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YOUR CHILD'S FIRST LESSON IN SOCIALISM
BoortzNuze ^ | 2-5-04 | Neal Boortz

Posted on 02/05/2004 10:56:40 AM PST by FlyLow

There is a reason why Democrats want the government to keep control of the education of our children. If you do not understand that reason, then you probably went to government schools.

Is there a parent out there who hasn't lived through this scenario?

You have a soon-to-be brand new first grader in the house. Yes, after over five years of careful nurturing your little rug rat is ready for that great adventure called education. It's time for school. Sadly, for most parents, it's time for government school. You're about to take the most precious thing in your life and turn it over to a government that, at some level, you know to be completely incompetent, for an education.

Ah, but first there's the school supplies! Through your exercise of due diligence you have acquired a list of school supplies that your proud new first grader should have with him when he reports to the first day of school. So, off you and your bouncing bundle of energy go to the local Wal-Mart or CVS to stock up.

There's pencils, white paste, construction paper, a protractor, ruler, paper clips, scissors (the rounded type that won't get your child bounced on a weapons charge), notebooks, erasers, and who knows what else.

Many of you with older children remember this day, don't you?

As soon as you get home from your school supply shopping trip your child disappears into his room with his bag of treasure. The pencils, rulers, paste, notebooks and everything else are dumped out on the bed and arranged neatly. First they're arranged according to size, then according to color. Which looks best? These are your child's supplies and he is going to make sure that they're in perfect order and condition when he proudly carries then into school on that magic first day.

This arranging and re-arranging process is so detailed and critical that you have to coerce your student-to-be to come to the table for dinner. Never have you seen a plate of asparagus and a slab of liver disappear so quickly. Then your child is off in a flash back to the bedroom to make sure that (a) his supplies are still there and still in good condition; and (b) that they are arranged and stored properly. The last inventory check of the school supplies takes place on the very morning of the first day of school. It's the final preflight. Your proud first-grader is certain that if everything is not absolutely perfect with the condition of those supplies, and the way in which they are neatly store into his back-breaking backpack, his entire education will be jeopardized and he'll end up making a living restringing a weed eater somewhere.

There's time for breakfast, one last check of the supplies, and into the car (you wouldn't want your child to ride the Loser Cruiser on the first day of school, would you?) and off to your local government indoctrination center.

Hold on here a minute! Did I just call your child's wonderful public school a government indoctrination center? Why, I think that I just did! How terribly insensitive of me! Read on.

About six hours after you watch your child disappear through the door of his brand new school, you're there waiting to welcome him as he emerges from his first day. Something's wrong, you think. He looks a little sullen. Discouraged.

"How was your first day of school?"

"Fine"

"Was your teacher nice?"

"I guess"

"What did you do?"

"Nuthin"

"Isn't this going to be fun?"

"I guess so."

You know something's wrong. Something happened that first day of school that has your tricycle motor upset.

At that moment if you were to check your child's backpack you would notice something. Something is missing. All of those school supplies that your child was so proud of are gone. There's maybe one pencil and one notebook left.

Here's what happened.

First, to fully understand what's going on here you have to understand why I refer to what you call "public schools" as "government schools." These schools are owned and operated by the government. Every single person working in these schools, from the principal down to the janitor, are government employees; and this includes the teachers. There are agents sent by the government to educate, (your word) or indoctrinate (my word) your child.

On your child's first morning of school, no more than fifteen minutes after the bell rang, the teacher instructed all of the children to bring their school supplies to the front of the room and deposit them neatly in a large box. The students, including yours, were told that their school supplies now belonged to the entire class. When a student needs something they just have to go to the government authority figure and ask. The government authority figure will then go into the box of common property and hand the student what he needs.

So, what did your little bundle of innocence learn on his first day of school? He learned that when it comes to government there is no such thing as private property. Whatever your child thought belonged to him when he entered that building on day one .. soon belonged to the entire class; to the collective.

No, this doesn't happen in every grade school classroom in America on the first day of school, but the practice of seizing and redistributing school supplies is widespread and becoming more and more common.

This practice doesn't always start in grade school. My first experience was with my own daughter at a day care center. She went to day care one morning with a supply of candy to last her through the day. When I picked her up that afternoon the proprietor handed me the bag containing my daughter's candy.

"We don't allow this." She said.

"You don't allow what?"

"We don't allow kids to bring candy to day care unless they have enough to share with everybody."

"Why's that?"

"Because it's not right for one kid to have something another kid doesn't have."

"Do you think it's right for you to have things that other adult's don't have?"

"Well of course it is."

"Then why isn't it right for children? They're learning their core values right now, and you're teaching them that they should never have something that everybody else doesn't have? Is that the kind of country we want? Where everybody lives in the same price home driving the same type of car wearing the same type of clothes? How in the world would you reward someone for extra effort or good decision making in a world like that?"

To her credit, the day care operator looked at me, blinked, paused and took the bag of candy back out of my hand. "I'll give it back to her in the morning and apologize."

This denial of your child's basic property rights on their first day of school is no accident. There is a design here, a lesson to be taught. That lesson is that there is something inherently wrong with possessing private property. The lesson which government seeks to teach here is that the right to property is not a right that vests in the individual. It is, rather, a right of the collective, the group, the commune. You can compare your child's first day in school with some brainwashed adult's first day in a cult. One of the first things that is required of the new cult member is the abandonment of all private property. Everything belongs to everybody now. You give what you can, and you take what you need.

Some of you might already see that this mindset comes uncomfortably close to something some chaps named Marx and Engels wrote back around 156 years ago: "From each according to their ability, to each according to their needs." That was the basis for some other system of government and rule, not ours, and it is alarming to see it being resurrected in our government operated schools today. Is this denial of private property exercise effective?

Several years ago The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ran a story featuring the charitable efforts of a sixth-grade girl in a northern Atlanta suburb. This young lady was a one-man (I just love doing that) charity machine in her neighborhood. One week she would be collecting for this, and the next week she would be having a garage sale for that. "This" and "that" being charities, of course.

The newspaper interview of this young lass revealed some well-learned lessons from her government school, for she proudly proclaimed that "everybody ought to have an equal amount of stuff." Our long-dead friends Marx and Engels would be so proud.

You will see this repeated throughout this book. Freedom cannot thrive in a society that does not recognize the sovereignty of the individual and the individual's right to property. Our government schools waste no time in attacking property rights. The very first day of school is not too soon.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: brainwashing; education; educationnews; educrats; governmentschools; governtskrools; gummintskoolz; marxism; nea; pubblikskoolz; publicschools; socialists; teechurzyuunion
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To: FlyLow
Bump for later...
61 posted on 02/05/2004 12:57:35 PM PST by dmanLA
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To: eyespysomething
Please post your husband's article as soon as it's ready, and ping me to it-- I'll be out of town for a couple of weeks, but will check in occasionally, and I'd really like to read it.
62 posted on 02/05/2004 1:01:18 PM PST by hellinahandcart
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To: FlyLow
I learned very sadly today that you aren't exempt in a Christian school either. The kids have a new teacher(our old pastor was called away and his wife was the former kinder teacher). She is just out of college(a Christian college) and she just started this garbage. She's decided that some kids are running low on markers and crayons so she is taking ALL of the kids things and putting them in one big box. She's asked various parents to contribute some new things and she would too.
Don't worry, she is coming back home after this year. Why not sooner? Circumstances don't allow it, but she won't be going back so we'll start homeschooling again in the fall.
63 posted on 02/05/2004 1:01:46 PM PST by cupcakes
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To: d-back
Ping.
64 posted on 02/05/2004 1:02:30 PM PST by NJ Freeper
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
If I had went to school and gave away the supplies my Dad paid for, he would have kicked my butt and then went to the school and raised hell.
65 posted on 02/05/2004 1:02:41 PM PST by philetus (Keep doing what you always do and you'll keep getting what you always get)
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To: CalKat
Just curious how making the parents supply Kleenex and soap make sense to you? Are your school taxes so low that you feel OK donating extra? Surely the school could get a much better price if they bought a truckload of Kleenex and soap.

Compared to the issues that led us to homeschooling these are trivial, but these little things sometimes lead to a deeper understanding of how the schools are (mis)managed.
66 posted on 02/05/2004 1:03:22 PM PST by 3Lean
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To: luckystarmom
If you can homeschool, do it. I still have to push the six year old along but we have silence when she is doing work and a two minute egg timer to help her along. She is getting quicker all the time because she sees the reward in getting the work done. If she finishes all the papers, they can play or we get to do a cool science experiment (today I put an ice cube in a frying pan and heated it until it disappeared).

There is a really cool time video I picked up at the Library. Both girls learned how to tell time by it and her Kindergarten teacher actually bought the thing after seeing it. Caution, too catchy of tunes, mommy is singing the songs in her sleep. Actually I heard all the "Rock and Learn" tapes are good.

All the best!
67 posted on 02/05/2004 1:04:57 PM PST by netmilsmom (God sent Angels- Homeschooling 1/5/04-6 yr.old now 2nd Gr./3 yr old now K)
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To: eyespysomething
Jeez, based on what you and your husband are going through, I would have been jailed. From middle school on, my son was frequently absent - so much so that he would be teased 'nice to see you' in yearbooks, school functions, etc.

The problem (for the school) was, he was in a gifted and talented program, had taken the SATs as a 12 yr old and scored at a high school level, had perfect scores on the various city-wide and Iowa tests, and had excellent report cards. Obviously, they couldn't say he was missing out on his education by not showing up to class.

He'd stay home reading, writing short stories, etc. and go back to school ahead of his classmates, who were no mental slouches either. I guess I was a bad parent. I didn't see how he could go wrong reading the classics of Western literature, science, and the writings of the Founding Fathers. But that's just me.
68 posted on 02/05/2004 1:05:16 PM PST by radiohead
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
Maybe he really doesn't know. ;D
69 posted on 02/05/2004 1:10:17 PM PST by hellinahandcart
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To: RightField
Betcha they have Marx, Engels and Mao's little red toilet paper dispenser....
70 posted on 02/05/2004 1:11:38 PM PST by cavtrooper21 (Hadj podj, I still haven't forgotten 9/11.... That goes for you 'crats out there too.)
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To: plastic_positive
Welcome to Freerepublic.

I know over at DU they do things differently, but here we would love to hear you liberals make the case for government schools. Have at it. (hurry, I think you will be gone soon)

71 posted on 02/05/2004 1:15:02 PM PST by Protagoras (When they asked me what I thought of freedom in America,,, I said I thought it would be a good idea.)
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To: 3Lean
Just curious how making the parents supply Kleenex and soap make sense to you? Are your school taxes so low that you feel OK donating extra? Surely the school could get a much better price if they bought a truckload of Kleenex and soap.

LOL. It only made sense in NYC because the janitors were taking every case of toilet paper and paper towels and Kleenex and soap and SELLING it all at discount prices. It went on for years. And we had to hear over and over how "the poor children have no toilet paper. We need more money!"

And on the other end of the system, the city bought textbooks at the highest price, no discount (no doubt because somebody was getting kickbacks from the publisher). Giuliani suggested buying the same books from Amazon, and his suggestion was met with scorn. "Our children deserve the best! We need more money!"

It's criminal, and nothing will ever really change. I'm so glad I never had children. I'd have to homeschool. :P

72 posted on 02/05/2004 1:19:10 PM PST by hellinahandcart
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To: 3Lean
It made sense to me only because they said they needed it, and I didn't find it enough of an issue to be concerned about. I'm always reading about how the schools need supplies, and the schools here had big cutbacks. My employer made a $25million donation to make up some of the deficit. I really don't know how much my school taxes are. My property taxes are 1.5 or 2.0% (I think -- sorry).

My son is receiving an excellent education in the schools in our town, and I don't find any evidence of the things I read about here. They don't have homosexuals coming and talking to the class, they allow religious t-shirts and have clubs for Republicans, as well as Christian or religious clubs. His school newspaper features opinions from conservatives in the editorial section.

I have been involved with his schools since he started, although now he's in high school so I don't go to the school during school hours, as I did in elementary school. Now I just volunteer on a committee that meets in the evening. The school he attends is a public school, and is ranked in the top 25 in the country in the big survey done every year (I think by US News and World Report).
73 posted on 02/05/2004 1:19:15 PM PST by CalKat
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To: eyespysomething
Our Georgia school has threatened parents with a "social worker" if a child misses more than five days of school in a year. I am completely ticked. I called the State Board of Ed, but they said that it was legal, but ten days was much more common.

I don't like my children's health being held hostage due to a tie to the school funds. They better not send a social worker to MY house.
74 posted on 02/05/2004 1:20:10 PM PST by Politicalmom
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To: CalKat
>>My property taxes are 1.5 or 2.0% (I think -- sorry). <<

I want to move next to you! We pay 4.3%. They are spending 6700.00 per student and still whinning that they don't have enough money.
75 posted on 02/05/2004 1:24:25 PM PST by netmilsmom (God sent Angels- Homeschooling 1/5/04-6 yr.old now 2nd Gr./3 yr old now K)
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To: netmilsmom
I live in California and we have Proposition 13. Our property taxes don't go up (to put it simplistically). There are people here who live in $15 million houses and pay something like $10,000 a year in property taxes. But when Prop. 13 passed they cut a lot of school programs, like sports, band and summer school. So parents have to pay for that kind of stuff.
76 posted on 02/05/2004 1:26:44 PM PST by CalKat
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To: FlyLow
We follow this subject closely at the daily terror thread:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1065689/posts?page=6516

Bump for posting it!
77 posted on 02/05/2004 1:27:23 PM PST by JustPiper (D A M N I T O L Take 2 and the rest of the world can go to hell for up to 8 full hours)
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
Honestly, if I could move back to Berea, Ohio where I grew up, they would be in school. My hubby has looked for jobs there and it is dry. We have to do the best for our kids and this is best here.

You're right! I love it when they get it. When the six year old learned how to carry numbers two days ago, she was bursting at the seams! Her paper is hanging on the fridge and Daddy gave her extra hugs.

78 posted on 02/05/2004 1:28:09 PM PST by netmilsmom (God sent Angels- Homeschooling 1/5/04-6 yr.old now 2nd Gr./3 yr old now K)
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To: philetus
#57
Yes, that's it. You can sometimes find good deals on half.com also. I got another copy of Penny Candy last month for around $6 on half.com.

But, whatever the price, it's an excellent book.

79 posted on 02/05/2004 1:30:09 PM PST by RightField (The older you get . . . the older "old" is !)
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To: netmilsmom
I think I'm going to seriously consider it for next year. I have to talk to the school district. They have an independent study program where the kid reports to a teacher (from the district), the teacher does the testing, and the district supplies the curriculum. I think my kids can do this and still get special ed services. The big thing will be whether or not my daughter can still receive the special ed services. The federal laws were rewritten a few years ago, and the district do not have to pay for special ed for homeschool kids. Lots of homeschool parents are upset. I'm trying to figure out a way around this.
80 posted on 02/05/2004 1:30:21 PM PST by luckystarmom
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