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Britain's' Equality Act of 2006 is a piece of legislation pushed into being under EU pressure. Its laudable aim is to outlaw discrimination towards people on grounds of - listed in this order - age, disability, gender, sex-change, race, religion, belief or sexual orientation. (The order is interesting. Is there an implied hierarchy that values my aged transgenderism over your one-legged voodoo?).
He believes that since the State funds Christian and Jewish schools it makes it very hard for it to refuse to fund Muslim schools. This being the case, he seems to argue, it should refuse to fund all faith-based schools, as is the case in America.
This is obviously a very involved issue. However, the following can immediately be said. Christians and Jews are very well integrated into their societies. Despite the opinion of some extreme secularists that religious believers must necessarily present liberal democracies with a problem, the fact is that these days almost all Christians and Jews in the West are at peace with democracy.
This being the case, it seems harsh to say the least to deprive Jewish and Christian schools of State-funding because Western societies have a problem integrating some Muslims. In other words, you shouldn't punish all religious believers to solve a problem you're experiencing with other religious believers.
Surely a better approach isn't to halt all State-funding to religious schools, but to ensure those schools have proper civics programs and other means of integration built into their curricula. This would include the insistence that all schools have minimum number of teachers drawn from the host culture.
"If I were asked to design a system for making sure that children's basic needs were met, we would probably come up with something quite similar to the two-parent ideal...The fact that both parents have a biological connection to the child would increase the likelihood that the parents would identify with the child and be willing to sacrifice for that child, and it would reduce the likelihood that either parent would abuse the child.."
Sara McLanahan and Gary Sandefur, "Growing up with a single parent: What hurts, what helps."