Posted on 11/25/2005 3:01:56 PM PST by chicagolady
I am the father of the young man who did not stand for the singing of the Mexican national anthem during a cultural awareness program at Larkin High School.
I have been constantly asked to explain the details of the event, and it is in response to these individuals that I offer the following facts.
Some of the students, my son included, were compelled to attend this assembly. The Mexican national anthem was printed on fliers and handed out to the attending students. The Mexican flag was marched in and placed on a podium by itself. The attendees were then asked to stand and sing the Mexican national anthem.
My son was not alone in his refusal to stand. Statements given to me by other youths and parents put the number of refusals at close to 20.
Larkin staff members immediately confronted the seated youth. Some of the students were threatened with in-school suspension; most of the seated students were intimidated into standing.
My son explained to the angry teacher who confronted him that he did not see a U.S. flag on the podium and he did not believe they were going to sing our national anthem. This teacher stated, "They have to stand for our national anthem, so you have to stand for theirs."
My son stated in response, "Yeah, but they're in our country."
The teacher called my son a punk and sent him to the office. The administrator in the office supported the teacher's demand and told my son that he could have made a more intelligent decision. My son was not formally disciplined. The teacher who confronted my son defended her actions to her students during class the following week.
I called Larkin principal Richard Webb to express my disappointment and concern. I described the manner in which my son had been treated. I was told that my son should have stood and that the school stood by its right to have this assembly in its chosen form.
I then exercised my right as a citizen and addressed the school board.
The press was present at the board meeting and media awareness snowballed from that point forward. Some of my statements to the board included, "I am disappointed that those responsible for creating an assembly intended to educate and sensitize Americans also felt free to act insensitively with regard to our culture. It is permissible to present another country's anthem alongside ours and receive standing respect. It is not reasonable to expect or demand that Americans stand and display respect for another flag and country in absence of the American anthem or flag."
I also asked the board to consider two positive actions. "First, encourage Larkin High School administrators to not underscore one culture to the exclusion of others. This ill-conceived mandatory assembly did nothing but widen the current schism. Second, I would ask the board to lay down some principles for future assemblies. While it is good educational practice to teach about other cultures, it is not an acceptable practice to require mandatory response to the patriotic elements of those cultures."
I was appalled by Webb's printed statement. Apologizing only for the "unfortunate spotlight" placed on the school does not acknowledge the process that brought the spotlight. Lack of proper oversight created an assembly that offended a large number of people. Teachers behaving badly guaranteed parental follow-through. Administrative silence and denial has perpetuated their arrogant image.
Trivializing the incident and belittling those it concerned has only confirmed Webb's lack of grounding with the community.
Since Dec. 8, 2004, educational institutions receiving federal funding are required to hold an educational program pertaining to the United States Constitution on Sept. 17 of each year. This year, Sept. 17 fell on a Saturday.
Our high school apparently chose on Sept. 16 not to hold an assembly on the Constitution of the United States, but to educate our youth on the patriotic elements of another country.
- Bedard is an Elgin resident.
11/25/05
Thank you, Lt Bardard, for raising a true American, one with backbone and intelligence. Please know that real Americans are with you.
You're Katherine Harris????
I'd just like to tastefully compliment Focault on his marvelous breasts.
Now you're just insulting Texans. We're done.
Yep. You Texans are done. :)
You are right. I cannot accurately predict what a poster may be compelled to argue for or against based upon his or her expressed opinion about how it would be if they were Mexican or how accepted etiquette is to always be respectful to another country's anthem regardless.
It was reaching too far for me to extrapolate.
By the way, how is that an insult? It's the truth.
This is the future you are cheering for, the burning of cars, synagogs and churches in Paris, the honor killings and rapes in the Netherlands ...... your think you are above it all, but it will come as our culture is not defended.
key meme...the nation's traditions are increasingly regarded as reactionary and prejudiced.
The limits of multiculturalism
The ideology of multiculturalism combines nicely with mass immigration to provide the perfect recipe for national dissolution. In the new issue of the Weekly Standard, Leo McKinstry focuses on the effects of the recipe in Great Britain: "Dis-United Kingdom." McKinstry contrasts Great Britain unfavorably with France to make his point:
For the last three decades, in response to waves of mass immigration, the civic institutions of Britain have eagerly implemented the ideology of multiculturalism. Instead of promoting a cohesive British identity, they have encouraged immigrant communities to cling to the customs, traditions, and language of their countries of origin. The emphasis is on upholding ethnic and cultural differences rather than achieving assimilation. This is in stark contrast to France, which has taken a color-blind approach to immigration, with newcomers expected to adapt to the culture of the host nation. The recently imposed ban on Muslim girls' wearing the hijab or headscarf in schools is a classic example of the French model.
Britain has moved in exactly the opposite direction. Soon after the French hijab ban was implemented, a British Muslim teenager brought a successful legal action to win the right to wear in school full Islamic dress from head to toe. She was represented in her court case by Cherie Blair, the barrister wife of the prime minister. And Mrs. Blair's action was typical of the spirit of the Labour-led British ruling class, which has elevated dogmatic multiculturalism into a principle of governance.
McKinstry makes the key point about the limits of multiculturalism -- a point that exposes the doctrine as an ideology, and a fraudulent one at that:
Yet the diversity enthusiasts want to celebrate every culture but their own. In the self-flagellating climate of modern Britain, the nation's traditions are increasingly regarded as reactionary and prejudiced. Britishness has "systematic, largely unspoken racial connotations," declared the government's Commission on the Future of Multi-Ethnic Britain. The commission's report, published in 2000, described the United Kingdom as "a community of communities" and called for British history to be "revised, rethought or jettisoned." The official mood of self-loathing, epitomized by the terror of giving offense to any ethnic group, has become even more pervasive in the last five years. In one typical instance, the English inspector of prisons stated that wardens should not wear badges or tie pins with the red cross of St. George, England's national flag, because this could be "misinterpreted as a racist symbol."
As an ideology, multiculturalism is a corrupted form of Marxism in which race and nationality replace class. Like Marxism itself, it is an ideology that must be opposed if we are to preserve a country founded on the proposition that all men are created equal and endowed with certain unalienable rights.
I don't know enough to judge whether France is in better shape than Great Britain with respect to the corruptions of multiculturalism. Moreover, it seems to me that elites in the United States -- the "leaders" whom John wrote about yesterday -- have similarly elevated multiculturalism into an operative principle, if not a principle of governance. We have our own multicultural problems with with which to contend. McKinstry's article outlines the looming perils that confront us as well as the Brits and the French.
UPDATE: As for France, see Diana West's Washington Times column: "C'est la vie in France."
They don't force children in school to sing the German or Irish national anthems. No one forces anyone to celebrate another's heritage. Why should our children be forced to celebrate a mexican's heritage or culture? Really dumb comparison.
Can you answer this part?
Which was the one I was replying to.
I read this thread.
You're still wrong for suggesting now is not the time to protest the mexicanazation of our schools.
You are a simpleton. period. He WASN'T in Mexico, he WAS in the USA. Try reading the article before making such an assinine statement.
America is a melting pot. American's made it that way, you will not find any other country who is willing to accept a diversity. If you are not able to accept others in the cultural pot, go back to from whence you came. America is not the place for you.
"Diplomacy" as defined by your liberal friends is "appeasement".
Don't even presume to tell me where I belong. This is my country. I was born here and I have no intentions of leaving it. If you don't like, tough. Deal with it.
And the "Zimmerman Note" intercept in WWI was one of the reasons the US got involved.
Part of accepting diversity is melting into our national identity, in order to be an american you must first renounce your diversity.
I think this statement bothers me most of all. I'm not sure if it's the "they" and "our," or the implied sympathy for the poor Mexican kids who "have to" stand for "our" National Anthem. Would the school like to fix things so that only the Mexican National Anthem is played from now on, and then the poor Mexican students won't have to be insulted or inconvenienced by standing for "our" anthem? That's probably next!
And what are the Mexican kids doing there if they don't consider themselves Americans and feel put out just for having to stand for our National Anthem on our soil?
Seems like all of the sympathy is going to the Mexican kids, while the American kids are expected to provide all of the respect and sensitivity. But then, what else is new?
LOL!!! Unbelievable...I think you should respect the man's wishes and page JIMROB and see what he has to say...I think that would be quite interesting!
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