As a homeschooled Protestant Christian living in the U.S., there are sarcastic comments I could make about said implication that would get me very very banned.
But honestly this is so thoroughly terrifying and authoritarian that I'm not even really in a joking mood regardless. I may live in an absolute hellhole of a country with an utterly ludicrous obsession with patriotism that I by and large don't share, but this is one of the few things that makes me really glad to have some good ol' American soil to clutch like a security blanket.
Which I also object to on a more general basis. I was homeschooled because I'm on the autistic spectrum, and teachers repeatedly treated me poorly during my preschool and kindergarten years for not acting neurotypical enough. What accommodations is the public education system there making for people like me? What makes them think that educating kids in a public setting will make kids less likely to be radicalized? What makes them think that parents are somehow inherently not qualified to raise their own children? You know, like say. . .they nearly always did prior to like 200 years or so ago?
There's a stereotype that Christian families raising their kids at home somehow means they're in a cult that leaves me offended every time I'm forced to read it. Not in the least because I know from my own personal experience that it's just wrong. This is just that but applied to Muslim families, and I'm equally offended at the exact same assertion being flung at them. So they might go through some study booklets on the Quran between their math and science lessons. Whoop-a-dee-frickin'-do. I did some Jesus books between mine and I not only ranked in the top 10% on the ACTs, I'm more than happy to openly question the moral sanctity of the Christian community.
But hey, authoritarianism is cute and trendy, amirite?
Imagine freaking criminalizing raising your own kids. Apparently France doesn't have to!