Failing Liberty 101
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: Gross
Media Ignorance
A recent Superman
comic book has the hero saying, "I am renouncing my U.S. citizenship"
because "truth, justice, and the American way – it's not enough
anymore." Though not addressing Superman's statement, Stanford University
professor and Hoover Institution senior fellow William Damon explains
how such a vision could emerge today but not yesteryear. The explanation
is found in his article "American Amnesia," in Defining Ideas (7/1/2011),
based upon his most recent book, Failing
Liberty 101: How We Are Leaving Young Americans Unprepared for Citizenship
in a Free Society.
The National
Assessment of Educational Progress reports that only 1 in 4 high-school
seniors scored at least "proficient" in knowledge of U.S. citizenship.
Civics and history were American students' worst subjects. Professor
Damon said that for the past 10 years, his Stanford University research
team has interviewed broad cross sections of American youths about
U.S. citizenship. Here are some typical responses: "We just had
(American citizenship) the other day in history. I forget what it
was." Another said, "Being American is not really special. ... I
don't find being an American citizen very important." Another said,
"I don't want to belong to any country. It just feels like you are
obligated to this country. I don't like the whole thing of citizen.
... It's like, citizen, no citizen; it doesn't make sense to me.
It's, like, to be a good citizen – I don't know, I don't want to
be a citizen. ... It's stupid to me."
A law professor,
whom Damon leaves unnamed, shares this vision in a recent book:
"Longstanding notions of democratic citizenship are becoming obsolete.
... American identity is unsustainable in the face of globalization."
Instead of commitment to a nation-state, "loyalties ... are moving
to transnational communities defined by many different ways: by
race, ethnicity, gender, religion, age, and sexual orientation."
This law professor's vision is shared by many educators who look
to "global citizenship" as the proper aim of civics instruction,
de-emphasizing attachment to any particular country, such as the
United States, pointing out that our primary obligation should be
to the universal ideals of human rights and justice. To be patriotic
to one's own country is seen as suspect because it may turn into
a militant chauvinism or a dangerous "my country, right or wrong"
vision.
The ignorance
about our country is staggering. According to one survey, only 28
percent of students could identify the Constitution as the supreme
law of the land. Only 26 percent of students knew that the first
10 amendments to the Constitution are called the Bill of Rights.
Fewer than one-quarter of students knew that George Washington was
the first president of the United States.
Discouraging
young Americans from identifying with their country and celebrating
our traditional American quest for liberty and equal rights removes
the most powerful motivation to learn civics and U.S. history. After
all, Damon asks, "why would a student exert any effort to master
the rules of a system that the student has no respect for and no
interest in being part of? To acquire civic knowledge as well as
civic virtue, students need to care about their country." Ignorance
and possibly contempt for American values, civics and history might
help explain how someone like Barack Obama could become president
of the United States. At no other time in our history could a person
with longtime associations with people who hate our country become
president. Obama spent 20 years attending the Rev. Jeremiah Wright's
hate-filled sermons, which preached that "white folks' greed runs
a world in need," called our country the "US of KKK-A" and asked
God to "damn America." Obama's other America-hating associates include
Weather Underground Pentagon bomber William Ayers and Ayers' wife,
Bernardine Dohrn.
The fact that
Obama became president and brought openly Marxist people into his
administration doesn't say so much about him as it says about the
effects of decades of brainwashing of the American people by the
education establishment, media and the intellectual elite.
July
12, 2011
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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