For those suggesting private schools aren't held to the same testing standards so why should parents who homeschool be - accredited, licensed private schools are held to standards by the state, they can't just do whatever they want, and they're held to standards by their customers.
No one is paying $30-50k a year for a school without demonstrable results. Even on the cheap end, no one is paying $10-15k without demonstrable results either. They don't produce, they don't have students. This isn't true for homeschoolers.
The Constitution is banned as a topic? I'm asking for the legal justification people are making linking the First Amendment to homeschooling, because it's not there - homeschooling itself isn't religious, if that's what you're implying, nor are many homeschoolers religious, we're talking about in general. Nor is the First Amendment the reason private schools are legal, no.
No one is paying $30-50k a year for a school without demonstrable results. Even on the cheap end, no one is paying $10-15k without demonstrable results either. They don't produce, they don't have students. This isn't true for homeschoolers.
Freedom of speech and the other is a banned topic on the DIS.
Feel free to google cases. But in a similar vein to why private schools are legal.
The Constitution is banned as a topic? I'm asking for the legal justification people are making linking the First Amendment to homeschooling, because it's not there - homeschooling itself isn't religious, if that's what you're implying, nor are many homeschoolers religious, we're talking about in general. Nor is the First Amendment the reason private schools are legal, no.

One guy is talking about how he can't afford to buy all the sweets his child keeps asking for and he's worried that he might hurt the kids feelings if he says no to his requests. Oh lord, you couldn't make this crap up. For anyone interested here is that thread: 
Meanwhile the kid is thinking "my Dad is such a sucker".