You answered the first half of your question by your statement in the latter half. I took issue with our member who stated that they talked about pot smoking and "other matters" and related as to why that kind of attitude harms public education in the states. I oppose doing so only on professional grounds that your private behavior should not be brought into the workplace. For a dedicated Christian, it's another reason to homeschool and to view public education with a raised eyebrow...
You used one anecdotal example to lambast "liberal education" and to complain about the lack of "moral education" in public schools. Please make your mind up.
... Personal observation only, but the fact still remains. Oh yeah, and "religious cordinators" are hired to conduct services and to arrange visits for our incarcerated youth with their respective clergyman/woman if they so desire. The pews are rather empty on average, which also plays a role in my observation on the matter. I didn't say "all," that was your fabrication...
If the US situation is anything like the UK, then I suspect, as shown time and time again by the UK census, a considerable majority of people still describe themselves in some form of religious manner. Only a very small percentage of people actually list themselves as 'atheist'. Most people will list themselves as 'CofE' (Anglican) or 'Catholic' or whatever other religion they still have a sense of belonging to. They night go to church once or twice a year at most (weddings and funerals), but it's still there.
...I'm not a conservative at all...
I didn't actually say that you were, but I would suggest that, on the basis of reading your posts here (and elsewhere), you are conservative rather than 'liberal' (meant in the loose, social sense and not the economic one). I certainly wouldn't describe you as politically left of centre.
... and yes, I agree that it's rather ironic that a "pro-life" president is viewed as being such when his own policies have led to the deaths of thousands of Iraqi civilians and American soldiers needlessly...
It's not just the 'pro-life' nonsense and irony, it's all the 'born again' rubbish, it's the 'Presidential prayer team' (have you seen that website? It's nauseating). It's the blocking science when he's too dumb to even understand what he's blocking. And on the basis of what? An unprovable, subjective belief that was not, as far as I am aware, a written part of any electoral manifesto upon which Bush and Cheney stood in 2000. The same sort of thing pissed me off about Blair, BTW – and continues to piss me off with Brown to a degree and other members of the current British government.
... Apples and oranges comparison there. It's one thing to teach a historical event of such a large scale, as opposed to a person of questionable ethics and morals going on and on in class in front of young people who have yet to solidify, to a large extent, what they believe...
You've taken the anecdotal claims of one anonymous poster on an internet forum and extrapolated that into being "liberal education". As I said earlier, I didn't necessarily disagree with your sentiments about those comments. But I'm now intrigued by "a person of questionable ethics and morals". Given the Constitution, who gets to judge this and do you want it part of the interview process for teaching jobs?
Interviewer: 'Well Mr X, and what's your sex life like? Are you a heterosexual, monogamous, married man who never wanks and never watches porn?'
Interviewee: 'I admit to having read
The Story of O when I was much younger ...'
Interviewer: 'That's it! No way we're hiring you!'
Again, your assertion is based on a subjective idea of "ethics and morals". Now this is not actually a debate about saying that 'your ethics and morals and bad and mine are good' etc. But it needs to be clear that those ethics and morals ARE subjective. Just as subjective as someone else's who thinks that there is nothing wrong with sleeping around with fellow consenting adults and smoking the occasional joint.
... Not "neutral" enough, good enough. That is also reflected through
testing data, not to mention the fact that on average, parents who send their children to private schools are
more satisfied with the results. I'm not worried about "heathen" teachers, just bad ones. The phrase "loads of cash" is an overstatement if there ever was one. Crude Marxism aside, the amount of money I pay for their education doesn't equal out what kids blow to maintain a colletion of Nikes or video games.:lol
So it was nothing to do with the "moral education" that you posted about earlier, then, and everything to do with the quality of education?