>That is why there are churches too.

But the students don't go to the same church, they do go to the same school.

> > A teacher can use their room for a group, like the drama club and that
> > doesn't bother you, but if it is a religious club, you just
> > happen to want
> > to study in that room.
>
>What? This is a flawed argument. Religion is highly volatile. You totally
>missed my point in the email.

I don't think I missed your point. You think that groups should be allowed 
to use the school so long as they are not limited to people of a certain 
religion. But then you said "But my point is that I may want to go there to 
study or whatever."

So you are saying that groups who only allow people of a certain religion 
to join don't keep you from studying. But others don't? Also the school 
provides facilities made specifically for students to study, it is mandated 
to be quite, and there are ample research tools to use.

>No big deal. Not a Christian argument anyway, it is a religious one.
>Religion should be kept out of public areas payed for by all of our tax
>dollars from people from all denominations (and no denominations). I do not
>want anyone, anywhere, to be made to feel uncomfortable by people practicing
>there faith in a public area, for whatever reason and whatever faith. It
>seems simple enough to just use a church for this.

Groups use school facilities all the time. The private catholic school 
plays basketball against the public school in school facilities. Is there 
anything wrong with this?

So what you are saying, Religious groups can't use park facilities, 
schools, community centers, or the like if they show up as a group? The 
people pay taxes just like the rest of us, why keep them from using their 
facilities? So for churches that don't have any open lawn want to hold a 
picnic at the local park and they call to reserve a shelter, they should be 
denied? That seems like they are being denied the right to assemble.

I am sick of the idea that people should go out of there way to make you 
comfortable. So what. If you aren't comfortable seeing a Moslem stop and 
pray when the time comes, even if he just happens to be walking down the 
street, then that is your problem, not mine or anybody else's. You seeing 
that makes you that uncomfortable, then get a grip, we are a divers 
society, we should be glad people do that and are not ridiculed. To hide 
things like this takes away from one of the great abilities of this country.

We are different, many cultures, many people, living their lives in peace, 
nobody feeling out of place. If we could open our eyes, and see that just 
because this person pray at dusk, this person prays at dawn, and this 
person doesn't pray, that we are still people, and we can be friends, and 
we can respect each other. Differences of faith or opinion should not keep 
people from being comfortable.

If you are uncomfortable seeing people go about their lives, then stay at 
home and close the blinds. While you have the right to go about your lives, 
the rest of us have the right to go about ours. We should not out of our 
way to hide our differences, we should go out of our way to celebrate them.

I don't care about Pat Robertson or Jerry Falwell, If you have read what I 
said in many other posts, I am not a Christian, I am an agnostic. If you 
would look beyond your general dislike for people with faith, you would see 
that they are people too. If one person would allow one group access, but 
not another, then that is wrong, as matter of fact it is illegal.

If you read the first Amendment to the Constitution it states:
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or 
prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, 
or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to 
petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

This to me says that any law passed that has any thing to do with religion 
is unconstitutional. It also states that people have the right to assemble 
so long as they don't cause any trouble.

You can't deny a group use of public facilities because it might cause a 
problem. This would be like arresting somebody for just saying hello to a 
prostitute. You can't do it. There must first be a crime, then deal with 
it. If you feel a problem might occur, make the group pay for additional 
security. That is what the KKK does when they get on the court house steps 
in cities around the country. They preach hate, they want to cause violence 
and hatred, and they scream it from the most public place of all.
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