Originally Posted by
JBI
Still, the vast number of homeschooled children in the United States seem to be from families affiliated with Evangelical Christian faiths, and have strong political doctrines attached to them. In a sense, it never allows for anyone to get away from their parents - so if the parent is a great example of a learned mind, according to whomever is judging, then the system works, however if the person hammers home too many regressive ideas, as most parents happen to be (despite our own love for our parents, it feels natural to realize that some of their ideas are old fashion, or regressive. My grandparents, wouldn't have allowed my parents to date non-Jews, and some of that resentment seems to have held, with a dislike even emanating from them). If I were only exposed to those viewpoints, I think I would be a lesser person.
Socrates, as we all know, spoke directly about this issue. One needs to really challenge the authority of ones parents if they are to understand anything on their own. Perhaps homeschooling does that, though I think, for most people, it's all part of a scheme to really centralize and regress, in the sense that The Jonas Brothers, or Father-Daughter Virginity Balls, or Jesus Camps, or Jewish summer Camps (which used to be socialist, and now are rather right wing) are.