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K-12 Brainwashing
FrontPagemag.com ^ | 11-4-2005 | Ari Kaufman

Posted on 11/04/2005 8:03:42 AM PST by DeweyCA

It is no longer a secret that many public and private universities are populated by professors who use their classrooms to recruit students to their political agendas. But while the politicization of the universities is now common knowledge, an even more distressing instance of this abuse is to be found in the nation’s K-12 schools.

I have that on good authority. I have been a teacher in Los Angeles-area elementary and middle schools and have witnessed first hand how students who are younger and more impressionable are being regularly indoctrinated by leftwing teachers. Having worked in a number of different school districts over the past five years, from the well-to-do Palisades to the hardscrabble Watts neighborhood, I can further attest that cases of indoctrination occur far more often than many would believe possible.

One such case involved a substitute teacher of my acquaintance. During his various stints at our school, he was notorious for compelling elementary-school students to sign random petitions in support of the political causes he favored. He wasn’t shy about foisting his views on other teachers, either. Once, when my classroom’s American flag accidentally fell, he immediately stuffed it into the closet. And, in a sense, who could blame him? Seeing that three quarters of our faculty were declining to recite the daily pledge with their students he had probably concluded that mistreating the flag would not be frowned upon.

In indoctrinating students in his politics, he was by no means an anomaly. I can vividly recall the greeting of a grade school colleague last Columbus Day, as the bell for morning class rang. “Hey, Mr. K, Happy Murdering of Indigenous people Day!” Then he said: “I'll tell my kids the real Columbus story today. The one not in the textbooks!” In responding that I intended to teach the story of Columbus as it happened, not the Howard Zinn version, I admit that I may have stooped to his level of petulance. But it is difficult not to despair at the anti-American history now being taught throughout our public school systems.

It was the same story at a middle school in a more affluent part of Los Angeles County. Most of the 8th grade American history classrooms held polls in which students got to vote on “who really discovered America?” I am not naive enough to believe that teacher influence played no role in the eventual results, which showed “Chief Howling Wind” easily defeating Columbus, 178 to 2. How different things are from when I was in 8th grade, a mere 13 years ago. Back then, we took part in essay-writing contests about the heroic deeds of Columbus on his 500th Anniversary. By 1996, however, the holiday had been replaced on Los Angeles school calendars with Cesar Chavez Day, in honor of the labor radical.

School assemblies were arguably the most blatant forums for political indoctrination. By my rough estimate, 80 percent of these were focused on promoting an environmentalist agenda. It wasn’t enough to encourage elementary school students to recycle. No, the kids had to endure sermons on the supposed wickedness of humanity, especially corporate humanity. An over-the-top presentation by a yoga instructor was representative of the genre. After showing pictures of dead animals, meant to symbolize the victims of environmental depredation, she led the children in a mournful chant expressly aimed at stirring their emotions. “How does the seal look?” she would intone. “Sad!” they would echo. When I voiced my concerns about the patently exploitative demonstration to another teacher, she concurred. Nonetheless, she insisted on keeping her concerns to herself. She had a point: objecting to the assembly might prove unpopular with the faculty, not a few of whom were radical environmentalists and Green Party members.

In a similar vein, consider the presentation made by a college theater group from UCLA. Showing no interest in a balanced engagement with the issues, the group instead staged a 20-minute play whose theme can be summarized thusly: Once upon a time, the Earth was beautiful. Then humans came and destroyed it. To appreciate the effect of such simplistic narratives on students, consider the reaction of a little girl in my classroom. Visibly upset, she approached me after the play to ask: “Are we really ruining the Earth”? I did my best to explain, as objectively as possible, that the reality was a bit more complicated that the play would have her believe. But this had little effect.

In case the assemblies proved inadequate to steeping the kids in environmentalist dogma, there were also field trips designed to achieve the same end. The preferred field trip of most teachers was something called “Ocean Day. Organized by the Malibu Foundation, a non-profit group whose declared mission is “creating conservationists” out of school children, it was annual day set aside for environmental activism, or as it is euphemistically called, “in-school environmental education.”

The point of the annual trip was to clean up trash on California beaches. Their work done, the children would then pose for photographs conveying the message of the trip. On one occasion, for instance, they were asked to line up in the outline of a fish with an oxygen mask – a standard piece of environmentalist propaganda – while an aerial photograph http://www.oceanday.net/2005.html was taken. My attempts to recommend a more educational venue for a field trip – for instance, the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles – met with indifference from school administrators. My fellow teachers were even less open to persuasion. Once, when I questioned the wisdom of ferrying the kids to spend yet another day picking up trash and reciting environmentalist slogans, two teachers in my grade level, both convinced environmentalists, dismissed my objections out of hand.

Environmentalist indoctrination is not the only problem in our public schools, however. It is not uncommon, for instance, for teachers to put their political commitments ahead of their teaching responsibilities. One such incident occurred at a school in Southwest Los Angeles, where I have taught full-time for the past two years. One of our faculty members missed the first week of the last school year. The reason? She was incarcerated, along with the school’s video camera, while protesting at the Republican National Convention in New York City. That teacher, who displays a “No War in Iraq” poster in her classroom, had already missed our training days in order to walk alongside Michael Moore and Jesse Jackson outside Madison Square Garden.

Upon her return, she regaled the faculty with her “protest” stories. Proudly displaying a picture from her stint in jail, she announced sarcastically, “this is our democracy at work!” She later had to miss more school in order to fly back to New York to retrieve the school’s camera and attend her court date. It was hard in the end to avoid the conclusion that she was more interested in boosting the fortunes of the political left than her students’ test scores. Yet the school’s administration looked the other way: This teacher was not disciplined and few people mentioned the incident afterwards; it was as though it never happened.

What does draw faculty and administrative attention on campus is anything that expresses a contrary or conservative point of view. Indeed, experience has taught me that a culture of intimidation obtains in our public schools. The case of one of teacher I knew provides an illuminating example. A 20 year veteran at the school, he had long hidden the fact that he supported the Republican Party, fearing, not without justice, that this would do him irreparable damage. The fact that his son was serving in Iraq had failed to prevent the pilfering of his “Support the Troops” sticker from his car in the school parking lot.

Besides him, there were only two other Republicans at my school: myself and a friend of mine. Both young and idealistic educators, we had not yet been apprised of the unspoken rule against challenging the school’s political culture. We learned the hard way last spring, when we published an article in the Orange County Register supportive of Governor Schwarzenegger and critical of the powerful Los Angeles Teacher’s Union.

The reaction at the school was as swift as it was severe. Formerly friendly teachers now refused even to acknowledge our presence; the convivial chatter ceased. One outraged teacher wondered how anyone could support Republicans, much less say a word against the teachers unions. (The evils of the Republican Party, on the other hand, were received wisdom; an African-American teacher who spotted a photograph of Condoleezza Rice in my classroom exclaimed, “That’s so racist!’) My skepticism about the teachers’ policy of leaving the school promptly at 2:30, part of the union-organized protest against the governor’s education policies, only added more tarnish to my reputation.

Ultimately, it was the teachers’ insistence on putting their own agendas ahead of the students that led me to resign my teaching post. It was bad enough that teachers neglected students in order to stick it to the Republican governor, that nearly a quarter of the faculty spent weekends at union rallies, marching alongside pro-terrorist organizations like International A.N.S.W.E.R., and that they believed as an article of faith that, as one teacher put it, “you can't be a teacher and also be a Republican.” But when it was announced this fall $8 would be subtracted from our salaries to fund campaigns against Governor Schwarzenegger’s reform initiatives, I resigned my teaching position out of principle.

Looking back on it now, I see that I was a poor fit for the public schools. While I love teaching, it has become clear to me that educational progress must take a back seat to the “progressive” political agendas of the teachers. I guess I had my priorities backwards.

Ari Kaufman is a writer living in Washington D.C. He blogs at Partial Transcripts.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: California
KEYWORDS: academicbias; education; indoctrination; pspl; schools
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To: DeweyCA
"School assemblies were arguably the most blatant forums for political indoctrination. By my rough estimate, 80 percent of these were focused on promoting an environmentalist agenda."

I recall an assembly where the entire school was shown a film on the environment, in 1960-something. It showed cartoons of thick air pollution created by factories that lingered while exhaust emissions from cars simply vanished. GM produced this educational film.

21 posted on 11/04/2005 8:42:23 AM PST by moehoward
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To: DeweyCA

How can people be surprised that a public school will become a cess-pool of politically correct groupthink and Liberal clap-trap. It's absolutely inevitable.

If you don't like it, don't send your kids to public schools.


22 posted on 11/04/2005 8:43:22 AM PST by gridlock (Nature started the fight for survival, and now she wants to quit because she's losing... Monty Burns)
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To: DeweyCA

As a parent, my 'wake up call' about liberal teachers endoctrinating children, came over 10 years ago when my then 2nd grade son came home and proudly told me he knew the difference between the democrat and republican parties. He said: "Republicans help the big businesses, and democrats help the little people."


23 posted on 11/04/2005 8:49:13 AM PST by PilloryHillary (Government is the only enterprise in the world which expands in size when its failures increase.)
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To: DeweyCA

Let's not forget the arms of NAMBLA infiltrating the schools, known as GLSEN and P-FLAG.


24 posted on 11/04/2005 8:52:20 AM PST by JoJo Gunn (Help control the Leftist population. Have them spayed or neutered. ©)
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To: bboop
I tutor in LA. My sole purpose, I have come to believe, is to teach the kids about our wonderful US history -- the right way!

I am stunned at what the kids say, but honored to be a Stealth Tutor. haha.

Keep up the good work. It is sorely needed.

My mom taught in the L.A. Unified school system and preferred teaching kindergarten because the kids had yet to be indoctrinated.

25 posted on 11/04/2005 9:04:22 AM PST by DumpsterDiver
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To: DeweyCA

Any chance that David Horowitz would finance a documentary illustrating some of this? I think it'd be enlightening to some of those who are not as familiar w/ our public "schools."


26 posted on 11/04/2005 9:05:33 AM PST by detsaoT (run bsd)
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To: kellynla
As noble as it is, homeschooling is not the answer to correct this treachery. Conservatives must fight to depoliticize our schools. The remaining 98% of the youth attending public school will dominate the political landscape of tomorrow. If nothing is done, your home-schooled child will merely be a frustrated member of a powerless minority.
27 posted on 11/04/2005 9:07:36 AM PST by Right Brother
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To: Beelzebubba
Solution: sunlight as disinfectant. Every public school classroom or auditorium where children are instructed should have an audio/video monitor that logs a transcript for parents and taxpayers to review every word that is uttered by these government employees. We have as much right to see how our money is being used to educate our children as we do to see how accused criminals are being tried. Public education should be on the public record.

I love your suggestion. That is what I have suggested at the college level. The videos should be kept for at least 2 weeks, so that parents can request them if they have complaints. Just the fear of a parent complaint, and the video to back it up, should put at least a small amount of proper fear into the leftist teachers.

28 posted on 11/04/2005 9:26:52 AM PST by DeweyCA
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To: Right Brother

I agree. I homeschool my child because the schools are a mess. but most do not and we will eventually lose. WE need to be fighting this as actively as if our kids were in the school system.

those kids indoctrinated to day will soon be voters.

that said, how do we fight this? where do I start ?


29 posted on 11/04/2005 9:30:05 AM PST by stompk
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To: DeweyCA
“How does the seal look?” she would intone. “Sad!” they would echo.

And they wonder why kids can't read? Clearly, the priorities of teachers are in the wrong place.

30 posted on 11/04/2005 9:31:15 AM PST by T. Buzzard Trueblood ("(I've had) too many wives and taken too many drugs." -Ambassador Joe Wilson)
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To: eraser2005

***How you word the question is very important....***

In THIS, case it's only important if you're a nit picker.


31 posted on 11/04/2005 10:07:21 AM PST by kitkat (Democrat=Socialist=Communist. Hillary the RED)
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To: Beelzebubba
Every public school classroom or auditorium where children are instructed should have an audio/video monitor that logs a transcript for parents and taxpayers to review every word that is uttered by these government employees.

My daughter's pre-school installed little web-cams in all the classrooms. Parents could log onto the website and get the feed from any internet capable computer. The cameras had no audio and would send out an updated 300x400 picture every 20 seconds, so they were pretty useless for monitoring what was going on.

But, I gotta tell you, the attitude of the teachers took a 180 overnight. All of a sudden they were the best behaved, most on-the-ball bunch you ever met in your whole life. Everybody was working all the time and happy. The difference in the school was like night and day.

And that was with cheap piddly little web-cams. If you wired a public school with full motion cameras with audio, it would completely transform the educational landscape.

This is a great idea, and it's cheap to do. Well, not so cheap if we put in the hands of the educational bureaucracy. But, done right, it need not cost a lot of money.

32 posted on 11/04/2005 11:02:47 AM PST by gridlock (Nature started the fight for survival, and now she wants to quit because she's losing... Monty Burns)
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To: gridlock
If you wired a public school with full motion cameras with audio, it would completely transform the educational landscape.


Heck, all you'd need would be the audio, and maybe a grainy image update every 10 seconds, just to capture the blackboard.

Heck, an enlightened private school ought to do this, and offer it for free or a limited subscription to home schoolers. Maybe the Catholic education exeablishment could put their very best teachers on the web, to reach homeschoolers.
33 posted on 11/04/2005 11:19:58 AM PST by Atlas Sneezed (Your FRiendly FReeper Patent Attorney)
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To: Chewie84
This article is about a specific instance of left-facism in British teachers unions, but it goes into a more general discussion of treason and leftist intellectuals:

Britain's new Treason of the Clerks

34 posted on 11/04/2005 11:38:54 AM PST by samtheman
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To: gridlock
A good idea, but knowing the left, they'll probably hide behind the invented right to privacy.
parents "have no due process or privacy right to override the determinations of public schools as to the information to which their children will be exposed while enrolled as students."
-=link=-
35 posted on 11/04/2005 12:32:01 PM PST by Dataman (" conservatives are retards"- PatrickHenry)
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To: DeweyCA

Exactly.

When I pulled out my buck folding hunter to help my 6 year old granddaughter carve a pumpkin, she gasped and said officer (some woman's name) told us to tell our parents that they shouldn't have that kind of knife around the house. Then she went on to tell me that guns are bad and people shouldn't have them because they are dangerous.

When she gets older I will have to have a serious talk with her.


36 posted on 11/04/2005 12:37:18 PM PST by ZULU (Fear the government which fears your guns. God, guts, and guns made America great.)
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To: Beelzebubba

I sent an email to David Horowitz's organization suggesting that they push for students to, at least, have the right to record all of their classes. Again, I hope that it would be a little bit of "the fear of God" (or fear of a lawsuit) into the teachers. I also liked your idea of you using top teachers to circumvent public schools. I think that technology will soon be changing the need for the big brick-and-mortar of both colleges and elementary and secondary schools. Add in some educational vouchers and we could have a true revolution in education.


37 posted on 11/04/2005 1:26:48 PM PST by DeweyCA
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To: Aquinasfan

Yup, we homeschooled too! I am on my knees daily thanking God for the opportunity. The more I see, the more it turns my stomach.


38 posted on 11/04/2005 5:50:52 PM PST by bboop (Facts are your friend.)
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To: stompk

Um, where did I get it? That may not be the exact title. It's down at the office, I can get it Monday and post it (where?). To your mail.


39 posted on 11/04/2005 5:55:38 PM PST by bboop (Facts are your friend.)
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To: starfish923

Thank you. It is a high calling that I am pleased to have. Bboop, tho -- it's on my business cards and everything ....


40 posted on 11/04/2005 5:57:21 PM PST by bboop (Facts are your friend.)
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