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Sunday, May 19th

You are here: Heartland News Editorials Action Reaction: Redacting History - by Brett Edward Stout - The Power of the Written Word

Action Reaction: Redacting History - by Brett Edward Stout - The Power of the Written Word

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Action Reaction: Redacting History - by Brett Edward Stout
The Power of the Written Word
What we need to do
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Those who consider the obsolescence of textbooks vastly undervalue the power of the written word vs. the ever changing content of the web. They also fail to recognize that the content available online is largely based on the general knowledge of the public. Textbooks are the driving force of curriculum and lay the framework for academic discussion. The Texas Board of Education, operating as the hand of religious extremists, is seeking to fundamentally alter that foundation of that public discussion. What makes the situation more significant is that, after California, which exclusively uses its own textbooks, Texas is the largest consumer of textbooks. Due to this massive market share, Texas-tailored textbooks are the only affordable option for other states. Therefore textbook standards are largely determined by Texas’s guidelines. It is not an exaggeration to say that the long-term impact of this recent decision could be so profoundly insidious that it could undermine the fair, balanced, and free-thinking American way of life as we know it.

The more than 100 amendments, redactions, and alterations to the recommendations made by Texas’s teachers were not posed by other, more enlightened historians but, rather, by 15 elected officials, (seven of which are proud members of the far religious Right.) What Texas is doing is beyond the usual arguments over the teaching of evolution or sex education. The revisions mandated by the board include removing references to Thomas Jefferson, the separation of church and state, minority heroes and artists, and downplaying the role slavery played in the Civil War. Instead of these facts, proposed textbooks will include the conservative philosopher John Calvin, speculation of how Christian fundamentals influenced the founding fathers, interpretations of how biblical law might be the basis for our legal system, negative impacts of social reform, positive outcomes of the McCarthy Hearings, the harrowing rise of the conservative movement in the 1980s and 90s, and distorted data that paints the Republican Party as a champion of civil rights.

While some of this may cause you to laugh, don’t. None of this is an exaggeration or a joke. These changes are deliberate, broad, and devious. Religious conservatives have one objective in mind: creating a future voting body that sees the separation of church and state as a myth and believes the United States is a Christian nation beholden to biblical principles. The purpose of this move is to transform our country into a theocratic republic controlled by religious zealots. Make no mistake: if you enjoy freedom of choice, freedom of thought, freedom of religion, or freedom of speech, you are these people’s enemy. They perceive you as hostile and un-American. This is not a bid for the state election of 2010, this is a bid for national intellectual domination in 2032.

While it is unclear if we need federally mandated education standards, what is clear is that we need an independent counteracting force to oppose the influence that Texas has on our national curriculum. But how do we protect our progeny from state-regulated ignorance?