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  • THURSDAY JANUARY 11 2007 11:00 PM

Not in Our Schools

It’s been a while since I’ve been in school, but here’s what I remember of it: school pretty much sucks. Most of the time there’s some teacher all bah-blah-blabity blah about calculus or some shit, and when they do break with the program, it’s for something else just as boring. If I had the chance to watch a critically acclaimed documentary film or practice some semi-trendy deep breathing exercise, I would have been three shades of psyched.

But, judging from two news stories this week, some spoil-sport Christian parent would have ruined it for everybody.

A school board in Washington has put the kibosh on students watching Al Gore’s global warming documentary An Inconvenient Truth because of a complaint from a God fearing parent. Apparently, father of seven Frosty Hardison has little tolerance for deviating from standard school curriculum or a literal interpretation of the Book of Revelations, even though one would think that being named for a beloved cartoon snowman would have made him loosen up years ago.

"Condoms don't belong in school, and neither does Al Gore. He's not a schoolteacher," said Frosty Hardison, a parent of seven who also said that he believes the Earth is 14,000 years old. "The information that's being presented is a very cockeyed view of what the truth is ... The Bible says that in the end times everything will burn up, but that perspective isn't in the DVD."


After Hardison sent an email complaint to the school board, the board decided that the film could only be shown if a teacher has permission from their principal and superintendent, and if a "credible, legitimate opposing view” is also presented. Which means, in theory, a school could screen the Kirk Cameron-starring Christian end times film series Left Behind to balance out the lack of rapture-informed content in Mr. Gore’s PowerPoint presentation.

Meanwhile a couple of days ago, a Canadian school anti-obesity program was knocked for an alleged anti-Christian bias. The program included yoga, which Christian parents in Quesnel, British Columbia feel is a religion. One parent objected to how a yoga pose required her child to put their hands together in a prayer-like gesture. Another parent was quoted speaking against yoga in language strikingly similar to that of Robert Mitchum’s evil preacher character in The Night of the Hunter.

"There's God and there's the devil, and the devil's not a gentleman. If you give him any kind of an opening, he will take that."


Thankfully, the school is continuing to teach yoga. Those Canadians really are more sensible. Actually, scratch that. Lately even Christians are more sensible. There’s a growing Christian environmental movement and a series of video tapes about Christian Yoga.

Can’t the cool Christians get together with all the stick-in-the-mud Christians for a three day seminar on how to chill-the-fuck-out?

 

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Comments
Zarth

zarth

Seattle, WA
December 2004

JAN 12, 2007 01:11 PM

MrCrisp said:
anyways, aside from the snide "spoken from experience" part, the rest was not addressed to you specifically.


That comment made no sense, anyway. When has he ever given the impression that he could learn from experience?

MrCrisp

MrCrisp

I'm lost
August 2004

JAN 12, 2007 01:32 PM

Zarth said:

MrCrisp said:
anyways, aside from the snide "spoken from experience" part, the rest was not addressed to you specifically.


That comment made no sense, anyway. When has he ever given the impression that he could learn from experience?


tongue

what's even more ironic is that he failed to think and understand what he was responding to before he hit reply, the exact thing i was mocking him for.

Zarth

zarth

Seattle, WA
December 2004

JAN 12, 2007 01:35 PM

Wait. So your irony was . . . ironic? I think I've been pwned, somehow.

We're all going to sucked into some cosmosarcastic vortex now, aren't we?

Ascanius

Ascanius

USA
October 2006

JAN 12, 2007 02:01 PM

Zarth said:
Wait. So your irony was . . . ironic? I think I've been pwned, somehow.

We're all going to sucked into some cosmosarcastic vortex now, aren't we?



Don't worry. I'll point out that you said "all going to sucked." The snarkiness will counterbalance the sarcasm, and all will be well.

Zarth

zarth

Seattle, WA
December 2004

JAN 12, 2007 02:07 PM

I'm grateful for the fact that you've saved the Earth, but you realize, of course, that this means war.

Ascanius

Ascanius

USA
October 2006

JAN 12, 2007 02:12 PM

*begins digging a moat around profile*

RileyStClair

RileyStClair

Los Angeles, CA
September 2006

JAN 12, 2007 02:16 PM

i still can't get past the fact that this guy calls himself "Frosty."
i couldn't take him seriously if i tried.

Roaring_Tulips

roaring_tulips

Jacksonville, FL
April 2006

JAN 12, 2007 02:23 PM

yourfashionwar said:
i still can't get past the fact that this guy calls himself "Frosty."
i couldn't take him seriously if i tried.



$10 he melts by late February.

Dru_Id

Dru_Id

Florence, SC
October 2006

JAN 12, 2007 02:45 PM

JESUS CHRIST (pronounced HEY-ZUES CH-RIST)

I can't help but think of a non sequiter comic from a few years ago god is on a late night talk show

"I think my greatist creation is the sence of humor. The Irony being that the more you beleave in me the less likely you are to have one."

it dosen't realy fit the story but it seemed apropriate

Chainlink

Chainlink

Key West, FL
August 2005

JAN 12, 2007 03:14 PM

Zarth said:
I'm grateful for the fact that you've saved the Earth, but you realize, of course, that this means war.



It's YOUR fault the Dooms Day clock is being advanced !

Warmonger !

theconservative

theconservative

Spring, TX
October 2004

JAN 12, 2007 03:42 PM

judgmental today are we? ok ok i plead guilty, i misread the statement...but if you're saying the more radical christians have permeated the government...blah, blah, blah, then are they the radical ones? i would figure the regular old christians would be the ones that would (i love that word) permeate.

theconservative

theconservative

Spring, TX
October 2004

JAN 12, 2007 03:43 PM

zarth scares me

MschfMayhemSoap

MschfMayhemSoap

Phoenix, AZ
April 2006

JAN 12, 2007 03:49 PM

theconservative said:
zarth scares me



its the stare, isnt it... tongue

MrCrisp

MrCrisp

I'm lost
August 2004

JAN 12, 2007 03:50 PM

they don't call it the radical religious right for nothing.

NickFaust

NickFaust

USA
April 2004

JAN 12, 2007 03:53 PM

roaring_tulips said:

Ascanius said:
I have to say, I concur with the Christians on the whole Yoga thing, but for a very different reason. Yoga is not just a fitness regime. It is, and I quote dictionary.com "a school of Hindu philosophy advocating and prescribing a course of physical and mental disciplines for attaining liberation from the material world and union of the self with the Supreme Being or ultimate principle."

My problem is not with children being exposed to religions and cultures that are not their own, but the idea of "Christian Yoga" seems to me to do a great disservice to yoga's Hindu origins. Yoga is a path towards Brahma-hood. It is a sacred practice. It is not, or should not be, a substitute for dodgeball. This is my problem with the whole Western yoga movement, though. If you're looking for enlightenment in a Hindu context then yoga away, but if you want a good stretch then I guess 'pilates' is the way to go.



I gotta agree with you on that. I used to do yoga everyday, but more to give me that time everyday to be spiritually aware. It DID help me lose a few pounds and give me more energy during the day, but that's just icing on the cake. I don't do it now, because I keep getting interrupted by my children and that defeats the purpose.



So what is wrong with being spritually aware and physically fit?

On another note, it makes me a little crazy when Christians act like they can't learn anything from other religions.

It also makes me crazy when Christians don't know the history of their own religion - which is repleat with examples of people using meditative techniques, some of which are quite comparable to Yoga.

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