Opening up the backpack for everyone

Guest Post by Morbo

Let me apologize at the outset for linking to a piece on World Net Daily, a kook right site, but it seems to be the only place out there following an interesting story out of Albemarle County, Va.

Some public school teachers there are throwing a fit because they have been told to place copies of a flier advertising a summer camp for atheists and freethinkers in folders that go home with the students every Friday. This distribution system, often called “backpack mail,” is very common in public schools around the nation.

The fliers advertise Camp Quest, which operates camps in five states and one Canadian province. It described as the “first residential summer camp in the history of the United States for the children of Atheists, Freethinkers, Humanists, Brights, or whatever other terms might be applied to those who hold to a naturalistic, not supernatural, lifestance. Campers are encouraged to think for themselves and are not required to hold any particular view.”

If you visit the World Net Daily site (just try to avoid looking at the repulsive ads on the side) you can see the flier. It’s pretty harmless. Yet apparently at least a few teachers went bonkers and refused to distribute it. One anonymous teacher told the site, “I took a stand and did not send it home. Other teachers did the same thing.”

“I took a stand”? How about, “I violated a federal court order” instead?

This isn’t up to the teachers. Public schools in Virginia and the other states in the U.S. 4th Circuit are required to put this material in the backpacks. This stems from a case a few years ago when a fundamentalist Christian parent demanded the right to distribute a flier to kids advertising a religious camp. The school system refused. The inevitable lawsuit followed, and the federal appeals court ruled that denying the religious group access was a form of viewpoint discrimination.

Now that fundamentalists have this access, other groups want it too — among them some local atheists. By law, all groups must be treated equally. If teachers are unhappy about some of the material going home, they have no right to take it upon themselves to toss fliers that offend them. Pretty simple, right? (Fliers from outside groups include disclaimers noting that they are not school sponsored.)

As it so happens, I don’t think public schools should have to distribute fliers unrelated to their core educational mission. I don’t believe it’s wise to compel Albemarle officials to put fliers from Camp Quest or Jesus Camp in kids’ backpacks. Personally, I’m tired of sorting through fliers for karate clubs in my kids’ Friday folders when all I really want to read are announcements from the school. But I acknowledge that if one outside group is given access, all must be. Equal treatment is the rule. If the Christians gets access to the backpack, so do the Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, atheists and so on.

The World Net site notes that some teachers consider the Camp Quest flier offensive or against their religious beliefs. Too bad. I’d like to point out that it was their fundamentalist allies that opened up this forum — so deal with it.

Officials in the Albemarle school system must make sure their teachers are abiding by the law and not allowing their personal prejudices to trample on the rights of others. Teachers who refuse to abide by the equal-treatment rule should get to go to their own special camp this summer. Call it “Camp Constitution.”

What goes around, comes around. It truly amazes me that the fundamentalist Christians who pushed for this erosion of religion/government separation were so myopic that they couldn’t see this coming.

If you don’t want separation between religion and government, you need to be prepared to deal with the consequences. Those consequences are that all religious and non-religious groups are treated fairly and afforded the same opportunities as one another.

  • Yes, but don’t leave those backpacks unattended or here comes the bomb squad. Sounda like the freethinker camp would be the only constitutional one. Those recalcitrant teachers should be pharmacists.

  • Hey hey hey Morbo!!!

    Get with the program here! What’s good for the Fundie isn’t good for anyone else!!! You can’t apply logic and reason to system than can’t see it.

    It almost amazes me that the Fundie never stops to think about the unintended consequences. It’s like they don’t fucking question things or something. Hmmmmmm….

    And that is why they’re so damned predictable.

  • Wake up Ye enterprising athieists (and believers of obscure religions)!!!! There’s a lot of federal grant money out there aimed at people who believe in things:

    http://www.whitehouse.gov/government/fbci/grants-catalog-index.html

    Suggestions:

    1) Wee Wittle Wickens: head start program, placing abandoned infants in good pagan homes, mentoring children of prisoners, etc.

    2) PETA Vegan Vittles: Summer food service program, Emergency food assistance, National school lunch program, etc.

    3) Darwin’s freedom balloons: AIDS education and Training centers, US agency for international development, etc.

  • Former Dan @3 – I detect the ever so subtle smell of sarcasm in your response – excellent!!

  • This is the main point the fundamentalists don’t understand – separation of church and state is really to their advantage. They won’t have to do things like these mailings.

  • Christianists just don’t want to compete in the open marketplace of ideas. (or mindless beliefs)

  • Here’s their “logic”
    Their religion & God is the right one, so banning Jesus Camp fliers is wrong
    Your religion (or lack of one) is wrong. So, it’s wrong to apply the same standard to it as applies to their “right” religon.
    There, see, it’s simple.
    And because this is their belief, nothing is going to sway them.

  • I had wondered, when that case about the distribution of the religious camp fliers was going on, what the possible ramifications might be. Now I know. Thanks for the giggle of the day

  • Dear Teacher,

    Please quit worrying about my child’s religion. It’s none of your business. It’s mine. Your business is to teach my child reading, writing, math and science. From the comparisons of US schools’ academic achievements to those of the rest of the world, you’re not doing a very good job. Perhaps some of the time you spend putting fliers in book bags and being outraged by their content should be used to work on arithmetic.

    Thank you,

    Julie’s Mother

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