A Public School Agenda? Of Course!
by Jim Fedako
by Jim Fedako
DIGG THIS
Let me be honest
and forthright: I have an agenda I always do.
You can be
certain that I am typing with a purpose in mind. I am typing in
order to satisfy a much sought-after end. My end my reason is
the hope that this article will influence a few, turning them toward
the path of liberty.
Are you shocked
or offended that I have an agenda? Is it wrong no, is it necessarily
evil when a man has an agenda; when a man has a given end for which
he will use some means to obtain? Certainly not. We all have agendas
that guide our actions. And we accept the presence of our own personal
agendas without question or concern.
When discussing
the evils of government-run education, many folks say that I have
a personal agenda. Well, no kidding. If I wake in the morning, I
have an agenda. The rhetorical use of the word agenda in
a pejorative sense implies that others do not have agendas this
being a false assertion. Those folks have at least one agenda that
gets them out of bed in the morning: to continue forcing me to pay
for their government school nonsense.
So why it is
that many nay, most Americans take offense to the idea that
public schools have an agenda? Why is it that folks who recognize
their own agendas cannot recognize that the individuals running
the school system have agendas too? Why cant these folks accept
that those who fought some 150 years ago for the adoption of government-run
schools had an evil agenda? Or that many today use government schools
for vile intentions? Why not? Yes, why not, indeed?
The reason
is twofold: The first is that the prime end of government-run education
is graduates who support the system. This is not some hidden agenda
it is right out in the open. This publicly lauded end is termed
citizenship and a good citizen always supports the so-called
public good of government education. When the schools say that our
goal is to educate citizens, you can be certain that they do
not mean citizens who question the state or its bureaucracies and
unions.
Good citizens
believe that teachers and administrators, as government employees,
know best. Even if the material is enough to raise hairs, the good
citizen trusts the schools. And, should a parent begin to question
the schools, the group the collective consisting of neighbors,
friends, etc. applies increasing pressure to bring the recalcitrant
back in line back to being a good citizen.
The second
reason is that anyone seeking to manipulate and indoctrinate the
youth can find no better means than a system of mandatory education.
This is true whether the purpose is to extend and enhance the coercive
power of government or to pollute young minds with perverse nonsense.
It is also true for any other goal, no matter how nefarious or seemingly
benign. The schools are the agent of change.
Therefore,
it is no wonder that the majority supports government schools.
Moreover, if
your goal is to create citizens who support the collective, and
you are not willing to take up arms, you adopt a Gramscian approach
and slowly destroy the institutions of free association of liberty
and freedom. You attack the family, the church, etc., in a roundabout
way. You employ the strategy of the indirect approach you indoctrinate
the youth. By doing so, you break the bond of parent and child without
resorting to loud confrontations and street fighting. You simply
use the classroom to define the state and its minions as maternal
and paternal figures. Then, you sit back and allow subsequent generations
educated by the state to chip away at the bedrock institutions
over time. Sure, you have the occasional pitched fight, but these
only serve as feints covering your flanking maneuvers. Your war
is not one of attrition; it is one of subversion and time.
The conservative
claims a liberal bias in education; they claim a liberal agenda.
They are right. However, the conservatives only propose to force
their bias on the liberals. The conservatives also have an agenda.
Both groups seek to use government, and both are winning and losing
at the same time.
The issue is
no longer individual versus the collective. The issue is now who
has the power to educate and indoctrinate. Despite their rhetoric,
most conservatives no longer stand for individual rights. In fact,
these conservatives quickly drop the individual and champion the
collective every time someone questions their cherished history.
An evening listening to AM talk radio will prove that point: Liberals
are teaching our children that Lincoln wasnt an American hero!
That he didnt stand for liberty! Those folks are un-American!
The conservative
solution is for the government schools to force-feed conservative
mythology to every parents child, all in the name of liberty.
Of course,
the essence of the current liberal worldview is also the collective
the collective of Prussia and Bismarck, along with that of Marx,
etc. It is a vision that easily melds with the state and its schools.
And it is a vision that is not all that different from the conservatives'.
While their respective messages are not the same, both groups subscribe
to the state as the means and the collective as the ends.
I asked this
question above: Is it wrong no, is it necessarily evil when
a man has an agenda; when a man has a given end for which he will
use some means to obtain? I answered in the negative. However,
I need to return to that response once more. A man can employ any
means that does not violate the property rights of others. Therefore,
he cannot invade your property to state his message. In addition,
he cannot use force to make you pay for his message either. Other
than those two rules, everything else is fair game.
Nevertheless,
the so-called public schools violate both of those rules. Government
has first claim to your children this being true even if you home
school and will invade your property to deliver its message in
the form of state-mandated curriculum and exams. Additionally, government
and its schools have first claim to your income your property.
Their means is one of evil, as it is a means backed by government
the social apparatus of coercion and compulsion (Mises).
Yes, I have
an agenda, and so does government, its schools, and associated minions.
Mine no, ours is an agenda of liberty and peace while theirs is
one of violence and control. Since we do not seek the violence of
government to win the day, we have to educate to see our agenda
through. We have much work left, but at the very least, we have
the follies of government to use as our fool.
September
23, 2008
Jim
Fedako [send him mail] is a
homeschooling father of five who lives in Lewis Center, OH, and
maintains a blog: Anti-Positivist.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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