Better idea: Scheduled "breaks" whenever works best for the schools (winter break, spring break, summer break, etc.), and then 10 or so "flex days" to be taken as needed. Need to be home on Oct. 15th? No problem. Halloween is a part of your religion? Take the 31st off, and November 1st for your sugar hangover. ![]() It'll never happen, though. There are already too many idiots thinking there's a "war on Christmas." |
Name one public or secular private school that was in session on Christmas or Easter one time in the past 100 years. |
I like how you call Muslim nations "the lowest common denominator" while claiming to be proud of religious freedom and diversity, inadvertently showing your own bias. The least you could do is at least google "Muslim countries that have Christmas off" or something. And I say this while agreeing with your larger point. |
Why don't they just do year 'round schooling. (X number of weeks in, X days off, repeat) Breaks happen when they fall on the school calendar, and everyone sucks it up regardless of religion. If your religion deems you need a day off, take your kid out for the day. Equal enough?
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Uh, quite a few. Or are you missing my point. I'm not saying they are holding class on Easter Sunday or on Christmas Day, what I'm saying is that secular and public schools plan their spring break when they feel like it - it has nothing to do with Easter week, which is a holy week preceeding Easter. Catholic schools always give that week off because it is Holy Week. The publics and privates do not give that week off or if they do it is coincidental and hasn't happened to us in a long time. They give off whatever week works best for them and for their staff and teachers. So every year we have to get out the school calendars and schedule three different kids with three different breaks so we can't do anything as a family because the publics and secular privates don't give a damn about Easter. |
Yeah, I had that same reaction to the confused poster. |
Do you support tolerance of Christians living in Muslim countries? |
No, this is not a Christian nation. Although you wouldn't know this from Maryland law, which requires schools to be closed on Good Friday and Easter Monday. http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2000-01-19/news/0001190202_1_religion-easter-supreme-court |
+1 so much for "all men are created equal". |
Start your own thread. That is totally off topic |
Christian here. I would 100% support this. |
Yes, it is. Trying to pretend otherwise is disengenous and makes you look patently ignorant. Which one are you being now? |
You're a literal person, aren't you? "Christian nation" refers to the fact that the overwhelming percentage of the population identifies in the Christian faith -- 3/4 of the country. The fact that our public institutions observe Christian holidays is pragmatic (can't be very productive if only a quarter of workers or students show up, can you?) and amounts to us being a de factor Christian nation. Surely you can grasp this? I know folks at the Cato Institute -- give them a call and they'll tell you the same thing. |
PP, evidently you think that the US is a Christian country because the majority of people who live in the US are Christian? But that is not what makes a country Christian (or not Christian). |
Not being smug. Explaining fact. Yes, Christian faith is dominant in this country. It's just the way it is. At least in this country, however, no one will object if you practice a different faith (whereas in some countries they will execute you for that). But demanding that public institutions close out of respect for a faith followed by a tiny minority of people is impractical. |