- Picture this: Your middle-school child is summoned to
a special workshop. The kids are asked to form a circle. Your child is
told to stand in the center, and is asked by a special guest from Planned
Parenthood: "Does your church consider homosexual behavior to be a
sin?" Ask the ninth-graders in Arcata, Calif., how they felt, when
it happened to them.
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- If your child attends middle-school in Seattle, you may
- or may not - know about "Challenge Day," facilitated by a for-profit
outfit called "Resource Realizations," in which kids are coerced
into confessing their wrongs. Incidentally, the kids also get a promotional
brochure advertising the three-day extended session for only $295, and
a week-long version for only $800.
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- At Aptos High School in Santa Cruz, Calif., 300 students
are bunched up in the gym, on one side of a line drawn on the floor. Then
a series of questions are asked. If the answer is yes, the kids are told
to step across the line. Some of the questions asked: * Are you a good
kisser? * Anyone in your family addicted to drugs? * Do you have a friend
or relative who is gay or lesbian? * Do you currently practice abstinence?
* Have you ever considered suicide? These are a few of dozens of deeply
personal questions students are asked to answer publicly. What on earth
is going on in our schools?
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- Freedom 21
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- Santa Cruz wants to know what is going on in their schools,
and why. They are accumulating similar stories from around the country.
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- Santa Cruz is one of the first cities to adopt a "Local
Agenda 21" program. For 10 years, a local group has been promoting
the implementation of Agenda 21 recommendations. Almost every community
now has some local group promoting Agenda 21 policies, but using names
such as "St. Louis 2004," or "[your town] 2020." These
plans focus primarily on planning, open space, zoning, land-use restrictions,
heritage sites, and the like. They also contain educational elements, based
on Chapters 21 and 25 of Agenda 21.
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- The function of American schools has changed. Once, the
function of the school was to prepare each student to reach his maximum
individual potential. Now, school has become a process to modify behavior,
attitudes and beliefs in pursuit of a "tolerant," (read: obedient)
society.
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- The transformation has been underway for much of the
last century. In 1949, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization conducted a series of seminars for teachers, called "Toward
World Understanding." This brief excerpt provides a flavor of the
series:
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- "As long as the child breathes the poisoned air
of nationalism, education in world-mindedness can produce only rather precarious
results. As we have pointed out, it is frequently the family that infects
the child with extreme nationalism. The school should therefore use the
means described earlier to combat family attitudes that favor jingoism."
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- Robert P. Hillmann has produced an excellent study of
how this transformation of our schools occurred. His 105-page report, "Reinventing
Government: Fast Bullets and Culture Changes" documents the relationship
between international organizations and school officials which has brought
about the transformation in our schools' function.
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- The activities in Seattle, Arcata and Santa Cruz have
struck a nerve, because the events probe deeply into personal and family
affairs. School activities that seek to transform attitudes about the environment,
about government, about freedom, about the Bill of Rights - have gone largely
unnoticed by parents and the community.
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- The result of the transformation is becoming clear: prayer,
freedom, corporations, liberty, the Ten Commandments, national sovereignty,
property rights - and certainly, guns - are all terms and concepts that
have been demonized. Tolerance, cooperation and equity, are values that
supplant individual excellence, individual achievement and individual responsibility.
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- Most of the world is subjected to government-imposed-and-enforced
education, and information. America has distinguished itself among all
nations in history because government did not limit education and information,
and celebrated individual achievement.
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- Those days are long gone. American schools have been
transformed. Only individuals who recognize the threat, and are willing
to invest their time and resources, can reverse this rush to homogenized
mediocrity.
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- Left to its own agenda, the international community,
assisted by professional education associations and enlightened facilitators,
will continue to transform our children into pliable conformists who follow
the party line, for fear of being different. ___
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- Henry Lamb is the executive vice president of the www.eco.freedom.org
Environmental Conservation Organization and chairman of Sovereignty
International.
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- © 2002 WorldNetDaily.com, Inc.
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