I agree with the school's decision. I am not sorry for her either.
Oh, and it is not an 'incredibly bizarre situation', as the biased reporter wrote.
1 posted on
04/11/2012 11:02:52 AM PDT by
rawhide
To: rawhide
2 posted on
04/11/2012 11:04:55 AM PDT by
Psalm 144
("I'm not willing to light my hair on fire to try and get support. I am who I am." - Willard M Romney)
To: rawhide
More like “In an unsurprising situation”...
4 posted on
04/11/2012 11:11:18 AM PDT by
TheDon
(The Democrat Party, the party of the KKK (tm))
To: rawhide
Contract, duh. She’s got no case. Seems not too bright.
I’m a little surprised a woman sports coach is even heterosexual, actually.
7 posted on
04/11/2012 11:34:13 AM PDT by
Tax-chick
(Quien vive? JESUS! Y a su nombre? GLORIA! Y a su pueblo? VICTORIA!)
To: rawhide
Photo for determining guilty or not.
8 posted on
04/11/2012 11:47:33 AM PDT by
Menehune56
("Let them hate so long as they fear" Oderint Dum Metuant), Lucius Accius, (170 BC - 86 BC))
To: rawhide
I think it is possible to agree with the school AND to feel sorry for her.
Yes, this Christian school has the right and obligation to uphold a moral standard.
But we can also have mercy for people who make mistakes.
To: rawhide
.... also, I am glad she decided to keep her baby.
She could have taken the easy way out and done the ‘convenient’ thing but didn’t.
To: rawhide
If you are teaching in a Christian school, you are required to model Christian behavior for your students. This woman didn’t, and she deserved her firing.
She should be teaching in government schools where there are no moral requirements.
To: rawhide
In an incredibly bizarre situation that appears headed for a legal challenge, a Dallas-area volleyball coach and science teacher was fired by the Christian school at which she worked for becoming pregnant before being married.She violated a Christian moral standard that was a condition of her employment.
Does "incredibly bizarre situation" now mean "easily understood chain of action and consequences"?
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