By Walter E. Williams
Wednesday, October 08, 2014
Students at several Jefferson County, Colorado, high
schools walked out to protest the school board's recently proposed curriculum
review committee that seeks to promote patriotism, respect for authority, free
enterprise, plus the positive aspects of U.S. history. The teachers union,
whose members forced two high schools to close by calling in sick, is against
the implementation of performance-based pay. The union has encouraged and applauded
student protests against what it's calling academic censorship.
The average parent and taxpayer has little idea of what
is being taught to our youngsters. In February 2006, I wrote a column titled
"Indoctrination of Our Youth," followed in March with "Youth
Indoctrination Update." Both columns focused on rants that a student
secretly had recorded of a geography teacher at another Colorado school --
Overland High School in Aurora. The teacher was Jay Bennish. He told his
students that President George W. Bush's State of the Union address sounded
"a lot like the things that Adolf Hitler used to say." He continued,
"Bush is threatening the whole planet." He then asked his students,
"Who is probably the single most violent nation on planet Earth?" He
shouted the answer, "The United States!" During this class session,
Bennish peppered his 10th-grade class with other ridiculous statements, saying
the U.S. has engaged in "7,000 terrorist attacks against Cuba" and
telling his students capitalism "is at odds with humanity, at odds with
caring and compassion ... (and) at odds with human rights."
Bennish reasoned with his class, "If we have the
right to fly to Bolivia or Peru and drop chemical weapons (pesticides) on top
of farmers' fields because we're afraid they might be growing coca and that
could be turned into cocaine and sold to us, well, then don't the Peruvians and
the Iranians and the Chinese have the right to invade America and drop chemical
weapons over North Carolina to destroy the tobacco plants that are killing
millions and millions of people in their countries every year and causing them
billions of dollars in health care costs?" This kind of anti-American
teaching might help explain why some Americans have joined the Islamic State of
Iraq and the Levant.
Relevant to our struggle with ISIL is this observation by
Bennish, reported by columnist Todd Manzi:
"You have to understand something. When al-Qaida
attacked America on Sept. 11, in their view, they're not attacking innocent
people. OK? The CIA has an office in the World Trade Center. The Pentagon is a
military target. The White House was a military target. Congress is a military
target. ... So in the minds of al-Qaida, they are not attacking innocent
people; they are attacking legitimate targets."
This kind of teacher indoctrination is by no means
restricted to Colorado. Many teachers, at all grades, use their classroom for
environmental, anti-war, anti-capitalist and anti-parent propaganda. Some
require their students to write letters to political figures to condemn public
policy the teachers don't like. Dr. Thomas Sowell's "Inside American
Education" (2003) documents numerous ways teachers attack parental
authority. Teachers have asked third-graders, "How many of you ever wanted
to beat up your parents?" In a high-school health class, students were
asked, "How many of you hate your parents?"
We can't tell whether Jefferson County teachers are
giving their students the same kind of anti-American indoctrination, because if
there is not recorded evidence, they will deny brainwashing. If they are
brainwashing students, then it's understandable why they are against the school
board's curriculum review demanding that they promote patriotism, respect for
authority, free enterprise and the positive aspects of U.S. history.
Parents should become more involved with their children's
education. They should look at the textbooks used and examine their children's
homework. Parents should show up en masse at PTA and board of education
meetings to ensure that teachers confine their lessons to reading, writing and
arithmetic and leave indoctrination to parents. The most promising tool in the
fight against teacher indoctrination and classroom misconduct is the
microtechnology that enables students to secretly record and expose academic
misconduct by teachers.
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