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Public Education: The Compulsion to Control

Since the promoters of compulsory education do not have history,
decency, common sense, and certainly not educational achievement on their side,
force is the only way such activists can achieve their goal...

The compulsory public education of America's children represents the bad fruit of allowing religion to influence secular government, and interferes substantially in the personal liberties of parents. The freedom of conscience won through much suffering by the Separatists such as the Pilgrims in Plymouth and Roger Williams in Rhode Island, and forged into law in the U.S. Constitution, is quickly being eroded in these modem times. At one time parents were still free to pass on the knowledge and beliefs that they thought best for their own children, until organized religion in America, with its strong governmental influence, brought in the concept of compulsory education. Eventually, taxes were forced upon every citizen to pay for this education, along with state control over what would be taught.

State-controlled education leaves the parents no control over what the state uniformly and unalterably teaches all the children regardless of the religious or cultural values of the individual parents. This substantial interference in the personal liberties of parents overrides the very personal choices of what goes into their children by example and by indoctrination. This is just one example of the bad fruit of allowing religion to influence secular government.

There is a fundamental Christian concept underlying the entire structure of state-controlled education that may surprise you. In fact, many of its most ardent champions would deny even being religious, let alone being guilty of advocating one of the most well-known and least-liked of Christian doctrines — the total depravity of man. The assumption is that parents are corrupt, easily tending to be abusive, unreliable, and therefore needing to be watched over. James Carter, a Massachusetts legislator, wrote the following in 1826. It was part of his ultimately successful campaign to pass compulsory education laws. In speaking of children, he writes:

"Their whole education is drawn from parental examples, which are not always the best, and are often times the most corrupt; and derived from the influence of surrounding society, which, all will acknowledge, contains abundantly enough of depravity to corrupt the propensities and pervert the tender principles of a child."[1]

Forty years earlier, Dr. Benjamin Rush, a prominent Christian, statesman, and physician, had written towards the same end, describing mankind in brute-like terms:

"Man is naturally an ungovernable animal; when we add the restraints of ecclesiastical to those of domestic and civil government, we produce in him the highest degrees of order and virtue.. Our schools of learning, by producing one general and uniform system of education, will render the mass of the people more homogeneous and thereby fit them more easily for uniform and peaceable government... Our country includes family, friends, and property, and should be preferred to them all. Let our pupil be taught that he does not belong to himself, but that he is public property. I consider it as possible to turn men into republican machines."[2]

Carter's and Rush's explicit goals were social change and social control. They speak approvingly of the homogenization of mankind. The public school system was created to achieve this goal.

This deep-seated view of the ineptitude, if not depravity of parents (people like you and me) is therefore shared, as a core value, between groups that are today seen as fiercely opposing forces in society: socially conservative Christians and socially liberal family "protection" and "planning" agencies and child welfare advocates. Of the latter, Paul Roberts writes to the parents of America:

"If you want to avoid ruin, understand that "child advocates' have succeeded in convincing school teachers, doctors, your neighbors — just about anyone who sees your child — that three out of four parents are child abusers."[3]

The Christian forerunners of compulsory education, like Carter and Rush, as well as the advocates of the modern welfare state, do not explain how teachers or social workers or foster parents escape this general depravity. They assume that educated professionals are better suited to the care and training of children than parents. In saying this, they are actually attempting to set up a new social order. It is not hard to foresee the day when such powers in society will find common cause as they realize how advantageous the other is to their shared goals.[4]

However, proponents of compulsory education have neither history, decency, common sense, nor educational achievement on their side. It is an astonishing fact that in the two centuries of America's history preceding compulsory education, America's children were better educated, by every fundamental measure, than they have been since. As you consider this, know that the U. S. Supreme Court has already defined what those measures are, in ways that may surprise you. In 1972, in the case of Wisconsin v. Yoder,[5] the Court identified the goals of compulsory education laws as:

  • Minimize the danger of child labor;
  • Prepare children for meaningful occupations so that they will not become a public charge;
  • Prepare children to exercise the responsibilities of citizenship.

That the compulsory educational system of America has failed radically on its second goal is all too clear from the emphasis that has been placed on welfare reform in America for the past thirty years. How has it done on fulfilling its third goal, to prepare children to exercise the responsibilities of citizenship? Let's compare the new system of state-controlled education with the freer, public, private, and parentally controlled, non-compulsory system of education that preceded it.

The famous French observer of American life, Alexis De Tocqueville, who traveled the United States extensively in 1831-1832, made the following amazing observation about education in America twenty years before the first compulsory education laws:

"The mass of those possessing an understanding of public affairs, a knowledge of laws and precedents, a feeling for the best interests of the nation, and the faculty of understanding them, is greater in America than anyplace in the world."[6]

A century and a half after education was made compulsory, Curtis Gans, director of the Committee for the Study of the American Electorate, would say before the November 7 election,

"Young people no longer study current events or get tested on them... A large majority don't discuss politics and a large minority are civicly illiterate."[7]

De Tocqueville would not be able to repeat his words today would he?

And lastly, what of the traditionally stated goals of public education, "reading, writing, and arithmetic"? In 1800 DuPont de Nemours was commissioned by President Thomas Jefferson to survey education in America. He could happily report to Jefferson that:

"Most young Americans... can read, write, and cipher. Not more than four in a thousand are unable to write legibly — even neatly..."[8]

Four in a thousand who can't read and write translates into 99.6% who can! And this was 52 years before the first compulsory education laws. De Tocqueville especially praised the citizens of New England:

"There has never been under the sun a people as enlightened as the population of the north of the United States. Because of their education they are more strong, more skillful, more capable of governing themselves and understanding their liberty; that much is undeniable."[9]

This being the situation, it may reasonably be asked, "What problem was compulsory education imposed upon America to fix?" It would seem as though something needs to be found to fix the solution.

According to the famous article, "Johnny Still Can't Read," estimates in 1981 of the numbers of people who were "functionally illiterate" are truly astonishing:

"…those who cannot read a want ad, bus schedule, or label on a medicine bottle — run as high as 25 million; another 34 million are just barely capable of simple reading tasks."[10]

So these people can barely read, and they cannot do what the Americans De Tocqueville saw in 1832 could do. They cannot govern themselves. They cannot even take care of themselves. They need, even demand, that the government help them. They certainly do not understand their liberties, or they never would have handed over the education of their children to such a foundationally flawed, corrupt, and failing system as compulsory public education!

So why does it stay in place, besides the obviously self-serving power of teachers' unions? Gene I. Maeroff, education writer for the New York Times, cautions, "Make no mistake. Schools have been viewed by Congress primarily as instruments of social change." Therefore, as home-schooling advocate Helen Hegener writes,

"The benevolent teacher imparting knowledge to children has been replaced with a combination of psychological goals and restructured intellectual objectives. Schools have become the primary agency for eliminating social ills in this country, and for developing personal integrity and the national character. It has been a master stroke to veil this design with an inspired long-term public relations campaign that has turned parents into staunch allies by proclaiming that "Education is the key to "The Good Life!"'"[11]

The "social change" and "national character" that schools are now developing in students are actually homogenizing students' thinking to embrace a wider loyalty to the emerging one-world government and economy. This is achieved by down-playing patriotism, "dumbing down" curriculum and training students for menial jobs, says former Department of Education official Charlotte Thomson Iserbyt.[12]

Dr. Rush is prevailing, isn't he? Karl Marx failed in his efforts to produce the "new socialist man," which was supposed to come about through the removal of all the middle-class concepts about individual rights. Dr. Rush desired his "republican machines." The two are not really any different as far as human freedom and dignity are concerned. Behold your teacher, America! The victims of compulsory education will continue to be those parents who desire to pass their culture, habits, and ways of thinking to their children independent of the state's control or oversight.


More about the education of our children:

We train our children in our own homes. We have developed our own curriculum, designed to meet our children's needs. We report our children's educational progress to the state regularly in recognition of their right to know that our children are being educated.

 


[1] Essays Upon Popular Education, James G. Carter (Boston: Bowler & Dearborn, 1826).

[2] Thoughts Upon the Mode of Education Proper in a Republic, Dr. Benjamin Rush (Philadelphia: Thomas Dobson, 1786).

[3] The U.S. Child and Family Services Gestapo Targets Parents, Paul C. Roberts, December 16. 2000. Incidentally, 55% of all child-abuse investigations are eventually deemed "unfounded" according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

[4] Both of the U. S. Presidential candidates in the 2000 elections spoke during the campaign, from their very different social and political viewpoints, of funding "faith-based" social programs. Such cooperation is far advanced in the socially liberal Christian democracies of Europe.

[5] 406 U.S. 205 (1972)

[6] De Tocqueville, quoted in G. W. Pierson, Tocqueville in America (Garden City, NY, Anchor Books, 1959).

[7] Low Voter Turnout Expected on Election Day, by Garrick Utley, November 3, 2000, for CNN.

[8] National Education in the United States of America, Dupont de Nemours (Newark, Delaware: University of Delaware Press, 1923), pp 3-5.

[9] De Tocqueville, p. 294.

[10] "Johnny Still Can't Read: A Horror Story of the Computer Age", Tulsa World, Aug. 23, 1981

[11] http://www.home-ed-magazine.com/lawregs/hoopjump.html [GO]

[12] The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America, Charlotte Thomson Iserbyt (Conscience Press, Sept. 1999).

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