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Nope, you should have a religious debate team. This is my view on atheists. They find one point that about God's existence that their religious friend can't disprove, and then they high five each other, and sit back and live life. They should READ SOME HOLY WRITINGS, and talk to no atheists rather than sitting in a ditch of their own self.
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Nope, you should have a religious debate team. This is my view on atheists. They find one point that about God's existence that their religious friend can't disprove, and then they high five each other, and sit back and live life. They should READ SOME HOLY WRITINGS, and talk to no atheists rather than sitting in a ditch of their own self.
That is the same as asking should there be a Persian club at school, which isolates themselves form every other country and tries to make their country sound more interesting. I'm persian, I think that our culture is great, but I wouldn't live in a pool of it.
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Why not ? It may improve linear thinking....I would guess you would not start the meeting with a prayer right ?
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yes ofcourse, we should ask the question; should schools be allowed to have religious clubs.
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yes ofcourse, we should ask the question; should schools be allowed to have religious clubs.
"Dont pray in my school, and I wont think in your church"
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High School should be one big secularist club where intelligent people got on with learning and building their social skills...
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High School should be one big secularist club where intelligent people got on with learning and building their social skills...
and if there are such things as thiests who have a club -
well - why not have an anti-thiest club too...
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Sure, why not? The school I teach at has a Christian Fellowship. Clubs are extra-curricular activities. As long as they meet the guideline for clubs and have a staff member willing to supervise, I don't see it as a problem.
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I personally think that an Atheist Club is unneeded, although I do feel that High Schools should educate their students about religion or the lack there of in a class. The main force behind me saying that it is unneeded is the fact that the school should be unbiased on their faith. While this is literally impossible I do feel like in the "Ideal" high school there would be an unbiased agenda that is solely focused on teaching.
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I think you should be able to do whatever you want, as long as you aren't hurting anyone...I would just ask the atheist community, not to complain, when the Christians start their clubs as well...
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I think students should be able to form whatever group they want to form - and as long as there aren't exclusions which are inconsistent, sounds fine to me.
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I personally think that high school should have a complete comparative religion class. It should go over the superstitions, requirements, taboos, and history of each, without giving a preferential slant to any of them. The heart of a democratic society is to provide as much information in the decision making process as possible, and hobbling learning to believe in one religion or another (including no religion) goes against that principle.
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No. Anyone who is absolutely sure there is no God is doing so as a matter of faith. Now a critical thinking club if done creatively, in a fun way, with no agenda, would be a great idea.
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They should be allowed to if there are students that want one, the same as people are allowed to form religious clubs.
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Definitely not. I think a public high school should be an inherently atheist organization, but it has no more business encouraging the challenge of religion than it does in encouraging religion itself.
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