PLAYER57832 wrote:Because, the truth is that every kid DOES owe the country a debt, because the country has, to a point, supported every child in the United States. Some more than others, but always some.
If you really beleive they owe some sort of debt, they will pay that, through taxes that they pay during the lifetime, in fact guess what, our kids, and grandkids are getting to pay OUR debt too.
The bigger question is, what debt does every kid owe us, that is deserving of forced labor. Or, better yet, what debt the retired seniors, whom this bill also might effect, owe society that they have not yet paid.
Prisoners who are paying "a debt to society" really do owe it. They are not contributing via taxes, they are not contributing to nation industrial production, they DO owe something. This is much different that using some line of reasoning that every youth in this country, owes society for being some sort of burden, because we have instituted public education. They are miles, or better yet light years, apart.
GT,
It has nothing to do with the validity of the projects, it is the idea that the governement is overstepping its constitutional limits. That is no little thing, it is a big thing, and well worth getting riled up. To be fair, I was just as fired up with the Patriot Act (I wasn't on CC of course, when it passed), I am an equal opportunity constitutional supporter.

. I could care less about uniforms, I would even be supportive of all public schools requiring uniforms. The difference comes when the government institutes required labor by minors, with the inability of their legal guardians to opt out of it.
If there was major reform of the way education was handled, and service was required for admintance into some form of publicly funded school that offered specialized skills training (for example). I would be fine with that. If the government wants to offer kids the option to be included in special programs as a reward for their time, i wouldn't be happy about it, but I wouldn't really have much of a legal basis to be against it unless I could show it was discriminatory. But when you take the CHOICE away from parents, the government has crossed the line.
In fact, I went to a private school so I could finish my high school education. Part of going there, was mandatory community service for me, and my parents were required to help out at the school for X number of service hours. The difference is though, that was a choice my parents and I made. We could have opted to me to not attend that school if for some reason we did not agree with the premise of the service. If you require a public school to do that, the parents and child have no choice, that is where the government is over stepping its bounds.