| Why
Is the Government Printing Textbooks?
By Alan Caruba
Parents
of high school students would be well advised to look at "We
the People: The Citizen and the Constitution", a book that
is the federally mandated text for what these students learn about
the founding and fundamental principles of this nation.
I learned
about it while reading "Fed Ed: The New Federal Curriculum
and How It’s Enforced." Written by Allen Quist and published
by the Maple River Education Coalition (1402 Concordia Avenue, St.
Paul, MN 55104), it can be purchased for $15.00 by visiting www.EdWatch.org.
Quist
raises a very important question. Why, he asks, "should the
federal government be involved in authorizing and subsidizing the
publishing of a high school textbook?" All others are privately
published and compete for use in schools. But "We the People"
does not. Moreover, only one non-government organization was given
the contract, the Center for Civic Education. Since Congress did
not set up any review process for the book, there is no way to know
how accurate it is or whether it has a particular bias. Unless,
of course, you read it!
When you do, you will discover that the "self-evident
truths" of the Declaration of Independence have been magically
transformed into mere "ideas" from the eighteenth century.
The message is that they can be cast aside or changed in our times.
It gets worse, a lot worse. When this textbook looks at the Bill
of Rights, those ten amendments that are the very heart of the protections
extended to individual American citizens, insuring that government
cannot run rampant over them, neither the Second Amendment, nor
the Ninth or Tenth are even mentioned!
The Second Amendment, of course, protects the right
of citizens to bear arms. The Ninth and Tenth are called "reserved
rights" and require the government to recognize that "The
powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively,
or to the people." The United States is a republic composed
of separate and sovereign republics. The ultimate government of
the United States is the people!
Naturally, Quist asks, "How can a textbook
teach the meaning of constitutional government without teaching
the Ninth and Tenth Amendments?" and he answers, "It
cannot be done."
Instead,
this vile and cancerous textbook subverts our Constitutional system
by teaching students that they are members of a "global village"
and are, in fact, "world citizens." As Quist notes, "The
book is really propaganda. It is social engineering, not education.
It is decidedly anti-American and anti-freedom. It is designed to
indoctrinate our citizens into being willing to give away our national
sovereignty and freedom, and to accept the establishment of world
government, instead."
"We have met the enemy and they is us,"
said Pogo. Well, the enemy is definitely among us and definitely
in our high school classrooms. It is your child’s curriculum
and it is time to demand this book’s removal by writing to
your congressmen, your state department of education, and your local
school board.
Let me make this as clear as I can. The federal
government has no business in determining the curriculum of this
nation’s schools! It especially has no business underwriting
the publication of a book that deliberately subverts key elements
of the US Constitution.
Alan
Caruba writes a weekly commentary, "Warning Signs", posted
on the Internet site of The National Anxiety Center (www.anxietycenter.com).
|