If you send your children to private religious schools, you might be part of something that “encourages division,” according to Barack Obama.
Speaking to a couple thousand people in Northern Ireland earlier this week, Obama said that children going to schools in line with their parents’ faith — Catholic and Protestant, in this case — is a bad thing that “discourages cooperation.” Although the connections between certain things in his speech seem tortured and unclear to me, it sounds as though he’s comparing religious schools to segregation.
“Because issues like segregated schools and housing, lack of jobs and opportunity — symbols of history that are a source of pride for some and pain for others — these are not tangential to peace; they’re essential to it,” Obama said. “If towns remain divided — if Catholics have their schools and buildings, and Protestants have theirs — if we can’t see ourselves in one another, if fear or resentment are allowed to harden, that encourages division. It discourages cooperation.”
So according to Obama, letting people make the choice about how to educate their children is tantamount to “segregated schools and housing” and “lack of jobs and opportunity”? Really? In which alternate reality does he find this to be true? Freedom of association is a good thing — and people have the freedom to make choices that you don’t approve of.
To me, the attitude embodied in this speech betrays a couple of things.

Healthy partner will always ask, ‘Who do you really want to be?’
Once you taste what is possible, you can’t accept being ‘normal’
Desperate need to be special drives me to try to matter to those I love
Those we love change who we are and reflect who we’re becoming
Roy Moore just the latest in the long line of politicians who want control
If you need incentive to prepare for the future, look to London today
The more I understand humans, the less I really comprehend us
Normal days often turn to terror when you live with a narcissist