Public School Powder Kegs

Bill Haymin
By: Malcolm A. Kline, January 29, 2007

Despite the touchy-feely pronouncements of their proponents, America's Public Schools have become battlegrounds over divisive issues that divide an already divided nation even further. "Indeed, rather than bringing people together, public schooling often forces people of disparate backgrounds and beliefs into political combat," Neal McCluskey writes in a study for the Cato Institute. "This paper tracks almost 150 such incidents in the 2005–06 school year alone."

"Whether over the teaching of evolution, the content of library books, religious expression in the schools, or several other common points of contention, conflict was constant in American public education last year."

As McCluskey lays out his data, drawn from media accounts, his information shows that the propensity of schools to erupt into civil conflicts is usually related to the degree to which those institutions have strayed from the teaching of basic skills and knowledge. When they are taught, algebra, grammar and the laws of gravity usually don't lead to court cases and confrontational school board meetings.

"Moreover, we found that over the last year only one state—Wyoming—appeared to have dodged divisive, values-laden school warfare, and many states suffered numerous clashes," McCluskey writes in "Why We Fight: How Public Schools Cause Social Conflict." "Even Wyoming suffered at least two such conflicts as recently as 2003."

"In all, we tracked nearly 150 values-driven public school conflicts over the past year." In order, here are the "values-driven conflicts" and the number of states they play out in:

Freedom of Expression—20 states

Intelligent Design—18 states

Religion—17 states

Sex education—13 states

Multiculturalism—11 states

Homosexuality—8 states

Book banning—8 states

Mandated integration—5 states.

As you may imagine, some of these categories overlap. "Relatively homogenous Carroll County, Maryland, was also beset by a censorship controversy when, at the request of some district parents, Superintendent Charles I. Ecker pulled The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big Round Things from schools' shelves," McCluskey writes. "The award-winning book depicted such things as self-mutilation and date rape that the aggrieved parents thought inappropriate for children."

"After a great outcry from members of the community who wanted the book restored, however, Ecker consented to returning the book to high school shelves while maintaining the ban in middle schools."


Defenders of the status quo see such conflicts as not only inevitable but possibly even desirable. "In one week I got calls from a Wiccan high priestess in North Carolina, a Utah parent who wanted to know if a student could be sent home for wearing a ‘Choose the Right' t-shirt commonly associated with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and a student who wants to mount a challenge to a rule banning profanity in the student life center," Charles Haynes said at Cato.

Haynes, a senior scholar and director of education programs at the Freedom Forum First Amendment Center, spoke on the same panel as McCluskey at Cato. Unlike McCluskey, he sees progress in the resolution of such conflicts.

"Twenty years ago, public schools almost became religion-free zones," Haynes said. "Today most textbooks mention religion."

"We've got hundreds to thousands of religious groups meeting on school property." What Haynes does not mention is that, despite the accomplishments of his group, most of those gains have come from the efforts of conservative religious public interest law firms such as the Liberty Counsel and the Alliance Defense Fund.

But if Haynes is taking too rosy a view of public education, his perspective is more realistic than that of Gerald Bracey, who has been affiliated with both George Mason University and Arizona State University. "The two goals of public schools are to transmit the prevailing culture and to transform it," Bracey told the audience at Cato.

Apparently, many parents have not updated Bracey. He also refuses to acknowledge either a drop in standardized test scores or an explosion in government funding that both occurred over the past forty years.

"Well, Prince Edward County in Virginia shut down their schools in response to desegregation and their scores definitely went down," he told me when I questioned the panel about the apparently inverse relationship between educational outcomes and subsidized inputs.

"I think you can say that federal funding leads to no academic gain," McCluskey said. Okay, I will.

Malcolm A. Kline is the executive director of Accuracy in Academia.

If you would like to comment on this article, please e-mail mal.kline@academia.org Copyright 2007

By Bill Haymin, 2007
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Bill Haymin

Because of Bill's increasing concerns about the serious, sobering and perilous times we are living and being manipulated into, his intentions will be mainly devoted (as he has been) to posting articles that will alert, inform, expose, and wake up a sleeping reading public. This involves the issues that are not covered, or not covered truthfully by the "National News Media." "In the time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." - George Orwell.

To warn the public of the present and coming danger of permitting the federalizing of local police departments across our nation is of the utmost importance, if allowed to continue it will result in the planned replication of the infamous "Nazi storm troopers" reminiscent of Hitler´s Germany in recent past history.

Also of grave concern is the agenda of "Sustainable Development."

"It is the official policy of every state government, and nearly every city, town and county in the nation. But, I warn you, accepting the perception that Sustainable Development is simply good environmental stewardship is a serious and dangerous mistake…
Sustainable Development is the process by which America is being reorganized around a central principle of state collectivism using the environment as bait...

…Sustainable Development calls for changing the very infrastructure of the nation, away from private ownership and control of property to nothing short of central planning of the entire economy…
…The Sustainablists insist that society be transformed into feudal-like governance by making nature the central organizing principle for our economy and society"…

Feudalism is the power over slaves.

…"According to Sustainablist doctrine, it is a social injustice for some to have prosperity if others do not. It is a social injustice to keep our borders closed. It is a social injustice for some to be bosses and others to be merely workers.

Social justice is a major premise of Sustainable Development: Another word for social justice, by the way, is Socialism. Karl Marx was the first to coin the phrase "social justice." Some officials try to pretend that Sustainable Development is just a local effort to protect the environment -- just your local leaders putting together a local vision for the community. Then ask your local officials how it is possible that the exact language and tactics for implementation of Sustainable Development are being used in nearly every city around the globe from Lewiston, Maine to Singapore. Local indeed…" Tom DeWeese www.americanpolicy.org

…"Are you starting to see the pattern behind Cap and Trade, the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, and all of those commercials you´re forced to watch about the righteousness of Going Green? They are all part of the enforcement of Sustainable Development…" Maurice Strong, Secretary General of the UN´s Rio Earth Summit in 1992

"…The politically based environmental movement provides Sustainablists camouflage as they work to transform the American systems of government, justice, and economics. It is a masterful mixture of socialism (with its top down control of the tools of the economy) and fascism (where property is owned in name only – with no control). Sustainable Development is the worst of both the left and the right. It is not liberal, nor is it conservative. It is a new kind of tyranny that, if not stopped, will surely lead us to a new Dark Ages of pain and misery yet unknown to mankind." Tom DeWeese

"A prudent person foresees the danger ahead and takes precautions; the simpleton goes blindly on and suffers the consequences." - Proverbs. 22:3 N.L.T