Pro-Tip: 'Expecting The Rapture' No Excuse To Stop Teaching Homeschooled Kids. Even In Texas.
Turns out that even in the Independent Republic of Texas, where virtually unregulated chemical plants don't have to follow any dang ol' fire code (since the state doesn't have one ), the heavy hand of Big Government is still ready to oppress people who are just minding their own business and not hurting anyone, except maybe their own children. Even in Texas, you apparently have to teach something to your homeschooled darlings, even it it's that Stonewall Jackson was a good Christian who made sure his troops prayed. You see, Michael McIntyre and Laura McIntyre, some good Bible-believing Christians in Texas, were pretty sure that Jesus was just on the verge of coming back to Rapture them all to heaven, and so in 2004 they took their kids out of public school so they could homeschool them.
Michael McIntyre's twin brother Tracy, obviously weak in faith, testified that the kids went to school in a "classroom" in some space cleared out at Michael's motorcycle dealership. And although he never saw them reading or doing math or worldly foolishness like that, they did play instruments and sing. Plus, a bunch of book facts weren't really necessary anyway, according to court documents:
“Tracy overhead one of the McIntyre children tell a cousin that they did not need to do schoolwork because they were going to be raptured.”
Michael's parents, Gene and Shirene McIntyre, were also concerned about this "not-learning-for Jesus" stuff, and met with the El Paso School District's attendance officer, Mark Mendoza, "and expressed concerns that their grandchildren were not attending school or otherwise receiving a proper education," which just shows how far the secularist agenda has advanced the idea that "knowing things" is somehow necessary. And in one of the more remarkable passages you'll find in a legal document, the case summary also notes that
Mendoza confirmed that the oldest of the McIntyre children, Tori, had run away from home at age seventeen so she could “attend school.”
Let's just have a quick round of applause for a 17-year-old willing to run away so she could go to school, before we start drinking heavily at the reminder that this happened in the first decade of the 21st Century, not in a charming tale about the dreams of a girl in a 19th Century shtetl (Spec scripts are no doubt already being written for Yentl on the Rio Grande ). Mendoza also
discovered that when Tori enrolled at Coronado High School, she was unable to provide any information regarding the level of her education or the curriculum provided as part of her home school education. The McIntyres refused to provide any information to the District on Tori’s behalf.
So after Mendoza filed truancy complaints against the McIntyres, the family bravely fought back, arguing, "based on Texas Education Code, the Texas Religious Freedom Restoration Act (TRFRA), the Texas Constitution, and the United States Constitution," that the First Amendment meant that they didn't have to teach their children anything at all, and compulsory education laws are of the Devil or something. That was in 2007. And finally, last week, the Texas Eighth District Court of Appeals ruled that, no, really, letting children sing hymns isn't an education and freedom of religion doesn't exempt you from at least providing a half-assed education to your children, if only because Jesus might have some spelling questions for them.
“No parents have ever prevailed in any reported case on a theory that they have an absolute constitutional right to educate their children in the home, completely free of any state supervision, regulation, or requirements,” the ruling stated. “They do not have an ‘absolute constitutional right to home school.’”
And there you have it -- life in Obama's America, where the sacred right to complete ignorance is no longer respected. What did the Founding Fathers fight for, if not the right to know nothing about the Founding Fathers or anything else?
[ RawStory / Image Credit: Scarfolk Council (Yes, it's a parody)]
And Malala is shot in the head for advocating the dangerous nonsense that girls should be educated.
Don't forget that Hobby Lobby requires them to sign away their right to sue. The less reading comprehension they have, the happier the managers will be . . . plus these kids won't even know to ask for birth control to be covered on their health plans. So - win-win!