A federal court has been asked to rule that government schools are unconstitutional.
The motion to the court includes the argument that the First Amendment should
be enlarged to prohibit laws respecting an establishment of religion or education.
All of the constitutional arguments against government schools can be viewed
at http://rexcurry.net.
Defendants cannot receive fair trials because jurors were
educated in government schools and cannot be impartial, according to the
documents. Government schools propagandize jurors to do as the government
says. More specifically, government schools tell jurors to support
vice laws against peaceful adults, and keep jurors ignorant of jury nullification
and the ways in which jurors can reject bad laws that violate individual
rights.
When the U.S. Constitution was written, most people received
private educations, and government schools, if they existed at all, were
rare and did not predominate as they do today.
If the authors of the Constitution had foreseen the government’s
modern education monstrosity then the authors would have explicitly banned
government schools just as they banned government churches in the First Amendment.
The separation of school and state is as important as the separation
of church and state. And for the same ideological reasons.
Under the proposed Constitutional Amendment, the
First Amendment of the United States Constitution would state: “Congress
shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or education, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of the speech,
or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a redress of grievances. Nor suppressing such
through an establishment of religion or education.”
According to a recent web search, http://rexcurry.net is
the first and only website to argue that government schools are unconstitutional
and that the First Amendment should be enlarged to prohibit educational as
well as religious establishments. The web search looked for variations
on the phrase “establishment of religion or education.” A web search
also reveals that rexcurry.net originated the phrase “The separation of school
and state is as important as the separation of church and state,” and is
the first or second site to coin or use one or more of these phrases:
The separation of school and state is more important than the separation
of church and state, the separation of school and state is much more
important than the separation of church and state, the separation of school
and state is far more important than the separation of church and state.