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An Army of One (What it's like to be the only Republican in your high school)
Weekly Standard ^ | From the October 25, 2004 issue | Dan Gelernter

Posted on 10/17/2004 4:40:41 PM PDT by hipaatwo

I GO TO AMITY SR. HIGH SCHOOL in Woodbridge, Connecticut--a liberal public school in a liberal state. Conservatives are scarce around here and outspoken ones are scarcer. I am so "unusual" that people (friends and even some I don't know) call me "Dan, Dan, Republican," which is a good-natured joke, sort of.

These days, I never go to school without my Election 2004 battle kit--a hefty red folder that I carry in my backpack titled (on account of my infinite humility) "Proving People Wrong." This folder holds everything from IRS tax return figures to a comparison of Bush versus Gore in terms of college grades (Bush wins). I always have my folder with me, so that when I get into a political discussion (which might happen a dozen times a day and is likely to happen even more often as Election Day approaches), I can confront my opponents with the facts. They hate facts. They prefer to take refuge behind a slogan: Bush is Dumb.

The teachers are predictable liberals; the students are more worrying. In the white-painted low-ceilinged cafeteria with noise echoing off the brick and cinderblock walls, I eat lunch at a table of eight friends among 400 noisy kids. Politics is usually on the menu. Most lunch-table liberals say that they do not love America, and would not defend it. One boy says he'd just as soon live in Canada. They can't understand why I should be so enthusiastic about our country. Isn't it more or less interchangeable with a few dozen other rich western democracies?

As I was writing this article, I chatted online with one of my best friends, a liberal who spent part of his summer working in Washington as a page in the House of Representatives. He asked what my article was about. To put it briefly, I said, "It's about kids who don't love their country." He answered: "Do they have to love their country? Is that a requirement?"

The most striking feature of my political debates is the utter ignorance of traditional values--whether American or Christian or Jewish--shown even by intelligent students. The typical student thinks that morality is a simple matter of doing what is "good for people," and that the way to do this is to vote for Democrats, since the Democratic party stands for "making things better."

Why do students talk and think this way? As computer geeks used to say, garbage in, garbage out.

We are taught U.S. history out of politically correct textbooks. The books are boring and tedious and, what's worse, extremely misleading. The pages are carefully measured to spend equal time on the accomplishments of men and women, whites and nonwhites. They take care not to offend America's past enemies, but don't seem to worry about offending Americans.

My textbook last year, for example, was the 12th edition of The American Pageant by David Kennedy, Lizabeth Cohen, and the late Thomas Bailey. Its chapter on World War II has more than a page on the relocation and internment of Japanese-Americans after Pearl Harbor and one sentence on the Bataan Death March. (What does one infer from this about the value of an American life?) It spends no time at all on the American GI, but gives a comprehensive discussion of the number of women who served, and where. (It carefully refers to "the 15 million men and women in uniform.") The discussion, in short, is warped, incompetent, anachronistic.

Worst of all are The American Pageant's blatantly biased discussions of modern politics. Compare the chapters on Carter and Reagan. Carter's actions are often described as "courageous." For instance: Carter's "popularity remained exceptionally high during his first few months in office, even when he courted public disfavor by courageously keeping his campaign promise to pardon some ten thousand draft evaders of the Vietnam War era." Or: "Carter courageously risked humiliating failure by inviting President Anwar Sadat of Egypt and Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel to a summit conference at Camp David."

The book dramatically describes how Carter, in the summer of 1979, "like a royal potentate of old, summoning the wise men of the realm for their counsel in a time of crisis," went up to Camp David ("the mountaintop") while his people awaited "the results of these extraordinary deliberations." Then he made a "remarkable television address" in which he "chided his fellow citizens for falling into a 'moral and spiritual crisis' and for being too concerned with 'material goods.'" (Everyone else remembers this event as Carter's pathetic "malaise" speech.) The authors sum Carter up as "an unusually intelligent, articulate, and well-meaning president," but one who was "badly buffeted by events beyond his control, such as the soaring price of oil, runaway inflation, and the galling insult of the continuing hostage crisis in Iran." In other words: He did a great job, and the awful things that happened during his administration weren't his fault.

The Reagan chapter starts by describing Reagan's high hopes and goals, but quickly deteriorates: "At first, 'supply-side' economics seemed to be a beautiful theory mugged by a gang of brutal facts" as the economy went downhill. Then there was a "healthy" recovery. But "for the first time in the twentieth century, income gaps widened between the richest and poorest Americans. The poor got poorer and the very rich grew fabulously richer, while middle-class incomes largely stagnated."

This is how the authors describe the largest peacetime economic boom of the 20th century, a period in which the average income of all quintiles from poorest to richest increased. The book then quickly moves on to discuss the deficit: "The staggering deficits of the Reagan administration constituted a great economic failure. . . . The deficits virtually guaranteed that future generations of Americans would either have to work harder than their parents, lower their standard of living, or both, to pay their foreign creditors when the bills came due."

Reagan's most important achievement, ending the Cold War, is never mentioned in the Reagan section. The authors imply that the credit for ending the Cold War goes to none other than Mikhail Gorbachev. My classmates swallow it all. They believe that Gorbachev suddenly decided one day that it was time for his country to lose the Cold War. My history teacher thought it incredible that I refused to credit Gorbachev with "allowing us to win."

Perhaps needless to add, there are no lessons on the virtue of patriotism. Like the textbooks, my teachers are extremely charitable when discussing American enemies; from the Soviet Union to the Vietnamese Communists, they all get the benefit of the doubt. I would like to believe that this is only a temporary situation, perhaps one that a few well-placed educational reformers could begin to correct. But my fear is that it will take a long time to repair our public schools. Meanwhile, what will become of a country whose youngest citizens have been taught to have so little affection for it?

Daniel Gelernter publishes the Republican Dan blog at republicandan.blogspot.com.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Connecticut
KEYWORDS: teens
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1 posted on 10/17/2004 4:40:43 PM PDT by hipaatwo
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To: hipaatwo

Time to abolish the public schools.


2 posted on 10/17/2004 4:44:31 PM PDT by Publius
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To: hipaatwo

Glad this kid's on our side.


3 posted on 10/17/2004 4:49:53 PM PDT by TADSLOS (Right Wing Infidel since 1954)
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To: AVNevis
Ping for you. Thought you might relate to this.


4 posted on 10/17/2004 4:53:40 PM PDT by LiberalBassTurds (Democrats: The blind leading the stupid enabling the evil.)
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To: hipaatwo

No government school for my kids, at least until they stop teaching the N.E.A. induced, self-loathing, blame America, praise brutal dictators crap, that passes for education these days.


5 posted on 10/17/2004 4:55:03 PM PDT by NavVet (“Benedeict Arnold was wounded in battle fighting for America, but no one remembers him for that.”)
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To: hipaatwo

Thanks to Carter and Camp David we have had 800 to 1,000 infantry troops sitting in the Sinai Desert year in and year out since they signed the peace into being. Thanks to Carter and Camp David the 101st lost a great number of troops returning home from one deployment. Hundreds have died and continue to die in that operation. MFOs.

The death toll of US troops in Kosovo was well over 30 before I lost count. Mines, 1 parachute accident, shootings, vehicles, etc, etc the numbers grew. The latest were the three killed in February (?) by the islamiacs.

The press can recount every combat and accidental death in the two Gulf wars but seem to have a hard time remembering we still have troops in the Sinai and Kosovo.


6 posted on 10/17/2004 5:00:01 PM PDT by PeteB570
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To: hipaatwo

bttt


7 posted on 10/17/2004 5:18:34 PM PDT by lainde (Heads up...We're coming and we've got tongue blades!!)
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To: lainde

bumpity bump!


8 posted on 10/17/2004 5:25:24 PM PDT by wayne_shrugged
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To: hipaatwo

Fortunately, some students your age can read and think for themselves; they have a bright future. Many other students your age want to have their texts read to them and their thinking done for them; they have a bright future in the Democrat Party. Unfortunately, many teachers have the same problem as the latter group.


9 posted on 10/17/2004 5:28:13 PM PDT by hyperpoly8 (Illegitimati Non Carborundum)
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To: hipaatwo

This has gotta be Dave Gerlertner's son....no?


10 posted on 10/17/2004 5:31:57 PM PDT by lancer (If you are not with us, you are against us!)
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To: hipaatwo

In 2028 Dan Gelernter will be accepting the Republican nomination for President.


11 posted on 10/17/2004 5:34:45 PM PDT by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: hipaatwo

You think high school is bad, just wait to you get to college.


12 posted on 10/17/2004 5:36:36 PM PDT by das65
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To: third try

Ping to your personal struggle w/the public schools.


13 posted on 10/17/2004 5:42:16 PM PDT by reformedliberal
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To: lancer

A conservative in Connecticut? I agree -- he must be related to the other conservative in Connecticut, even if the spelling seems to be off.


14 posted on 10/17/2004 5:49:26 PM PDT by AZLiberty (Proud to be an infidel.)
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To: hipaatwo

My kids were in High school ten years ago, and that was going on. Every few pages in their American History book was a little biographical and sketch. I counted them up, and it was just like you say, 50/50 men/women, and 15% minority.

15 posted on 10/17/2004 5:50:55 PM PDT by StACase
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To: hipaatwo
"...since the Democratic party stands for "making things better."

Have you ever asked your friends exactly HOW the Dem Party has made things better? I'm guessing they just regurgitate what liberal adults have spoon fed them.

Great post by the way! you have a bright future!

16 posted on 10/17/2004 5:51:26 PM PDT by airborne (God answers all prayers. Sometimes the answer is ,"No".)
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To: LiberalBassTurds
Thanks for the ping.

I can relate to this. I also go to a liberal high school. I too have had confrontations with liberal teachers. Just Friday my English teacher was talking about the difference between capitol, with an o, and capital, with an a. And he said, "The nation's capital, Washington DC, with an a, is where John Kerry will be next year." And I said, "Actually he will be in both the capital with an o and with an a. See, he will be in the Capitol building, witch is in the capital city, inside the Senate chamber where he has been for 20 years, give or take a few years for all the campaigning. (OK, I really didn't say the part about being out for campaigning, but I wish I had.). He just grinned at me and said nothing while the class laughed.
17 posted on 10/17/2004 9:29:55 PM PDT by AVNevis
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To: FreedomCalls

By the way, Dan, can I be your VP?


18 posted on 10/17/2004 9:33:02 PM PDT by AVNevis
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To: AVNevis
That's a great story AVN. Glad you have the wisdom and courage to see through the propaganda and confront it. What else could he do but smile, you busted him... but good. There's pain that comes with fighting the tide but the journey's a lot more fulfilling. Keep up the great work son.


19 posted on 10/17/2004 10:36:05 PM PDT by LiberalBassTurds (Democrats: The blind leading the stupid enabling the evil.)
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To: das65
You think high school is bad, just wait to you get to college.

You mean like this???

20 posted on 10/19/2004 10:12:26 PM PDT by libber-tarian
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