Writer misses his points
Niko Theris
I would like to comment on three statements made in Dale Fincher’s
letter, “Everyone should have open minds,” Coastline Pilot, Oct. 22.
First, Fincher states, “it was Ted Bundy who claimed that he
murdered 40 women because he couldn’t justify the value of human life
based on his secular education.” Does Fincher imply that grade-school
students who are receiving a secular education are potential mass
murderers? That the value of human life is beyond the comprehension
of those who are secular? Bundy may speak for himself, but he does
not speak for all who have a secular education, just as those
God-fearing parents who murder their children and then claim that God
told them to do so, do not speak for those who have a sectarian
education.
Second, Fincher states, “But the [public] school has already
become an arena to recruit children in the ideas of an atheistic
secularism in their classroom.” Not teaching about God in public
school does not mean it recruits for atheism. Nonsense. Public
schools are secular; teaching about God is not in their curriculum.
If parents want their children to learn about God, there are private
schools, church schools and Sunday schools that are sectarian and do
teach about God. So, what’s the problem? Perhaps Fincher wants all
schools to be sectarian. To really nail atheistic secularism as
undesirable, Fincher should list for the readers all the pogroms,
crusades, inquisitions, witch-hunts and wars that were started in the
name of atheistic secularism ... (Readers: Don’t hold your breaths.)
Third, Fincher states, “Many parents send their kids (young
goats?) to Good News Clubs because it is one of the few places left
in our society where children (that’s better) can actually receive
moral teachings “ Perhaps some Laguna Beach school teachers and
administrators would like to comment on the implication that our
public schools are devoid of moral teachings.
* NIKO THERIS is a Laguna Beach resident.
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