President Obama to Read My Pet Schools to America's
Students on Tuesday, September 8
by
Gary North
by Gary North
Recently by Gary North: Which
Flation Will Get Us?
You may remember
My Pet Goat. President Bush read this book to a class of
third graders on September 11, 2001. Then he was told about the
attack on the first tower. He kept on reading the book to the class.
Obama will
deliver one speech for children ages 5 to 18. It must communicate
effectively even inspirationally to kindergarten students
and legal adults taking Advanced Placement, college-level classes.
Can you imagine
Karl Rove telling Bush to read My Pet Goat to a combined
class of kindergarteners and calculus students? They called Rove
"Bush's brain." What should we call the dimwit who dreamed
up this scheme?
I have this
vision of how the speech will begin.
Hello, boys
and girls. My name is President Obama. That is because I am the
President of the United States. Do you know what the President
does? He gives speeches like this one. He controls the use of
nuclear weapons. He tries to look important, when the whole world
knows that Nancy Pelosi is running the show, which is why I have
to give a speech to Congress tomorrow night. She told me I needed
to get front-and-center behind her health insurance bill.
Today, I
am going to talk to about a government program called public education.
It costs a trillion dollars a year. Do you know what a trillion
dollars is, boys and girls? I mean, what a trillion dollars are?
That is the size of my administration's budget deficit every seven
months. But this will be down to only $900 billion next year and
every year thereafter until 2019. We are fighting waste in Washington.
And so on,
for 20 minutes.
Bush was widely
criticized for not responding to a national crisis rather than continuing
to read My Pet Goat. But nobody asked this: "What was
the President of the United States doing in a third grade classroom
reading a book to kids?"
It was a photo
op to show that the President was behind tax-funded education. And
why not? The public school system is the central institution in
every modern nation by which the government secures control over
the voters, beginning at age 5 or 6. More than any other institution,
the public schools set the terms of discourse on politics, beginning
with this: "Tax-funded education is the right of every child.
Anyone who says otherwise is a threat to the social order."
Conservatives
are upset about having the President speak to millions of students.
Isn't this partisan politics? Of course. But aren't the schools
supposed to be bipartisan? They are bipartisan. They secure the
population for at least 12 years for a bipartisan agenda, namely,
the expansion of state control. Both parties favor this.
In 1963, a
conservative theologian, R. J. Rushdoony, and a liberal church historian,
Sidney E. Mead, had books published in which they identified the
public school system as America's only established church. Rushdoony
opposed the schools; Mead favored them. Rushdoony's book was titled
The
Messianic Character of American Education. Mead's was titled
The
Lively Experiment.
The problem
is not the fact that Obama wants to position himself as a defender
of America's schools. That goes without saying. The problem is that
the schools are political indoctrination centers. That has been
their purpose ever since the 1830's, when Massachusetts stopped
funding the Congregational churches and set up tax-funded schools.
He will speak
on the need for education, meaning more tax-funded schools. That
sounds innocuous enough. Well, it isn't. Better that he should speak
on health care. That would enrage conservatives. They would see
through this charade. What threatens our freedom is the charade
that tax-funded education isn't political to the core.
Read
the rest of the article
September
7, 2009
Gary
North [send him mail]
is the author of Mises
on Money. Visit http://www.garynorth.com.
He is also the author of a free 20-volume series, An
Economic Commentary on the Bible.
Copyright ©
2009 Gary North
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