America's "New Communism" at its best

fatdaddycool

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The nation?s public school curriculum may be in for a Texas-sized overhaul, if the Lone Star state?s influential recommendations for changes to social studies, economics and history textbooks are fully ratified later this spring. Last Friday, in a 10-to-5 vote split right down party lines, the Texas State Board of Education approved some controversial right-leaning alterations to what most students in the state?and by extension, in much of the rest of the country?will be studying as received historical and social-scientific wisdom. After a public comment period, the board will vote on final recommendations in May.

Don McElroy, who leads the board?s powerful seven-member social conservative bloc, explained that the measure is a way of "adding balance" in the classroom, since "academia is skewed too far to the left." And the board's critics have labeled the move an attempt by political "extremists" to "promote their ideology."

The revised standards have far-reaching implications because Texas is a huge market leader in the school-textbook industry. The enormous print run for Texas textbooks leaves most districts in other states adopting the same course materials, so that the Texas School Board effectively spells out requirements for 80 percent of the nation?s textbook market. That means, for instance, that schools in left-leaning states like Oregon and Vermont could soon be teaching from textbooks that are short on references to Ted Kennedy but long on references to conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly.

Here are some of the other signal shifts that the Texas Board endorsed last Friday:

- A greater emphasis on ?the conservative resurgence of the 1980s and 1990s.? This means not only increased favorable mentions of Schlafly, the founder of the antifeminist Eagle Forum, but also more discussion of the Moral Majority, the Heritage Foundation, the National Rifle Association and Newt Gingrich's Contract With America.

- A reduced scope for Latino history and culture. A proposal to expand such material in recognition of Texas? rapidly growing Hispanic population was defeated in last week?s meetings?provoking one board member, Mary Helen Berlanga, to storm out in protest. "They can just pretend this is a white America and Hispanics don?t exist," she said of her conservative colleagues on the board. "They are rewriting history, not only of Texas but of the United States and the world."

- Changes in specific terminology. Terms that the board?s conservative majority felt were ideologically loaded are being retired. Hence, ?imperialism? as a characterization of America?s modern rise to world power is giving way to ?expansionism,? and ?capitalism? is being dropped in economic material, in favor of the more positive expression ?free market.? (The new recommendations stress the need for favorable depictions of America?s economic superiority across the board.)


- A more positive portrayal of Cold War anticommunism. Disgraced anticommunist crusader Joseph McCarthy, the Wisconsin senator censured by the Senate for his aggressive targeting of individual citizens and their civil liberties on the basis of their purported ties to the Communist Party, comes in for partial rehabilitation. The board recommends that textbooks refer to documents published since McCarthy?s death and the fall of the Soviet bloc that appear to show expansive Soviet designs to undermine the U.S. government.

- Language that qualifies the legacy of 1960s liberalism. Great Society programs such as Title IX?which provides for equal gender access to educational resources?and affirmative action, intended to remedy historic workplace discrimination against African-Americans, are said to have created adverse ?unintended consequences? in the curriculum?s preferred language.


- Thomas Jefferson no longer included among writers influencing the nation?s intellectual origins. Jefferson, a deist who helped pioneer the legal theory of the separation of church and state, is not a model founder in the board?s judgment. Among the intellectual forerunners to be highlighted in Jefferson?s place: medieval Catholic philosopher St. Thomas Aquinas, Puritan theologian John Calvin and conservative British law scholar William Blackstone. Heavy emphasis is also to be placed on the founding fathers having been guided by strict Christian beliefs.

- Excision of recent third-party presidential candidates Ralph Nader (from the left) and Ross Perot (from the centrist Reform Party). Meanwhile, the recommendations include an entry listing Confederate General Stonewall Jackson as a role model for effective leadership, and a statement from Confederate President Jefferson Davis accompanying a speech by U.S. President Abraham Lincoln.

- A recommendation to include country and western music among the nation?s important cultural movements. The popular black genre of hip-hop is being dropped from the same list.

None of these proposals has met with final ratification from the board?that vote will come in May, after a prolonged period of public comment on the recommendations. Still, the conservatives clearly feel like the bulk of their work is done; after the 120-page draft was finalized last Friday, Republican board member Terri Leo declared that it was "world class" and "exceptional."

?Brett Michael Dykes is a national affairs writer for Yahoo! News

Not only is this an afront to the very foundation on which this great nation was built but it is effectively shackles free thinking and true education. This borders on Communism. One of the books that I had to read in grade school was "Animal Farm" authored by George Orwell. It seems that the "pigs" such as Napolean are running the farm again. What a sad sad state we are in where traitors to the very foundation of equality and freedom are being glorified and idolized. Jefferson Davis was an insignificant man in the large scope of things compared to Thomas Jefferson. What a tragedy.
 

hedgehog

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Oct 30, 2003
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The nation?s public school curriculum may be in for a Texas-sized overhaul, if the Lone Star state?s influential recommendations for changes to social studies, economics and history textbooks are fully ratified later this spring. Last Friday, in a 10-to-5 vote split right down party lines, the Texas State Board of Education approved some controversial right-leaning alterations to what most students in the state?and by extension, in much of the rest of the country?will be studying as received historical and social-scientific wisdom. After a public comment period, the board will vote on final recommendations in May.

Don McElroy, who leads the board?s powerful seven-member social conservative bloc, explained that the measure is a way of "adding balance" in the classroom, since "academia is skewed too far to the left." And the board's critics have labeled the move an attempt by political "extremists" to "promote their ideology."

The revised standards have far-reaching implications because Texas is a huge market leader in the school-textbook industry. The enormous print run for Texas textbooks leaves most districts in other states adopting the same course materials, so that the Texas School Board effectively spells out requirements for 80 percent of the nation?s textbook market. That means, for instance, that schools in left-leaning states like Oregon and Vermont could soon be teaching from textbooks that are short on references to Ted Kennedy but long on references to conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly.

Here are some of the other signal shifts that the Texas Board endorsed last Friday:

- A greater emphasis on ?the conservative resurgence of the 1980s and 1990s.? This means not only increased favorable mentions of Schlafly, the founder of the antifeminist Eagle Forum, but also more discussion of the Moral Majority, the Heritage Foundation, the National Rifle Association and Newt Gingrich's Contract With America.

- A reduced scope for Latino history and culture. A proposal to expand such material in recognition of Texas? rapidly growing Hispanic population was defeated in last week?s meetings?provoking one board member, Mary Helen Berlanga, to storm out in protest. "They can just pretend this is a white America and Hispanics don?t exist," she said of her conservative colleagues on the board. "They are rewriting history, not only of Texas but of the United States and the world."

- Changes in specific terminology. Terms that the board?s conservative majority felt were ideologically loaded are being retired. Hence, ?imperialism? as a characterization of America?s modern rise to world power is giving way to ?expansionism,? and ?capitalism? is being dropped in economic material, in favor of the more positive expression ?free market.? (The new recommendations stress the need for favorable depictions of America?s economic superiority across the board.)


- A more positive portrayal of Cold War anticommunism. Disgraced anticommunist crusader Joseph McCarthy, the Wisconsin senator censured by the Senate for his aggressive targeting of individual citizens and their civil liberties on the basis of their purported ties to the Communist Party, comes in for partial rehabilitation. The board recommends that textbooks refer to documents published since McCarthy?s death and the fall of the Soviet bloc that appear to show expansive Soviet designs to undermine the U.S. government.

- Language that qualifies the legacy of 1960s liberalism. Great Society programs such as Title IX?which provides for equal gender access to educational resources?and affirmative action, intended to remedy historic workplace discrimination against African-Americans, are said to have created adverse ?unintended consequences? in the curriculum?s preferred language.


- Thomas Jefferson no longer included among writers influencing the nation?s intellectual origins. Jefferson, a deist who helped pioneer the legal theory of the separation of church and state, is not a model founder in the board?s judgment. Among the intellectual forerunners to be highlighted in Jefferson?s place: medieval Catholic philosopher St. Thomas Aquinas, Puritan theologian John Calvin and conservative British law scholar William Blackstone. Heavy emphasis is also to be placed on the founding fathers having been guided by strict Christian beliefs.

- Excision of recent third-party presidential candidates Ralph Nader (from the left) and Ross Perot (from the centrist Reform Party). Meanwhile, the recommendations include an entry listing Confederate General Stonewall Jackson as a role model for effective leadership, and a statement from Confederate President Jefferson Davis accompanying a speech by U.S. President Abraham Lincoln.

- A recommendation to include country and western music among the nation?s important cultural movements. The popular black genre of hip-hop is being dropped from the same list.

None of these proposals has met with final ratification from the board?that vote will come in May, after a prolonged period of public comment on the recommendations. Still, the conservatives clearly feel like the bulk of their work is done; after the 120-page draft was finalized last Friday, Republican board member Terri Leo declared that it was "world class" and "exceptional."

?Brett Michael Dykes is a national affairs writer for Yahoo! News

Not only is this an afront to the very foundation on which this great nation was built but it is effectively shackles free thinking and true education. This borders on Communism. One of the books that I had to read in grade school was "Animal Farm" authored by George Orwell. It seems that the "pigs" such as Napolean are running the farm again. What a sad sad state we are in where traitors to the very foundation of equality and freedom are being glorified and idolized. Jefferson Davis was an insignificant man in the large scope of things compared to Thomas Jefferson. What a tragedy.

another point of view other than liberal academia, omg...gotta love the great state of Texas:00hour
 

bleedingpurple

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Mar 23, 2008
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Where it is real F ing COLD
You mean the Northerners that VOTED for Al Franken?

You guys are really Smart, aren't you?

LMFAO!!!


HEE HAWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW


:mj07:

Yep and those are the same ones who voted for "jesse." I am just saying that many Northern people can't understand people like Hedgy. A rebel flag waver, who celebrates Confederates day, supporting a group who was fighting a civil war for what the North to believe was for fucked up reasons ANd if you read some of his posts he still supports the confederate efforts. Now to take Thomas Jefferson out of text books? That in my opinion is just IGNORANT.
 

The Sponge

Registered User
Forum Member
Aug 24, 2006
17,263
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You mean the Northerners that VOTED for Al Franken?

You guys are really Smart, aren't you?

LMFAO!!!


HEE HAWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW


:mj07:


Didn't he go to Harvard? I know it isn't quite liberty college but it still is pretty nice college. By the way Skully the guy he beat was so far up the ass of all those contractors stealing in Iraq but im sure u never knew that. Did Perry graduate from anywhere? I thought he was taken Texas and leaving the united states? Then he trashed the stimulist bill and out of the other side of his mouth grab those funds like a bandit in the night.:shrug:
 

Skulnik

Truth Teller
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Mar 30, 2007
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When parents object to left-wing inclusions and omissions, claiming they should have something to say about what their own children are being taught and how their taxpayers' money is spent, they are usually vilified as "book burners" and belittled as uneducated primitives who should allow the "experts" to decide. The self-identified "experts" are alumni of liberal teachers colleges and/or members of a left-wing teachers union.

In most states, the liberal education establishment enjoys total control over the state's board of education, department of education and curriculum committees. Texas is different -- the Texas State Board of Education is elected, and the people (even including parents!) have a voice.

Texas is uniquely important in textbook content because the state of Texas is the largest single purchaser of textbooks. Publishers can hardly afford to print different versions for other states, so Texas curriculum standards have nationwide influence.

The review of social studies curriculum (covering U.S. government, American history, world history and economics) comes up every 10 years, and 2010 is one of those years. The unelected education "experts" proposed their history revisions, such as eliminating Independence Day, Christopher Columbus, Thomas Edison, Daniel Boone and Neil Armstrong, and replacing Christmas with Diwali.

After a public outcry, the SBOE responded with common-sense improvements. Thomas Edison, the world's greatest inventor, will be again included in the narrative of American history.

Schoolchildren will no longer be misled into believing that capitalism and the free market are dirty words and that America has an unjust economic system. Instead, they will learn how the free-enterprise system gave our nation and the world so much that is good for so many people.

Liberals don't like the concept of American exceptionalism. The liberals want to teach what's wrong with America (masquerading under the code word "social justice") instead of what's right and successful. The SBOE voted to include describing how American exceptionalism is based on values that are unique and different from those of other nations.

The SBOE specified that teaching about the Bill of Rights should include a reference to the right to keep and bear arms. Some school curricula pretend the Second Amendment doesn't exist.

Texas curriculum standards will henceforth accurately describe the U.S. government as a "constitutional republic" rather than as a democracy. The secularists tried to remove reference to the religious basis for the founding of America, but that was voted down.

The Texas Board rejected the anti-Christian crowd's proposal to eliminate the use of B.C. and A.D. for historic dates, as in Before Christ and Anno Domini, and replace them with B.C.E., as in Before the Common Era, and C.E.

The deceptive claim that the United States was founded on a "separation of church and state" gets the ax, and rightfully so. In fact, most of the original 13 colonies were founded as Christian communities with much overlap between church and state.

History textbooks that deal with Joseph McCarthy will now be required to explain "how the later release of the Venona papers confirmed suspicions of Communist infiltration in U.S. government." The Venona papers are authentic transcripts of some 3,000 messages between the Soviet Union and its secret agents in the United States.

Discussions of economics will not be limited to the theories of Karl Marx, John Maynard Keynes and Adam Smith. Textbooks must also include Milton Friedman and Friedrich von Hayek, two champions of free-market theory.

History textbooks will now be required to cover the "unintended consequences" of Great Society legislation, affirmative action and Title IX legislation. Textbooks should also include "the conservative resurgence of the 1980s and 1990s."

Texas textbooks will now have to mention "the importance of personal responsibility for life choices" instead of blaming society for everything and expecting government to provide remedies for all social ills.

It's no secret that the people who control public schools are at war with our nation's history, culture and achievements. Since taxpayers foot the bill, it is long overdue for a state board of education to correct many textbooks myths and lies about our magnificent national heritage and achievements.

After a public comment period, a final vote on the Texas standards is expected in May.
 
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