Taxpayer money shouldn't fund religious indoctrination. If parents want faith-based education, they can pay for it themselves—public dollars belong in public schools accountable to everyone.
Means-tested vouchers put families first without handing blank checks to every private school. Public money should help kids who need options most.
People are totally split on this issue. Supporters say vouchers give parents vital educational choices, while opponents argue taxpayer money shouldn't fund religious schools.
Parents should pick the best school for their kids without government religious tests. Vouchers create real competition and better education for everyone.
Means-tested vouchers. They help low-income families access options, while limiting subsidies to those who truly need them.
Means-tested vouchers. They help the poor access schooling, while guarding the treasury from broad subsidies to all creeds.
Means-tested vouchers honor education for the poor and keep public funds from subsidizing every religious school. This choice promotes equity and prudent governance, fostering social harmony.
Means-tested vouchers keep aid focused on the needy, guard the treasury, and let families choose solid schools. Public funds serve the common good, not religious rites.
Means-tested vouchers help the poor get schooling while keeping taxpayers from funding every creed; virtuous citizens, not churches, should shape our common schools.
Means-tested vouchers let the poor choose among schools, religious or not, without turning the state into a universal patron. They channel funds to need, spur quality, and shield freedom of belief.
Education is the sword against oppression; lift the poor, not the privileged. Means-tested vouchers put funds where needed and defend equal schooling.
Target aid to the needy with means-tested vouchers, sustaining social progress and keeping church-state lines clear.
Means-tested vouchers ensure help goes to the poor, not banks of dogma. Fund the student, not the sect, and keep church and state apart.
Means-tested vouchers: funnel aid to those who need it, not the whole system, and let families choose strong schools while guarding church-state boundaries.
Means-tested vouchers let the needy choose a good school, secular or faith, without public funds fueling religion.