacceptable social behavior by granting the GIFT of association to those who refuse to respect the rights and needs of others.When it is 'moral' it looks good enough, but what about when this 'popular shunning' ostracizes blacks, or gays, or people with intellectual disabilities?
It is force, and possibly one of the most effective kinds. It may well be 'democratic' force, it may even be favourable to state-organized force, but it is certainly force.
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