Hello there!

I hope that you independent Anarchists out there get a few nods or even a satisfied chuckle at what I write. And, to you liberals, I hope you get pissed and send me a bunch of hate-mail:
-VladimirMilea@yahoo.com

Friday, March 26, 2010

Throwing away "god"?

Is it me, or is society contradicting itself lately? I have been reading a book called The Harsh Truth About Public Schools in the past few months. It seems as if the new ideal for a non-religious society is beginning to contradict the fact that Paganism is being introduced in schools. Atheist zealots out there are freaking out about religion, saying that it must be taken out of school for the well being of the children. While I agree that some religions have to be toned down a bit in schools, I really can't say that I want them to be taken out. I'll cover that in a moment.

Anyway, this is a highly discussed ideal for schools. So, it comes as a shock to me that there are some schools where:

-Children are taught to ask Mother Earth to take Her plants away when they want to pick flowers.
-Children have a segment in social studies where they have to create a Muslim name, outfit, and prayer to Allah.
-A discreet version of Luciferianism is the basis for the public schooling system.

This seems a bit contradictory, am I right? Liberals are freaking out, saying that religion must be pulled out, yet most of them are the ones teaching new-age religions to children. I have no problem with that (because I'm a Pagan), but I feel that if you are going to eliminate one religion, you must eliminate them all. I'm tired of teachers able to discuss, in detail, the exploits of Gods and Goddesses of mythic lore, yet they cannot say a word about the Judao-Christian God. Though I'm not a Christian, everyone has equal rights when it comes to this kind of thing. Apparently schools don't think so. This fits in perfectly with the contradictory Atheistic agenda; pick and choose what is and is not acceptable.
"Well, let's teach on Allah, but Jehovah is gone."

Religion explains the world, and keeps it full of hope and color in times of need. Whether its stories are true or false, they provide hope for a lost generation and a path for those who cannot find their way. It's fine not to believe in a God, but outright denying the possibility is just as close-minded as the Atheists whine that the religious folk are.

2 comments:

  1. how is Luciferianism the basis for the public schooling system ???

    ReplyDelete
  2. There is a public school somewhere in the west where an obscure branch of luciferianism is the basis for morals taught in health classes.

    ReplyDelete