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February 26, 2012

A Sample Letter Regarding Alberta’s Bill 2 (2012 Education Act)

Filed under: Education,Family,Liberty,Persecution,Politics,sexuality — Tim @ 7:01 am

Note: The following is what I have drafted as a response to the Alberta government’s present Bill, which is in second reading. I publish it here for your consideration. I urge you to read the present Bill, particularly this provision: “All courses or programs of study offered and instructional materials used in a school must reflect the diverse nature and heritage of society in Alberta, promote understanding and respect for others and honour and respect the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Alberta Human Rights Act.” Note that “school” here includes not only public schools, but also private Christian schools and home schools.

Dear Mr MLA,

I have recently reviewed the provisions of Bill 2 (2012 Education Act), and I am gravely concerned regarding this legislation.

It is not only that in general the Bill assumes sweeping powers for the Minister, but more specifically, it requires all curriculum, including that of home educators, to conform to the Alberta Human Rights Act. This latter is something that should be repealed, not used as the basis of further legislation, as it has had seriously negative effects upon the freedom of religion and freedom of speech in this province. In particular, it in essence prohibits Christian home educators (and others who share a basic biblical worldview) from teaching the biblical view that homosexual acts are wrong (“sinful”). This proscription applies, even though Christians teach kindness and love toward sinners; it is the intent of the Alberta Human Rights Act, and therefore Bill 2, to normalize and justify homosexual acts, period.

While in interviews, members of the Minister’s office have suggested that Bill 2′s provision affects only curriculum and not a family’s private views, this is not a satisfactory response.

First, this response presupposes a fundamental difference, and indeed incompatibility, between Christian faith, on the one hand, and “real life,” including education, on the other. This is unacceptable. Jesus Christ, according to the Bible, is Lord or lords (meaning master of all) and King of kings, not a private aid to personal devotion or an assistant to secret beliefs. The Bible ought to be the basis of the moral dimensions of education, not the Alberta Human Rights Act.

Moreover, the response of the Minister’s office presupposes that Bible courses themselves will not be part of the curriculum, or if they are, they must be circumscribed by the anti-biblical rules of the Alberta Human Rights Act. This is an attack upon all religious education in both home education and private Christian schools. Part of the point of private Christian schools and much home education is the ability to provide Bible courses, and Bill 2 is at best a restriction of the basic purpose of such education.

Furthermore, the response of the Minister’s office is unsatisfactory because it of necessity grants the Province tremendous leeway, particularly with home schools, to persecute those who would defend biblical moral teaching. The concept of curriculum is, and ought to be, broader in the context of home education than is available in the government schools. The Bill leaves far too much room for the Minister or bureaucrats to forbid parents from full-orbed biblical instruction.

The Province of Alberta does not own the children who reside within it, and would do well to remember that politicians and bureaucrats are servants of the people, and not the other way around.

In view of this, I am imploring you as an MLA to:

  1. Vote against this Bill as it stands;
  2. Work against the general impulse of putting near-dictatorial powers in the hands of the Education Minister;
  3. Work toward the repeal of the Alberta Human Rights Act, which is in contradiction to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which opens by recognizing “the supremacy of God and the rule of law.”

Thank you in advance for your prompt and diligent response to this matter. Your work is critical for the maintenance and restoration of genuine religious and parental freedom in our province.

Yours,

[Signature]

August 9, 2010

Discrimination and Homosexual Marriage

Filed under: Family,Liberty,sexuality — Tim @ 9:48 pm

There is a great deal of fine reasoning in this essay. The profound difference between children as a “gift” and children as a “right” is also a highly important point.

February 4, 2010

The Real Censorship

Filed under: abortion,Defense of Life — Tim @ 1:24 pm

Television station yanks anti-abortion ad on the ground it is “too graphic.” Watch the ad. It is not graphic at all, even in isolation, never mind in juxtaposition to the sort of fare that regularly fills the TV airwaves.

May 16, 2009

Vote In Poll Regarding Assisted Suicide

Filed under: Defense of Life,euthanasia — Tim @ 9:53 am

The Calgary Herald is polling viewers whether they are in favour of legalizing assisted suicide. Scroll down the page to the poll toward the right side.

April 24, 2009

The Depression You’ve Never Heard About

Filed under: Economics — Tim @ 7:16 am

“Why don’t we try sanity for a change”: Historian and economist Thomas Woods explains why the depression of 1920 is so unknown – government did nothing (other than cut taxes and expenditures) and the markets self-corrected by 1921. In this YouTube video (running time just under 50 minutes) from the Mises Institute, Thomas explains why the Keynesian-influenced bailout and stimulus policies currently promoted make things worse rather than better.

Contrary to popular belief, both Hoover and FDR responded to the 1929 crash by being proactive and introducing stimulus and intervention into the economy. The result that was a depression that lasted well over a decade. Wouldn’t it be better to imitate the policies in place for a depression that ended in months instead?

Take the time to listen to this presentation; it’s well worth it.

April 18, 2009

Hayek: An Infinite Number of Good Things

Filed under: Economics,Justice,Liberty — Tim @ 1:51 pm

We are constantly under a barrage of calls for government intervention on a whole host of fronts that have to do with our safety and even convenience. Here is an excellent point from Hayek:

… there is little question that almost every one of the technical ideals of our experts could be realized within a comparatively short time if to achieve them were made the sole aim of humanity. There is an infinite number of good things, which we all agree are highly desirable as well as possible, but of which we cannot hope to achieve more than a few within our lifetime, or which we can hope to achieve only very imperfectly. It is the frustration of his ambitions in his own field which makes the specialist revolt against the existing order. We all find it difficult to bear to see things left undone which everybody must admit are both desirable and possible. That these things cannot all be done at the same time, that any one of them can be achieved only at the sacrifice of others, can be seen only by taking into account factors which fall outside any specialism, which can be appreciated only by a painful intellectual effort – the more painful as it forces us to see against a wider background the objects to which most of our labors are directed and to balance them against others which lie outside our immediate interest and for which, for that reason, we care less.  (Hayek, The Road to Serfdom: The Definitive Edition, ed by Bruce Caldwell, p. 98)

All of the above is another way of saying that we live in a world of scarcity (on this, read especially Thomas Sowell’s magisterial Basic Economics). As difficult as it is, there will be no utopia in this life, and every effort to create one will end in totalitarianism sooner rather than later.

This is not at all to say that we should not seek to alleviate injustice. But in order to alleviate injustice, we must first identify precisely what we mean by the term, and we must also prioritize, since no human agency (or all human agencies collectively, for that matter) has the power to rid the world of all injustice.

Suffering is an evil that has resulted from the fall of man. God addresses suffering in the ministry of Jesus – a ministry of healing. But that does not mean that all suffering must be addressed by any and every means. The obliteration of suffering is a function of the final inbreaking of heaven and earth. When men attempt to impose that divine act by human means (usually governmental), they of necessity must cripple and destroy all human liberty; and even then they cannot succeed in their stated intentions.

Nowhere is this better seen than with the failed communisms and socialisms of the twentieth century. Despite the obvious fact that the lessons have not been learned, these socialisms, while intending to eradicate poverty, instead virtually universalized it. The State is not God, and when the State plays God, it can only do so as a very failed deity.

March 27, 2009

Love, Sex, and Mammon

Filed under: abortion,Defense of Life,Economics,Family,sexuality — Tim @ 2:30 pm

This editorial at Touchstone is trenchant – dare I say, prophetic.

As a sampling of how this little piece hits home:

Why do Christian parents, contra St. Paul’s clear admonition in 1 Corinthians 7, encourage their young adult children to delay marriage, sometimes for years past the time it would take to discern whether this union would be of the Lord? Why do we smilingly tell them to wait until they can “afford” it? It is because, to our shame, we deem fornication a less awful reality than financial hardship. [Emphasis mine.]

Must reading.

March 19, 2009

More Freedoms Under Siege in Alberta

Filed under: abortion,Defense of Life,Liberty — Tim @ 12:39 pm

This time, it’s the Alberta College of Physicians and Surgeons, attempting to force doctors to make abortion referrals against their own conscience.

March 12, 2009

Punishing the Innocent

Filed under: Education,Family,Justice — Tim @ 9:37 pm

This reflects what is wrong with the modern judiciary in so many ways.

A North Carolina judge has ordered a mother to stop homeschooling and send her children back to public school.

The judge could not even claim that the children were not being educated properly – indeed, he admitted that they had “thrived” under four years of homeschooling. (Outside testing had shown the children were up to two years in advance of their peers.) But they needed the “socialization” of public school, despite being involved in all sorts of out-of-the-home activities in sports and other clubs.

But the kicker: this ruling was part of a divorce proceeding, and came at the behest of the father, who acknowledges the divorce springs from his own adultery. But he doesn’t want the children homeschooled – in part, apparently, because he doesn’t want to pay for it.

This is the society we live in. Implicitly reward the adulterer with authority, rather than punish him. And interfere in the God-given authority of the innocent parent to direct the education of her own children.

Eighty Per Cent

Filed under: abortion,Defense of Life — Tim @ 8:57 pm

The number of Russian women estimated to have had a least one abortion. (Warning note: “delivery” room nudity.)

Interestingly, the female narrator has had four abortions of her own. According to Life Site News, she comments on how shocked she is “how easy it is to give and to take lives.”

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