We already have those. It's called private high school and we have a major one here in Michigan called "Catholic Central" or CC for short. It's a super high-end and competitive high school for catholic boys and the rules are very strict to get in. You must prove you are catholic and the boys go to church twice a week. We used to have a girl version named "Ladywood High School" but enrollment collapsed and they had to shut down :/
I went to a private girls Catholic school back in the day - tested to get in - it was NOT a part of the subsidized public school system. My parents paid tuition.
so, citizens should be able to SUE Michigan for not providing separate but equal education - not only for lgbtqrz, but also to Christians, Boys, Girls, Conservatives, etc etc lol.
No. Because it's a private school that parents pay lots of their own hard-earned money to send their children to. In that case, it's treated very much like a private company. The state still offers thousands publicly subsidized and paid-for high schools that are open to every kid in their respective cities.
We already have those. It's called private high school and we have a major one here in Michigan called "Catholic Central" or CC for short. It's a super high-end and competitive high school for catholic boys and the rules are very strict to get in. You must prove you are catholic and the boys go to church twice a week. We used to have a girl version named "Ladywood High School" but enrollment collapsed and they had to shut down :/
I went to a private girls Catholic school back in the day - tested to get in - it was NOT a part of the subsidized public school system. My parents paid tuition.
is the one in Michigan tuition free?
No it is rather expensive. It is completely separate from the public school system as well.
so, citizens should be able to SUE Michigan for not providing separate but equal education - not only for lgbtqrz, but also to Christians, Boys, Girls, Conservatives, etc etc lol.
No. Because it's a private school that parents pay lots of their own hard-earned money to send their children to. In that case, it's treated very much like a private company. The state still offers thousands publicly subsidized and paid-for high schools that are open to every kid in their respective cities.