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gengwall -> RE: Student Sues 'Anti-Christian' Teacher Over Remarks in Class (4/11/2008 12:34:20 PM)
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We're in luck. It's public record so I do not need permission. This is directly from the complaint. quote:
15. Dr. Corbett made the following statements during one single class period [my emphasis], October 19, 2007, while teaching the Advanced Placement European History lass at Capistrano Valley High School: a. “How do you get the peasants to oppose something that is in their best interest? Religion. You have to have something that is irrational to counter that rational approach….[W]hen you put on your Jesus glasses, you can't see the truth.” b. “Now, the Boy Scouts have said, unless you're willing to love God, and unless you're willing to – unless you're not gay, um – they are saying, being gay excludes you. Not believing God or not professing a belief in God also excludes you….But you see, until they started these rules, Boy Scouts used to – or Boy Scout troops usually met at schools, and places like that, parks, government buildings. They can't do that anymore. They can't do that anymore, because now they are, in their own mind, a homophobic and a racist organization. It's that simple….It’s call[ed] separation of church and state. The Boy Scouts can’t have it both ways. If they want to be an exclusive, Christian organization or an exclusive, God-fearing organization, then they can’t receive any more support from the state, and shouldn’t.” c. “People – in the industrialized world the people least likely to go to church are the Swedes. The people in the industrialized world most likely to go to church are the Americans. America has the highest crime rate of all industrialized nations, and Sweden has the lowest. The next time somebody tells you religion is connected with morality, you might want to ask them about that. Um, and let’s see. Is there something else on that? No.” d. “U.S. regulators – U.S. regulators say they added new warnings about the potential risks of sudden hearing loss for men who are using Viagra, Cialis, or Levitra. So what they have been be telling you all these years, that you'll go blind, isn't true; but you will go deaf. And now what I think – some Canadian has to get this, but I have a suspicion, if you went down the list of side effects, of possible side effects, of this drug, you could – you could really – I mean, somebody who had all the side effects would be pretty fun. I mean, there is, after all, the fourhour thing. So, you know, you know, if you run into somebody who is, you know, deaf and whose pants felt stiff, he's probably using the drug….They're happy, but they're deaf. e. “‘After an outbreak of pregnancies among middle school girls, education officials in the city [of Brooklyn, Maine] had decided to make birth control pills available at the middle school health centers….’ [O]ther people say, you know, we shouldn’t be teaching our kids how to have sex safely. We should be teaching our kids abstinence. Well, we know abstinence doesn’t work. And we know one other thing; and that is, once people become sexually active, they often don’t stop for, like, 40 or 50 years. I mean, generally, when you start you don’t, like, have a conversion and try to become re-virginized, you know. It’s not going to happen.” UNKNOWN STUDENT: “Isn’t it sort of like to urge more girls to have sex?” DR. CORBETT: …Let’s say – and there is a lot of reasons women take birth control pills, including just, you know, organizing a period so that it happens – instead of randomly, that it happens at the right time. So, you know, let's say, for the sake of argument, that there is a girl in here that a doctor gave birth control pills to because she needed to regulate her cycle. Girls, as soon as you start taking those pills, at the moment, you're going to be going, ‘Whoopie. Time to have sex.’ I don't think so. You know, so the argument that it's just going to make them have sex is just absurd. If that were true, girls, then the first time somebody takes you out on a date and halfway through the date pulls out a condom, and says, ‘Hey, we're safe. Let's go,’ all the girls would say, ‘Sure.’ But they're not gonna say that, you know. Um, now, uh, you know, the arguments – the way it works is, parents have to give permission for their child to go to the health center. But they do not have to have parental permission to get the birth control pills. And, in fact, it's confidential….So, you know, some parents are objecting, saying it's taking too much power away from the parents. Parents are pretty irresponsible. And so is the Bush administration with its abstinence policy. Spending billions of dollars on something they know doesn't work, wonderful. Wonderful. Idiotic. Um, birth control pills for middle school girls. My mother has a solution to this problem. And I'm sure the girls were careful. My mother thinks that all the boys, when they reach puberty, should be given a reversible vasectomy….” f. “….[C]onservatives don't want women to avoid pregnancies. That's interfering with God's work. You got to stay pregnant, barefoot, and in the kitchen and have babies until your body collapses. All over the world, doesn't matter where you go, the conservatives want control over women's reproductive capacity. Everywhere in the world. From conservative Christians in this country to, um, Muslim fundamentalists in Afghanistan. It's the same. It's stunning how vitally interested they are in controlling women.” g. “Um, freedom of expression, freedom of censorship. It just makes it a major literary center of activity. Because religious reforms, now, here – you know, again, boy, I'll tell you. It does put me in mind of the culture wars that are going on in the United States today. I mean, here is Joseph II. He's trying, for example, to end serfdom. Serfdom in which the peasants, the Serb class, on these estates worked, literally, property. They had no rights to speak of at all. He doesn't just go that far. I mean, he tries to get them land. He tries to set them – I mean, um – he really has the interest of this class of people at heart, and the – the reforms that he makes really are going to make the lives of these peasants massively better. So why do the peasants oppose him? …Because he also tried to reform religion, and the peasants love their church. It's the same thing here. You know, you go down to Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, all these states that are as red as they could possibly be, as right-wing Republican as you could possibly be. When you first present these people with the economic policies of the Democratic party, they are all Democrats. Virtually all the social programs, they like. They lead the Democratic party on social issues. That's it. Social issues, can you imagine what they're saying on Rush Limbaugh now? About, ‘Middle school people in New England giving people birth control pills. My God. What next?’ I love Rush Limbaugh. A fat, pain in the a** liar. And, boy, is he a liar. Unbelievable. Um, anyway, the guaranteed freedom of religion for Jewish people, that upset a lot of Catholics, um, Protestants. That upset a lot of Catholics, trying to get people to tolerate other religions. But, come on. The church is there. The local priest is there telling them, ‘Joseph II is satanic. He's like those Democrats that will be around in another 300 years.’” h. “…If you're poor, and you live in the inner city, um, chances are actually greater that one parent will be at home, and that you will be living in an apartment. You guys, most of you, have parents, two parents, who work. And if you want to smoke a joint, you can walk out into the backyard, sit down by the swimming pool, and smoke it. You do not have to worry about some cop driving by and busting you. In the inner city, you can't smoke with your mom in the apartment, so you go down to the street corner. There is no place to hide. They get busted all the time there. Here, you know, the dealers – I'm sure there are people in here who know people who will sell pot. That's one of the ironies of teaching here and one of the ironies of our own judicial system is that – every year I ask my class this question, and every year I know what the answer is. I say, if – I'm not going to do this. Let's get that straight. If I made this offer – I am not making this offer. If I made this offer, and the offer is: The first person who leaves this room for lunch, who comes back with either alcohol or marijuana will get an ‘A’ for the year. What would I have? Alcohol or pot? THE CLASS: Pot. DR. CORBETT: So the illegal substance is more available to you than the legal substance. Anyway, um, you know, we've had several presidential commissions look into our judicial system, penal system, and they've all concluded the same thing: It simply doesn't work. And the systems in other nations do work. Sweden, for example, the longest you can spend in prison for a crime – machine-gunned a kindergarten class – the longest you can spend in prison is 10 years. UNKNOWN STUDENT: Oh, what? DR. CORBETT: Why are you outraged by that? They have the lowest crime rate in the industrialized world. Where would you rather live if you're worried about crime? Here or there….There, obviously.” i. “So we know what rehabilitation works and that punishment doesn't, and yet we go on punishing. It really has a lot to do with these same culture wars we're talking about. This whole Biblical notion: Sinners need to be punished. And so you get massively more Draconian punishment in the South where religion is much more central to society than you do anyplace else. And, of course, the Southerners get really upset, as what they see as lenient behavior in the North. You know, we're going to solve this problem. Except, guess what? What part of the country has the highest murder rate? The South. What part of the country has the highest rape rate? The South. What part of the country has the highest…church attendance? The South. Oh, wait a minute. You mean there is not a correlation between these things? No, there isn't. Um, in fact, there is an inverse correlation. In those places where people go to church the least, the crime was the most. And that's not just Sweden and the United States. That's Pennsylvania and Georgia. It's not even true.”
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