Friday, April 20, 2007

Texas panel rejects required Bible class

Link.

AUSTIN, Texas - A plan to require public schools to teach classes with the Bible as a textbook was changed by a Texas legislative panel to make such classes optional instead.

The House Public Education Committee approved the modified bill Thursday, drawing praise from critics who feared mandatory Bible courses would be more religious than academic.

"I think the committee got the message that families and churches don't want the government to tell our children what to believe about the Bible," said Kathy Miller, president of the Texas Freedom Network.

The original bill by Republican state Rep. Warren Chisum would have required schools to offer Bible courses as an elective. He argued the Bible would be used for its historical value.

About two dozen Texas high schools already offer Bible courses as electives. Supporters said the legislation would make schools more confident about offering them.

1 comment:

Zach Nereim said...

fucking historical value? Maybe as a god damn ficition book, but I don't think thats what they mean. I find it very telling all they care about is the christian familes and why they don't want it to be taught. No they fucking can't listening to any fucking atheists or non christian people that would be fucking insane.