WDMSO, add to the list of things you don't understand, what "separation of church and state" means. It's very clear, what it means is that there is no official state religion. It does NOT mean that government and religion can never intersect. The nation was literally founded on religious principles.
Here's what that means to school choice. If the government said that public money can be used to fund catholic schools but not schools of other religions, THAT would be a violation of church and state. Letting people pick whatever religious school they wanted (or one of MANY private schools that have no religious affiliation) is not a violation of the separation of church and state.
Wrong again.
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