The view being that women and men should be treated equally.
And the use of the term indoctrination is pejorative in this case. Would you consider 'indoctrination' to be the correct term in the context of children being taught that boys and girls (and men and women) should be treated equally.
So simply by using the term you (or is it this person Robertson) is demonstrating a fundamental bias.
Davey - I have to ask - are you even a professor, given your tendency to dodge the point and your tenuous grasp of reading posts, not to mention how you quick you are to make erroneous assumptions.
Are we really going to argue the Robertson issue on this thread now? We have established that Robertson was not asking for the government to teach primary school children in classrooms that LGBT are inferior.
What he did say, when asked for comments in an interview, was that he did not think primary school children needed to be taught about LGBT - a view I disagree with but I do support his right to air his concerns about what they were going to be taught in classrooms - facts or beliefs.
By challenging Robertson's use of the word "indoctrination", are you saying that it is not possible for LGBT pressure groups to indoctrinate primary school children into a particular belief - are you arguing that LGBT groups have a better moral compass than everyone else and therefore will ensure that they are not biased towards a particular belief?
Also, can you please quote where he said he thought it was indoctrination to teach primary school children that everyone is equal.
Teaching about sex is a sensitive subject when it comes to primary school children - different parents have different assessments about when their individual children feel ready to have these discussions. Talking about sex is not the same as talking about boys and girls or men and women in terms of gender. Sex does not have to be mentioned in gender conversations and a child is aware of gender from a very young age, but is not necessarily aware of sexual activity. Robertson also made it clear that schools should act against bullying. That does not mean it takes away a parent's concerns and responsibility to do what is best for their own primary school age child by assessing their own child and finding an appropriate way at the appropriate age for their individual child to talk about sex in a way that is not distressing for their child.
Robertson's point was that the rights of the minority LGBT community do not trump the rights of the majority of straight primary school age children to have their needs met to have a conversation about sex at an age and in a way that is appropriate for each individual child. And he wanted to look at ways to protect children from bullying and mental health issues and drugs, rather than narrow the focus onto LGBT issues at primary school, given the tiny minority of children who are affected by LGBT.
So how is your repeated question to me about whether I would be ok for children to be taught that women are inferior an analogy of the situation? Bit dishonest of you to dodge answering that question.
I note that you did not disagree that an analogy would have been if you asked me if I would support the right of Robertson to air his concerns about children being indoctrinated into a particular view about women. If you had asked me that question on the thread I would have answered it. Your stupid irrelevant question on the thread did not merit an answer.
By the way, you said several people asked me the question - who else asked me apart from Ippy - or was that you being misleading again? You seem to have a need to portray that many people agree with you - why is that - are you under the impression if your opinion is popular it must be right, or are you just insecure?