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QED

(2,946 posts)
Sat Feb 11, 2017, 11:09 PM Feb 2017

The Hard Right's Planning Document for Education

This is some scary stuff - and with DeVos in place, well, who knows? There's a lot at the link. Anyone know anything about these people?


The Hard Right's Planning Document for Education

Well, this is kind of scary. We're going to do this two parts. First we're going to look at the Center for National Policy's documented proposed plans for education. Then, because you probably don't know who this poorly named group represents, I'll show you why their desire to create a conservative theocratic system is worth taking seriously. I laughed at this plan, right up until the point I saw whose plan it was. This is going to take a little while, and if you are prone to conspiracy theory-based paranoia, you may want to sit down. But stay with me to the end.

<snip>

The Four Assumptions [5?]

The report starts by asking the question of whose worldview should be represented in the soul of a culture and hints that the answer is "not the government's." Then it lays out the four assumptions and a pledge for the rest of the report:

1. All knowledge and facts have a source, a Creator; they are not self-existent.

2. Religious neutrality is a myth perpetrated by secularists who destroy their own claim the moment they attempt to enforce it.

3. Parents and guardians bear final responsibility for their children’s education, with the inherent right to teach, or to choose teachers and schools, whether institutional or not.

4. No civil government possesses the right to overrule the educational choices of parents and guardians.

5. The CNP Education Committee pledges itself to work toward achievable goals based on uncompromised principles, so that their very success will provoke a popular return to the Judeo-Christian principles of America’s Founders who, along with America’s pioneers, believed that God belonged in the classroom.

<snip>

So who are these people?

The Council for National Policy was founded in 1981 by Tim LaHaye, then the head of the Moral Majority (and later author of the Left Behind series), Nelson Bunker Hunt, T. Cullen Davis, William Cies, and Paul Weyrich. It meets three times a year, and if you haven't heard of it, that's because they'd rather you didn't. The New York Times in 2004 described them as "a little-known club of a few hundred of the most powerful conservatives in the country," and the Center for Media and Democracy calls them a "shadowy secretive group." The Daily Kos, never a group for understatement, calls them "Sith Lords of the Ultra Right." Members are told not to discuss the group's meetings outside, and are encouraged not to even mention that they are members. When ABC attempted to profile the group, they found members mostly unwilling to be interviewed.

More on who they are at link.

http://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/2017/02/the-hard-rights-planning-document-for.html?spref=tw

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The Hard Right's Planning Document for Education (Original Post) QED Feb 2017 OP
Basically Is A Manifesto To Create A Religious Christian Base For Education. TheMastersNemesis Feb 2017 #1
My personal "conspiracy theory" on the right's view towards public schools El Viejo Mar 2017 #2
 

TheMastersNemesis

(10,602 posts)
1. Basically Is A Manifesto To Create A Religious Christian Base For Education.
Sat Feb 11, 2017, 11:15 PM
Feb 2017

Ultimately it creates and atmosphere for making theocracy the basis of governing and not the Constitution.

El Viejo

(26 posts)
2. My personal "conspiracy theory" on the right's view towards public schools
Thu Mar 2, 2017, 05:25 PM
Mar 2017

They want to privatize the entire system but will settle for something less, as long as they've done permanent damage. Which is exactly what this current mania over high stakes testing is doing.

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