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In reply to the discussion: Pork or nothing: how school dinners are dividing France [View all]MADem
(135,425 posts)your 'disagreement' holds no sway.
Americans are not used to not having choice. It's one of the things that is quite remarkable about USA, how the country accommodates people and tries to make everyone's requirements part of the national fabric.
And, apparently you are woefully unaware ( BS that the French "cannot enjoy a nice wine with their meal in Saudi Arabia" btw) of the Saudi's strict laws against consumption of alcohol in their country--here is some light reading to educate you on that topic:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/oct/13/karl-andree-briton-350-lashes-saudi-arabia-david-cameron
Further, you are confusing church and state in your last sentence. There is no "Muslim child" in the equation as far as the government is concerned. There are French children, and they will be accommodated in a "French" way. They are a SECULAR nation, and rigorously so, these days.
People who don't fit in are free to make their own accommodations, but the French schools that are doing this "no choice" menu do not feel it is their job to make exceptions--and the government is backing them up. That's why this is a story--it's a change to previously made accommodations that the French believe are undermining their culture.
Europe is not as "lefty" as many people imagine. They can be rigid and intolerant, too. Or "secular," depending on one's POV.