Vlunderer,
It's special pleading all the way down with you isn't it.
The only special pleading here is the special pleading you're allowing religious schools that isn't allowed to other ideologies.
An ethos of a school is a foundation for the pupils life.If a business ethos is permissible then not allowing a religious ethos is special pleading.
Oh dear. An ethos is fine – teaching as facts, say, creationism isn't an ethos at all though - it's the wholesale introduction of an
ideology replete with its own "facts".
We directly know that Marxist Leninist experiments failed and all tended to become oppressive. I guess that's why they are not encouraged.
As opposed to the well-known success stories that is theocracies?
Either way, that isn't the reason at all. No-one says, "you can't teach Marxist-Leninism because that's been tried and failed". What they do say though is that you cannot just teach ideologies in place of the facts and methods of the national curriculum - unless that is that ideology happens to be a religious one
Christianity is compariible with business in that while there have been excesses through both, business and Christianity need not tend that way.
Utter bullsihit - religion entails faith and dogma, and so it's much more akin to political ideologies. "Business" on the other hand concerns real world practices and processes.
I don't suppose there is any objection toward a secular humanist ethos. Therefore to prevent a religious ethos is special pleading.
As ever, you confuse the absence of something with the presence of something. What exactly do you think a "secular humanist" approach would entail that's in any way comparable with a religious one?
Good grief!