We as parents have the ultimate say as to what we do with our own kids, within the limits of the law, of course. But it IS society's concern what is done with/for kids, even if it's not society's decision what is done.
Kids grow up to be adults, and adults run society. So I have a great big interest in how today's kids are developing into tomorrow's adults.
So while I don't appreciate the other poster's tone and apparent intolerance, I do think he has reason for knowing and caring about how ANY schooling is done and how it impacts kids overall.
ITA that anyone has a right to be interested in children
in general. I would go further then calling it a right and even call it a responsibility to care. **Side note, I do not feel any home schooler should be subject to individual scrutiny by any governmental agency or individual....differnt standards for what should be taught when or how or what should be done or not done or how something should be taught abound...the parent(s) in every family (I feel and the law backs me up on this) have the right to decide for their own children on all these counts.**
However, I would just like to point something out...home school children make up roughly 2% of all school age children in our country according to the US Department of Education.
SO...statistically...as far as how it could negatively impact society...the numbers just don't mesh with the amount of concern over homeschooling in general. I think that the amount of concern people seem to have with the homeschooling movement comes directly from the fact that it is an unknown to most people. It is "outside" the norm, it challenges the current educational system by way of the home school movement even existing (even though many home schoolers are in fact NOT anti schools in general) and has odd (yet outdated or even totally untrue) stereotypes associated with it.
Many who are concerned simply do not know what homeschooling is really about. And the fact that most people have a very limited sample on which to draw conclusions (unless you happen to be someone who actively seeks out many home school families) leads to even more labeling of a large group of people based on a small contact group within that larger group. To presume an understanding based upon limited interaction is a dangerous thing to do with any group of people.
I am not arguing that homeschooling is the end all be all of education for every child. I am not saying that schools today are inherently bad. I am simply stating that homeschooling is a valid choice for some families. An educational path that has it's own sets of benefits and hardships as all educational paths do.
I was very happy to read your posts on this thread. I thank you for being open minded and I would very happily try to share what I know, think and feel about homeschooling with you or anyone else who has a sincere interest and has not already closed there mind to the subject before even entering the discussion.
I think that is where the rub comes in for many who homeschool...a great deal of the time those are the sorts of conversations we are expected to enter into..."Given: Homeschooling is bad and will not socialize your children and cannot possibly produce a well balanced adult...now...explain homeschooling to me".

It is

when those sorts of conversations pop up time after time.
I have stammered on for way longer then I meant to. I am sorry if I went way OT here. I just think that anyone entering into a discussion should not do so assuming the other side is "guilty until proved innocent". When someone is asked to start off from a "prove yourself" standpoint...well, it doesn't make for constructive conversations most of the time (IMHO).
I am NOT lumping the poster I quoted in with those people. In fact, I do thank him for doing the opposite. I just wanted to explain the frustration a lot of home schooling families feel over having the same uphill conversations time and time again.