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Archive for 29. March 2010
Rethinking education: McLeroy, Texas, and historical perspective
29. March 2010 by admin.
Editor’s note: the end of this article contains implied use of vulgarities from other liberal writers who oppose American Clarity’s position. Tread carefully!
A short while ago, Don McLeroy and other Texas conservatives decided they’d had enough: liberal indoctrination of their children had been crossing boundaries for too many decades, teaching values which opposed the very foundations of conservatism. And so one day, he and a band of other Texas school board members decided that Texas would be different. They decided that Texas would spend class time talking about different aspects of American history than what had been considered adequate for decades. Predictably, the backlash was vicious: the anger expressed by liberals has been predictably foul (by historical standards), and at times even terrifying.
So what exactly did McLeroy and his board do to cause all the rage?
In a short list from the liberal Huffinton Post, the Texan conservatives wanted to:
1) Teach about the values of the free market, and how America was intended to achieve economic success with less government intervention (see: The Wealth of Nations, written by an incredibly important historical figure whom liberals tend to forget, Adam Smith).
2) They didn’t want to spend as much time on one of our most humanistic (read: liberal) founding fathers, Thomas Jefferson, and instead decided to discuss the speeches of Jefferson Davis–The President of the Confederacy, an important person in American history–alongside those of Abraham Lincoln. Read the rest of this entry »
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