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Child abuse in government schools: Neal Boortz exposes latest socialist indoctrination curriculum
WorldNetDaily.com ^ | Friday, December 26, 2003 | Neal Boortz

Posted on 12/26/2003 12:55:18 AM PST by JohnHuang2

Child abuse in government schools

Posted: December 26, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

The children sit in a circle. Some are wearing mittens; others are waiting expectantly with little plastic shovels. The rules of the game state that a few of the children must do nothing but sit and watch as the action begins. On the leader's "Go!" the children scramble for 100 pennies that have been scattered on the floor in the center of the circle.

The players with mittens are having a rough time picking up any pennies at all. The kids with shovels are scooping up some pretty good numbers, while the kids working with their bare hands experience modest success.

What's going on here? Is this some new type of gambling game being played by our children in order to avoid real exercise? Are drugs involved? Is sex?

No ... it's a classroom exercise – an exercise quite possibly unfolding in a classroom in some government school near you. The official title is "Activity 2 Economic Justice: The Scramble for Wealth and Power." It was created by professor David Shiman at the Center for World Education at the University of Vermont, and is distributed to our government school teachers by the Human Rights Resource Center at the University of Minnesota.

This "Scramble for Wealth and Power" is an exercise designed by Shiman to show your children how wealth and power is "distributed" in our society. Once the exercise is completed the children with shovels will have more pennies (the rules also allow the use of candy or peanuts), the kids wearing mittens will have less. The participants who were not allowed to scramble for pennies will have nothing. The pennies, of course, represent the world's wealth.

After the scramble is completed, the students with many pennies are told that they may give some pennies to their classmates with less, if they want to. If they do decide to give away some pennies, they will be honored on a list of "donors."

During the second part of this exercise students are asked to devise plans for a fair distribution of the pennies. They are asked to pass judgment on the other students who did or did not give away some pennies to others, and whether or not there should be a redistribution of wealth in America, and how to accomplish this redistribution.

Later, these kids are asked to write papers on such topics as "Can poor people really achieve human rights?" and "How do wealth and power affect one's ability to enjoy human rights and human dignity."

So, while you think your precious children are off at their local government school learning how to read, how to do basic mathematical computations, how to communicate effectively in the English language – plus a bit about science, health, our economic system and American and world history – your kids may instead be engaging in exercises created by leftist, anti-capitalist college professors designed to teach them that wealth is distributed, rather than earned, and that our economic system is based on something comparable to a mad scramble for pennies.

Here, I want you to read the entire instructions for this classroom exercise. Go through the entire exercise and see if you can find the word "earn" one single time. Read the exercise for yourself and see if you can find one reference to actually working to acquire wealth. Look for any reference to the benefits that can flow from good decision making.

Students, for instance, are given the opportunity to donate pennies to others, but the exercise does not give students with more pennies the option of actually hiring a student with less to actually perform some task or chore (clean our my book bag?) in exchange for a few pennies. No! Never! We can't teach that in a government school! Why in the world would we want to teach school children that preparation, knowledge, training, hard work and good decision making are the keys to acquiring wealth?

These institutions are no longer schools. They are government indoctrination centers, owned and operated by government and staffed by government employees who have every reason to teach dependency on government and no reason to produce a generation of children who have learned how to depend on themselves.

The single most prevalent form of child abuse in this country is the act of sending a child to a government school. We worry incessantly about the separation of church and state. We would do well to devote half as much attention to the separation of government and education.





TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: economics; education; indoctrination; nealboortz; socialism
Friday, December 26, 2003

Quote of the Day by NutCrackerBoy

1 posted on 12/26/2003 12:55:19 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
I still remember my government class at a public (government) high school. The teacher presented socialism as an acceptable compromise between capitalism and communism, and once a week we spent half an hour in class reading Newsweek magazine, which was presented as an example of a valid source for balanced information on current events.

In retrospect, I am not surprised that he didn't say anything about The New American or The American Spectator.

2 posted on 12/26/2003 1:12:44 AM PST by The_Eaglet (Happy incarnation celebration!)
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To: JohnHuang2
Good find!
3 posted on 12/26/2003 1:12:58 AM PST by MonroeDNA (Soros is the enemy.)
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To: JohnHuang2
"teach dependency on government"

Precisely what the government schools are all about.

4 posted on 12/26/2003 1:34:15 AM PST by Ed_in_NJ
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To: Ed_in_NJ
The author misses the entire point of a capitalist economic system, as does the Commie professor who created this bu!!$hit game. Wealth isn't earned, it's created. If we assume that it's earned, we assume that there's only so much available to be earned. A capitalist economy creates wealth, allows all who wish to participate to be a part of that wealth creation, and share the rewards in proportion to the value they add.

Duh.

5 posted on 12/26/2003 3:58:49 AM PST by Hardastarboard
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To: JohnHuang2
My first " taste " of government intervention was in 1958. I was in sixth grade and the school started the UNICEF program to take our Halloween loot. If you didn't participate you couldn't attend the party . My buddies and I solved the problem by carefully opening the containers and did a 5-1 distribution in our favor and sealing them again.
6 posted on 12/26/2003 4:11:46 AM PST by Renegade
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To: Hardastarboard
Wealth isn't earned, it's created.

Absolutely, but a big part of the wealth creation process is the person who's just doing his job and earning his pay. Since his risk and value are limited, so too, is his proportion of the reward. He is creating wealth but only indirectly, and he may view it as 'just earning a living'.

If we assume that it's earned, we assume that there's only so much available to be earned.

I disagree on your leap from first assumption to the second. Creating more wealth for one's employer certainly increases the amount that's available to be earned. Whether it takes the form of a raise, more hours, or promotion to supervising others, more business for the company should translate directly into more money available to be earned.

A capitalist economy creates wealth, allows all who wish to participate to be a part of that wealth creation, and share the rewards in proportion to the value they add.

Of course it does -- that's why it works so well. Human nature being what it is, people will respond to incentives in their own self-interest.

7 posted on 12/26/2003 4:42:54 AM PST by Bob
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To: JohnHuang2
No ... it's a classroom exercise – an exercise quite possibly unfolding in a classroom in some government school near you. The official title is "Activity 2 Economic Justice: The Scramble for Wealth and Power." It was created by professor David Shiman at the Center for World Education at the University of Vermont, and is distributed to our government school teachers by the Human Rights Resource Center at the University of Minnesota.

What the lesson SHOULD be, is that the kids with mittens need to learn how to take them off, and the kids without shovels need to learn how to improvise one.

Communists suck, and they have our kids.

8 posted on 12/26/2003 4:46:05 AM PST by Lazamataz (BadgerBadgerBadgerBadgerBadgerBadgerBadgerBadgerBadgerBadger MUSHROOM MUSHROOM.)
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To: JohnHuang2

If anyone doubts the Marxist agenda of this so-called "professor", click here...


9 posted on 12/26/2003 5:06:10 AM PST by Fintan (Merry Christmas to all...)
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To: Fintan
If that teacher REALLY wants to show his students how Socialism works, he should take away points from the grades of students who earn A's and give those points to students who earn D's and F's so that they too can become B students. Even better, punish those A students if they complain.
10 posted on 12/26/2003 5:21:49 AM PST by Muzzle_em
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To: Muzzle_em
If that teacher REALLY wants to show his students how Socialism works, he should take away points from the grades of students who earn A's and give those points to students who earn D's and F's so that they too can become B students. Even better, punish those A students if they complain.

They already do that, through group work where everyone gets the same grade irrespective of his contribution.

It teaches the same universal lesson as the penny exercise: "Do whatever we tell you, without protest, no matter how stupid, pointless, or destructive it is. If you don't, we will punish you. We are more powerful than you are, and you can't do anything about it."

That parents will subject their children to this, year after year, is almost beyond belief.

11 posted on 12/26/2003 5:31:57 AM PST by Tax-chick (Some people say that Life is the thing, but I prefer reading.)
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To: JohnHuang2; Freee-dame
Ping!
12 posted on 12/26/2003 5:42:31 AM PST by maica (Laus Deo)
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To: JohnHuang2
Part of me isn't bothered by this. "Education" like this is yet one more reason why other people's kids (who are influenced by stuff like this) will end up working for my kids (who will laugh it off).
13 posted on 12/26/2003 6:33:12 AM PST by only1percent
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To: only1percent
Several years ago, the local newspaper did a story on a wealthy private school in my state where all the kids had access to the "Wall Street Journal" every day.

I'll bet my last dollar the kids didn't sit around in a big circle and play this idiotic game. I'm sure they'd all bust a gut laughing if they found out that the local government indoctrination center was incorporating this into their curriculum.
14 posted on 12/26/2003 7:24:37 AM PST by ladylib
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To: JohnHuang2
Makes me ill. Thank God my 11 and 7 yr old sons are in private Christian school. New Rats in the making. School should teach children HOW to think. not what to think. These socialist SOB's need a good can of WhoopA%% opened on them/
15 posted on 12/26/2003 9:07:01 AM PST by Indie
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To: JohnHuang2
BTTT
16 posted on 12/26/2003 9:11:51 AM PST by Celtjew Libertarian (Shake Hands with the Serpent: Poetry by Charles Lipsig aka Celtjew http://books.lulu.com/lipsig)
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17 posted on 09/05/2006 9:29:27 AM PDT by Coleus (I Support Research using the Ethical, Effective and Moral use of stem cells: non-embryonic "adult")
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