BA,
I was a teacher,...
A depressing thought...
...and very few schools obey the law on the mandatory religious observance. Any parent can remove their child from any religious participation.
Yes they can remove their children, with all the awkwardness, embarrassment and hassle that entails. The point though was that the
norm is for religion to have its privileged position in education in the first place.
Faith schools are only there because there is a demand: this is a democracy. If you don't like the situation, vote for someone of like mind.
Really? How many send their children there because of their religious teaching, and how many because they happen to get better exam results do you think? And while we're at it, what kind of social damage do you think it causes to have children set aside in special institutions where they're taught that their faith beliefs "facts" are correct and the faith beliefs "facts" of others are wrong?
Would you be as relaxed at the idea of children being taught in, say, Marxist-Leninist schools?
Why not?
Religion doesn't enjoy more air-time than any other part of society;
Seriously?
Seriously seriously?
Can I suggest that you buy a copy of the Radio Times and maybe have a bit of a think about that?
...not forgetting the large number of theists who have a right to be heard.
Ah yes, "Songs of Atheism" on a Sunday afternoon; "Rationalist Thought for the Day" on the Today Programme; secular humanists routinely broadcast every time the House of Commons is to debate abortion or capital punishment.
I've already pointed out the fallacious importance you put on the Bishops in the Lords.
Wrongly so - if they don't have influence, what's the point of them being there, and besides the issue was that fact that the religious - and only the religious - get to have seats in the HoL
by right.
Why?
And as to wealth: much of the money the Church has is used for the good of the community, whether theist or atheist; and in any case most of this wealth is in the form of land-ownership; and they have to pay bills and salaries: they are large employers.
Some of it goes to good causes certainly (though how much of that benefits "the community" rather than to those who happen to use church facilities is moot), but much of it just goes to upkeep and some is downright squandered (Bishops with chauffeurs for example. Really?). C of E bodies also enjoy substantial and largely unsupervised tax breaks from their charitable status.
As to the position of the Archbishop, that is merely a nominal status - a pure red herring on your part.
No, it's just an example of the privileged status I was talking about and that you denied happens. "Nominal" or not, it's still
there.
As far as my comment on belief, I have made my point; if I seem to have shifted ground, that is because I have simply clarified myself.
Flatly untrue. Your opening gambit was to suggest that the beliefs could not be a "hoax"
because people died for them. Now you're saying instead only that people who die for their beliefs must think that they are true - a very different thing.
If you're not honest enough to face up to it that's up to you, but at least now presumably you won't be returning to your first argument will you.
Will you?
If you are looking for real privilege then look at the corporate tax cheats who are allowed to get away with it: those whose wealth enables them to gain advantage over others : bankers who raid the county's wealth: the supermarkets who defraud the populace daily, etc, etc. Get real, and save your accusations for those who really deserve it.
You're confusing acts of illegality or immorality with state-sanctioned privilege, which are very different things.
As to the Remembrance Day; well that should be re-thought; but it is about remembering, and that can be done by anyone anywhere. If you have to be at the Cenotaph to express your remembrance, it begins to look like massaging ego. Anyone can go there and show their remembrance at any time.
Yes they can, but that wasn't the point: it was just another example of the entitlement the religious have that's denied to others.