Look at my last couple posts, I regret jumping into a semantic debate over whether a street corner is analagous to a schoolyard, and would like to apologize to Durandal, Ryoga, and Lagmonster for that.
Apologies are not required; you didn't insult any of us. You just jumped in too quickly, something that plenty of the people here are guilty of.
Getting back to the "bigger picture," I'd like to restate my original position from waaaaay back on page four:
I wrote:
Any group of students should be allowed to meet on school grounds and express/promote their views on whatever subject they desire (Christianity, Satanism, atheism, politics, computers, chess, etc.) with the following restrictions: 1) they don't disrupt other students by being too loud; 2) they don't block pedestrian or vehicular traffic; 3) they don't interfere with normal school activities (eg. gathering aroud the flagpole during an official ceremony, or meeting in a classroom when a class is scheduled there); and 4) possibly some other stipulations which I can't think of right now.
If there is a conflict between two groups over an area (eg. the Bible club and the chess club both want to use Room 21 at 3:00pm), then it should go to whoever got there first or whoever signed up for it first.
Note the all of the above applies to student gatherings of any kind; it does not give preferential treatment to any religious or non-religious group. It is also applicable to gatherings of the general public in other public areas.
Darth Wong rightfully pointed out that giving rights to a religious groups that non-religious groups don't have would be establishment of religion, but he apparently missed where I said that atheist groups (and computer/chess/whatever ones) must have the same rights as religious ones.
Does anyone still feel that the rules I described above are unfair and/or immoral?
You're missing the even bigger picture. If a school allows students to form a Bible Club, then that club gets school funding and public money. That is an endorsement of religious beliefs. Same goes for an atheist club. Endorsing religious beliefs of any kind or quantity does not change the fact that religious beliefs are being endorsed. The only way to maintain religious freedom in such institutions is to completely disallow any such demonstrations.
I was, like you, trying to think up restrictions to put on such activities to try and preserve the expressive freedom of the students, but the list of restrictions got so long that it would have <surprise!> disallowed any such activity, anyway. The use of government resources to further religious causes is simply not allowed, and a school resource is anything from a classroom to the blacktop, both of which are school grounds. The only time students can do their Bible Study bullshit is when they are completely off school property and away from school functions.
Again, there is
no reason why Christian evangelists
must use a school or courthouse to profess their religious beliefs, anyway, other than for the
express purpose of gaining the perception of governmental endorsement.