jay_a2j wrote:Guiscard wrote:
It isn't forcing anyone to do anything.
It is presenting it as an acceptable lifestyle option. Now, where that may be ok for your kids, some parents have religious convictions and it is not ok for their kids. Thus should not be shown in a public school.
Tolerance: the virtue of a man without convictions.
That's complete humbug!
Unless of course you're arguing that children ought to grow up believing precisely what their parents tell them, without being given the possibility of questioning it.
Your parents are christian; how does this make it wrong for people to show you the possibility of living in a different fashion. The lifestyle presented is not illegal, and it's a perfectly natural and acceptable lifestyle choice, open to any citizen to adopt. Just because parents of a child have rejected that lifestyle does not mean that it cannot be presented as a possibility to a child.
If the school was trying to educate children that homosexuality was the 'only' way to live, that'd be different. But that's not happening here, we'll chat about that another time...
The problem is that you're being hideously reactionary about this. If the children believe in anti-homosexual chrisitan codes, then they'll reject Brokeback. If however they have open minds then they'll simply digest it as an example of how some people choose to live. Just because you don't believe in something doesn't mean it's not ok to show your child that is a legal and valid lifestyle option (obviously showing them heroin abuse as an acceptable option wouldn't be right).
If for example a child's parents didn't believe in drinking or smoking as acceptable lifestyle choices, would all material involving characters drinking or smoking suddenly be unacceptable classroom fodder? What if one parent was an anti-semite, are you going to ban Jews next? Let's go crazy, say a parent is a vegetarian; if we accept your viewpoint then we'd better get to banning any material portraying meat product consumption as an acceptable lifestyle choices.
The distinction you're missing is this: It's ok to show children as acceptable things that their parents disagree with (so long as those things are legal, and not anti-social). It's not ok to try to brainwash them into accepting those things as the only way to go about things.
I appreciate you're a Christian, and you take your beliefs very seriously. But you've got to understand that if your system of faith isn't hideously outdated, reactionary, and obsolete; then it will be able to keep its believers regardless of what they see in the media. Quit trying to ban everything that you don't agree with, it just makes you seem hideously uncertain about the validity of your own code of morals.