Weekly Opinion Editorial
THE RELIGION OF THE UNRELIGIOUS!
by Steve Fair
On June 5, Oklahoma became the first state in the country to approve a religious charter school. The 3-2 vote will allow St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual Charter School’s application to receive Oklahoma tax dollars. Immediately after the vote, Dr. Robert Franklin, the board chairman resigned. Franklin said those who voted to approve did so in direct violation of the state constitution.
Governor
Kevin Stitt applauded the approval, calling it a win for religious and
education freedom. Attorney General Gentner
Drummond said the move was unconstitutional and a blow at the heart of
religious liberty. Drummon vowed to challenge
the school board’s decision in court. So
did Americans United for Separation of Church and State, a liberal think tank. Ryan
Walters, Oklahoma Superintendent of Public Instruction, says he urged the board
to approve and believes their action gives parents more choices in their child’s
education. Three observations:
First,
government money always comes with strings.
While St. Isidore may get tax dollars, with those funds comes the long
arm of government. Many religious
private schools understand that and do not/will not accept government money
because they don’t want government poking its unwanted nose into their
business. With tax money comes rules and
regulations. Taking tax dollars invites scrutiny
and submission to an overreaching government.
Second, tax dollars are already being used to teach a religion-Secular Humanism. John Dewey, often cited as the most prominent
American intellectual in the first half of the 20th century, is considered
be the father of modern public education.
Dewey believed humans can be ethical and moral without a belief in
religion or God, aka secular humanism. Dewey
was responsible for transferring some of his radical, secular ideas to the
classroom and shaped today’s public education.
Public school textbooks are screened to exclude any reference to religion
or God. They must be secular or
non-religious.
In
1961, the no-religion/no God ‘secular humanism’ and ‘atheism’ were acknowledged
to be a religion in a Supreme Court case.
In Torcaso vs. Watkins, Justice Hugo Black wrote: “The state, nor the
federal government, can constitutionally force a person to profess a belief or
disbelief in any religion.” Among
the non-religions cited by Black were Secular Humanism. Black was far from a conservative, but he
recognized unbelief was actually a belief system. Much like when the apostle Paul declared the ‘unknown
God’ to the Greeks, Black’s ruling recognized cynicism was confidence. It takes more faith to believe no one created the
world than to believe someone did.
Third,
the U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) has already ruled regarding use of tax dollars by
religious schools. In a 6-3 vote in June
2022, the SCOTUS ruled faith-based schools CAN get public money. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the majority opinion saying Maine’s
exclusion of religious schools not being able to get public funding violates
the First Amendment.
After
the SCOTUS ruling, AG Drummond’s predecessor John O’Connor, issued an AG
opinion consistent with the SCOTUS ruling.
Drummond defeated O’Connor in the GOP primary and when he was sworn into
office, he rescinded O’Connor’s opinion.
In the reversal, Drummond (a lawyer) contended the SCOTUS ruling was
narrow and did not carte blanche open the door to religious schools getting tax
dollars. Clearly, Stitt and Walters (not
lawyers) disagree.
Drummond’s position has angered many conservatives and school choice advocates in GOP ranks. Some believe Drummond plans to run for governor in 2026. If that is the case, angering conservatives by taking a stand against religion isn’t the way to the Republican nomination.
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