Del, we're on to something here, I'm sure of it! I mean, what reasonable person could find fault with our proposals?! Hardly anyone would look at this plan and reject it, unless of course they had some agenda you and I can't even imagine-- so maybe we have opened the door to a breakthough and a reconciliation in American educational policy! I wonder if CobaltBlue would be interested in acting as the legal representative of the lobbying organization we will, I'm sure, be founding soon. Blue, perhaps you would consider taking on this task pro bono, as it will surely be a short-lived one. For how long could it take to persuade the electorate and Congress that this is a sensible proposal?!
The only problems I can foresee might be in those areas of the country, remote, inaccessible areas, in which there are no houses of worship; perhaps no shelter at all, in which to pray, save for that provided by the school buildings themselves. In such a case, I can see that the distraction to the shelterless children caused by the shattering blasts of the chill winter air or scorching heat of the summer sun might interfere with their prayers, not to mention the considerable inconvenience of having one's Bible drenched by spring and autumn showers over and over again until it becomes stiff as a brick and quite unreadable. |