My Take - Strange article, but it does ask a question
at the end that needs answering. She asks;
"Does Congress really believe that we would be better off being
governed by the staff in state departments of education or the US Department of
Education than by locally elected school boards, even if they are all informed
by the same uninformed reporters and college administrators?"
The answer is
simple. Yes they should! Parents are the ones most concerned about their
children's education and will abandon what fails and adopt what works, versus
an education that's become tremendously expensive and terribly inadequate. And
why is that? Is it because the parents and their local school board were making
all the decision or because decisions were being forced on them by the federal
government? If there's a failure here
the fault must be placed at the feet of the Department of Education, their
myrmidons at the state level and the driving force for maintaining the level of
inadequacy in public education that exists today - The teachers unions and
their members. Members, who based on the
value of the product they’re turning out, are overpriced, inadequate, underworked, under
smart, pampered and unfixable because it’s almost impossible to fire a teacher.
If the teachers of this nation were producing nuts and bolts the manufacturers
would reject them.
Are we Cambodia yet? - Laura Hollis warns against 'steel-booted certainty' of
today's speech silencers. In Roland Joffe’s 1984 film, “The Killing Fields,” we
see the Cambodian Communist revolution and its aftermath through the eyes of
Dith Pran, the film’s main character. In one iconic scene in a Khmer Rouge
re-education camp, Pran looks on while children march in a circle, fists
pumping in the air, chanting Khmer Rouge propaganda. Elsewhere, a group of
seated adults are encouraged by party leaders to admit their bourgeois pasts
and come forward. They are promised a fresh start in the “new” Cambodia. This,
of course, is a ruse; having identified themselves, they are then taken out and
shot.
Anyone who has studied history will recognize these as
signature tactics of contemporary extremist political movements, not only in
Cambodia but in North Vietnam, China, Laos, North Korea, Cuba and every
socialist republic in the former Soviet Union. Truth and inquiry are replaced
by propaganda. Education becomes indoctrination. All speech save that which has
been pre-approved is forbidden. Those with opposing viewpoints are mocked,
dehumanized and finally silenced – typically by imprisonment or death…… By way
of example, college campuses, intended to be bastions of vigorous inquiry, have
taken on a vague whiff of leftist authoritarianism……. student comments
included, “You don’t question when someone you have privilege over speaks to
you about oppression,” and “Don’t tell me what’s oppressive. I tell you; you
shut up and listen.” You can’t say “X.”
You can’t speak. You shut up. You don’t question.
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