This
is not hyperbole: some of the most active and violent anarchist groups in
Portland are run by teenagers, and dozens of minors were arrested during last
year's riots. These groups have taken up the mantle of climate change, anticapitalism,
antifascism, and Black Lives Matter ~ whatever provides a pretext for violent
"direct action."
Contrary
to those who believed that the end of the Trump presidency would bring a
"return to normalcy," the social and political revolution in
Portland has only accelerated under President Joe Biden. On Inauguration
Day, teenage radicals marched through southeast Portland,
smashing the office windows of the state Democratic Party and unfurling large
banners with hand-painted demands: "We don't want Biden, we want
revenge"; "We are ungovernable"; "A new world from the
ashes." Intoxicated by revolution and enabled by their elders, Portland's
kids are not all right.
Demonstrators march in Southeast Portland during a protest on
Inauguration Day 2021.
Tigard,
Oregon, is a placid suburb southwest of Portland. A local shopping mall hosts a
Macy's, a Dick's Sporting Goods and a Cheesecake Factory. The city's historic
main street is a pastiche of coffeehouses, boutiques, repair shops, and
restaurants. Historically, the city's political squabbles have concerned zoning
and land-use issues ~ in other words, the typical politics of an affluent
American suburb. Demographically, Tigard is not diverse; it numbers only 636
blacks out of a total population of 52,368, making up approximately 1 percent
of residents.
Nonetheless,
educators at the Tigard-Tualatin School District have gone all-in on the
social-justice trinity of "diversity, equity, and inclusion."
Last
June, at the height of the nationwide unrest, Superintendent Sue Rieke-Smith
and Board Chair Maureen Wolf signed
a proclamation "condemning racism and committing to being an
anti-racist school district."
The preamble to the document recited the
names of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery, and confessed that
the district's "students of color, and Black students in particular, still
regularly experience racism in [their] schools." To rectify this, the
superintendent pledged to become "actively anti-racist,"
"dismantle systemic racism," implement a "collective equity
framework," establish "pillars for equity," deploy "Equity
Teams" within schools, create racially segregated "Student Affinity
Groups," and use "an equity lens for all future curriculum
adoptions."
Tigard-Tualatin School Board member Maureen Wolf (left) and
Superintendent Sue Rieke-Smith
The
next month, the district announced a new Department of Equity
and Inclusion and installed social-justice activist Zinnia Un as director. Un
quickly created a blueprint, which I have obtained through a whistle-blower,
for overhauling the pedagogy and curriculum at Tigard-Tualatin schools. The
document calls for adopting the educational theories of Brazilian Marxist Paulo
Freire, whose "pedagogy of the oppressed" (summarized in a 1968 book
with that title) was originally designed to instill "critical
consciousness" among impoverished South Americans and to forge the
conditions for overthrowing the dictatorial governments of the era. (See Pedagogy of the Oppressor, Spring
2009.)
Following
Freire's categorizations, Un writes that the Tigard-Tualatin school district
must move from a state of "reading the world" to the phase of
"denunciation" against the revolution's enemies and, finally, to the
state of "annunciation" of the liberated masses, who will begin
"rewriting the world."
Portland State’s Zinnia Un, the new director of equity and
inclusion for Tigard-Tualatin School District
In
her blueprint, Un describes the new oppressor as an amalgamation of "whiteness," "colorblindness,"
"individualism," and "meritocracy."
These are the values of capitalist society ~ but for Un, they
are the values of
white
society, the primary impediment to social justice.
What
is the solution to pathological whiteness? According to Un and the
Tigard-Tualatin School District, the answer lies with a new form of "white
identity development."
In
a series of "antiracist resources" provided to teachers, the
Department of Equity and Inclusion includes a handful of strategies for this
identity transformation, intended to "facilitate growth for white folks to
become allies, and eventually accomplices, for anti-racist work." Couched
in the language of professional development, the process assumes that
whites
are born "racist," even if they "don't purposely or consciously
act in a racist way."
The
first step in the training document is "contact," defined as
confronting whites with "active racism or real-world experiences that highlight
their whiteness." The goal is to provoke an emotional rupture that brings
the subject to the next step, "disintegration," in which he or she
feels intense "white guilt" and "white shame," and admits:
"I feel bad for being white." The training then outlines a process of
moving white subjects from a state of "reintegration" to
"pseudo-independence" to "immersion" to
"autonomy."
In
the early stages, activities include "attending a training, joining an
allies group, participating in a protest." Later, white subjects are told
to analyze their "covert white supremacy," host "difficult
conversations with white friends and family about racism," and use their
"privilege to support anti-racist work."
At the final stage, trainers plumb their subjects' individual
psyches to ensure that their "whiteness" has been banished.
Subjects
must answer a series of questions to demonstrate their commitment:
"Does your solidarity make you lose sleep at night?
Does your solidarity put you in danger?
Does your solidarity cost you relationships?
Does your solidarity make you suspicious of predominantly white
institutions?
Does your solidarity have room for Black rage?"
This
is a pedagogy not of education but of revolution. It's also textbook cult
indoctrination:
Convince initiates of
their fundamental guilt;
present a remedy
through participation in the group;
manipulate emotions
to achieve compliance;
identify and organize
against an amorphous scapegoat;
demand total loyalty
to the new orthodoxy;
proselytize through
personal circles;
isolate from old
friends and family;
and keep the ultimate
solution always out of reach.
A
veteran teacher who requested anonymity, out of fear of reprisals, told me that
the "big change" happened when the new superintendent and equity and
inclusion director took over the district. Immediately, the focus shifted from
academics to politics, and employees were expected to fall in line with the new
ideology. The teacher described one professional-development training session
that left some of her colleagues in a neighboring school devastated:
"They
had teachers actually crying because of their 'whiteness.'
"Which
brings us to the last plank in Tigard-Tualatin's antiracism program: enforcement. As soon as Un took over as
equity and inclusion director, she formulated a new "hate speech"
policy designed not just to prevent truly discriminatory speech but also to
pathologize any political opposition to the new order. The cultural cues in
the district are clear: teachers must support Black Lives Matter protests and
oppose anything that smacks of conservatism.
"I
almost feel like we're walking around on eggshells. You have to be careful
what you say," a veteran teacher told me. "I'm afraid of speaking
up for fear I might lose my job. . . . I mean, what would happen if I said
I'm a conservative Republican Christian? How would that go?"
When
I asked how the new political education program had affected her personally,
her voice broke:
"I
don't want go back to work. I don't believe in this. It goes against my faith
system. . . . We're all created as equals in God's sight, and this is just
wrong, the way we're teaching our children. I don't have to be embarrassed
because of my skin color."
Born
as a small farming community with the arrival of the Oregon Central Rail Road
in 1868, the City of Beaverton has since transformed itself into a busy and
prosperous suburb. Commuters fight through traffic to the Nike corporate
headquarters on Southwest Murray Boulevard, or to the Intel research
laboratories in nearby Hillsboro. Like Tigard, which borders the city to the
south, Beaverton is a predominantly white and Asian-American community; just 2
percent of the city's population is black.
"I'm trying to give her an education," said
antifascist radical Michael Reinoehl of his 16-year-old daughter, who often
accompanied him to protests and riots before he murdered a Trump supporter
in downtown Portland.
Beaverton
shares something else with Tigard: its public schools have been consumed by the
racial panic following George Floyd's death. Building on some of the same
pedagogies and educational theories as in Tigard, Beaverton teachers designed
and began teaching a new racial curriculum for every grade level, including
kindergarten.
The
general language for these lessons seems innocuous: "diversity," "empowerment,"
"change-making," "culturally responsive teaching." Under normal
circumstances, most parents would glance at the syllabus during parent-teacher
night and forget about it.
This
year, however, because of the coronavirus lockdowns and remote-learning
requirements,
many parents kept closer
tabs on their children's education and were alarmed by what they saw. The
curriculum, they discovered, reveals its radicalism in the details.
ED Noor: During the earlier days of the lockdown, many of these teachers took to Twitter to complain about parents watching these classrooms. They pushed for removing the parents from the rooms in which the children were being taught. And some did refer to it as an agenda and most did NOT like the adults being privvy to these lessons.
One
family that had moved to Beaverton partly for the city's highly rated public
schools sent me a folder of lessons being taught to their third-grade child.
The social studies module on race begins innocently enough: the teacher asks
the eight- and nine-year-old students to think about their "culture and identity" and join her in "celebrating diversity," set alongside
pictures of a world map and cartoons of smiling children. The subsequent
lessons become more pointed.
The
teacher explains to students that "race is a
social construct," created by privileged white elites who use these
categories "to maintain power and control of one group over another."
This, the teacher says, is "racism" that "can determine
real-life experiences, inspire hate, and have a major negative impact on Black
lives."
The
next module focuses on "systemic racism"
and the history of the United States. The teacher tells the students that
racism "infects the very structure(s) of our society," including
"wealth, employment, education, criminal justice, housing, surveillance,
and healthcare." To accompany the lesson, the teacher includes a video presentation
in which the speaker directly accuses the children of being racist themselves:
"Our
society speaks racism. It has spoken racism since we were born. Of course you
are racist. The idea that somehow this blanket of ideas has fallen on
everyone's head except for yours is magical thinking and it's useless."
The
speaker then tells the students that if they don't convert to the cause, they
will "affirm the status quo of certain bodies being allowed resources,
access, opportunities, and other bodies being literally killed."
The final modules present the solution:
Students must immerse themselves in "revolution,"
"resistance," and "liberation."
The
teacher introduces these principles through photographs of child activists,
Colin Kaepernick, the Black Power fist, and Black Lives Matter demonstrations,
as well as protest signs reading "White Silence = Compliance,"
"Black Lives > Property," "AmeriKKKa," and "Stop
Killing Us."
The
goal, according to the curriculum, is for students to become
"change-makers" and "antiracist in all aspects of [their]
lives."
They must actively fight "white supremacy, white-dominated
culture, and unequal institutions," or they will be guilty of upholding
these evils.
In
the concluding lesson, the curriculum instructs the third-graders to "do
the inner work to figure out a way to acknowledge how you participate in
oppressive systems," "do the outer work and figure out how to change
the oppressive systems," and "learn how to listen and accept criticism
with grace, even if it's uncomfortable."
A parent who emigrated from Iran to the United States told me that the lessons
were "absolutely unacceptable" and reminiscent of the political
indoctrination in the Islamic Republic. "I moved here because this is
America, because of the rights and the opportunities that we have. And this is
not where I want my country to go," the parent explained.
When
I asked about her own childhood in Iran, she became emotional.
"I
remember when we would line up in the morning in an assembly. We had to chant
'Death to America.' I remember being in elementary school and thinking, 'I
don't want to chant this. I have aunts and uncles in America. I don't want them
to die.'
Her
husband sent a letter to the Beaverton School District, blasting the curriculum
as "presenting racist material under the guise of 'antiracism.' “(When
reached for comment, the Beaverton School District replied that it "does
not advocate for overthrowing the United States.")
"They're
trying to indoctrinate the children," the father observed. He believes
that the intention is to turn child against parent. After the antiracism
lessons, his child felt torn between school and family, sometimes crying in
confusion.
"They're slowly going to get behind their defenses, get
behind the parents' defenses, and create little social-justice warriors,"
the father said. "They're trying to hyper-empathize and hyper-emotionalize
the children in order to get them to be more receptive to . . . some sort of
revolution."
The
parents decided to pull their child from the social studies program and now
hope to transfer to another school next year. Though they were able to opt out
of the program for now, they fear that, left unchecked, the campaign to turn
children into the "pointed sword for revolution" could lead to wider
social consequences. The mother reminded me that many Iranians initially
supported the Islamic Revolution in order to depose the shah and usher in a
better world, only to be bitterly disappointed. The revolutionaries promised a
new utopia but ended up transforming their country into a tyranny.
"I'm
fighting this at the school and even at my work, because I see this country
going that way."
Unfortunately,
this kind of curriculum is fast becoming the rule in Oregon. In 2017, state
legislators passed a bill overhauling the state curriculum and installing a
mandatory "ethnic studies" program that reflects the emergent racial
orthodoxy. As a term, "ethnic studies" is another euphemism that
obscures more than it reveals. It connotes a cheerful pride in cultural
tradition, but the actual discipline is rooted in cultural Marxism.
According
to drafts of the ethnic studies standards, teachers will require kindergaartners
to learn the "difference between private and public ownership" of
goods and capital and "develop understanding of identity formation related
to self, family, community, gender, and disability."
ED Noor: An extremely misleading image from the book "A is for Activist", a children's book. The elephant does not represent Communism as depicted; that is completely a leftists or Democrat tendency.
In
first grade, they will learn:
~
how to "define equity, equality, and systems of power";
~
"examine social construction as it relates to race, ethnicity, gender,
disabilities, and sexual orientation"; and
~
"describe how individual and group characteristics are used to divide,
unite, and categorize racial, ethnic, and social groups."
In
third, fourth, and fifth grade, students must deconstruct the U.S.
Constitution, uncover "systems of power, including white supremacy,
institutional racism, racial hierarchy, and oppression," and "examine
the consequences of power and privilege on issues associated with poverty,
income, and the accumulation of wealth."
If
the elementary school curriculum sets the premise that the United States is the
great oppressor, then the middle school and high school curricula deliver the
conclusion. The learning standards read like an old left-wing pamphlet:
~
students must internalize the principles of race-based "subversion,
resistance, challenge, and perseverance";
~
they must fight against the "structural and systemic oppression" of
capitalism, authority, religion, and government;
~
and they must commit to the "pursuit of social justice."
The
internal
documents for the Oregon
Department of Education make it quite clear that the point of ethnic studies is
not academic achievement; it's "social change." Education is the
means; politics is the end.
If
the cities of Tigard and Beaverton represent the categories of theory and
praxis, Portland represents their result: power.
In recent years, Portland has emerged as the leading hub of left-wing, Marxist,
and anarchist movements. After George Floyd's death, Portland's radicals
attacked police officers and laid siege to federal buildings. They armed
themselves with rocks, bottles, shields, knives, guns, bricks, lasers, boards,
explosives, gasoline, barricades, spike strips, brass knuckles, and Molotov
cocktails. A year later, many downtown businesses remain closed, and insurance
companies have either raised premiums or refused
to issue policies because of the ongoing risk of property destruction.
Meantime,
Portland Public Schools has institutionalized the philosophy of social justice
and codified political activism into every aspect of the bureaucracy. In the
district's 2019 Racial Equity and Social Justice Plan, the administration
pledged to make "antiracism" the district's "North Star"
and to create "an education system that intentionally disrupts ~ and
builds leaders to disrupt ~ systems of oppression." The superintendent
hired a new equity czar and announced a "Five-Year Racial Equity
Plan," which promises a dizzying array of acronyms and academic
catchphrases like "intersectionality" and "targeted
universalism."
It's hard to overstate how entrenched the political ideology now
is in the school system.
A
veteran elementary school teacher who described herself as a longtime liberal
told me that the district's "antiracist journey" began with good
intentions a decade ago. But over time, the leadership has hardened
"antiracist" principles into dogma. Today, she and other teachers
must submit to mandatory antiracism training each week. "From the
beginning, we were told that we couldn't question [the antiracism
program]," she said.
"I
called human resources and asked them if I needed to profess that I believe [in
critical race theory] and if I had to teach from this perspective. And I was
told that I need to understand it, I need to know all about it, [and] I could
probably lose my job [if I didn't teach that way] if my principal is super into
making sure that teachers are using this lens as they teach."
In
one recent antiracism session, this teacher had to participate in a "line
of oppression" exercise. The trainers lined up the teachers and shouted
out various injustices (racism, homophobia, and so on), and asked teachers who
would suffer from these harms to step forward. The trainers then divided the
room into oppressed and oppressors, with straight white men and women forced to
reckon with their identity in the oppressor category. The objective, according
to the teacher, was to intimidate white teachers into submission through
collective guilt and fear of being labeled a racist.
Portland has become a factory of political radicalism, the
culminating expression of which is violence ~ as seen in the ongoing riots and street
battles during the summer of 2020.
The
ideology of "antiracism" has permeated every department in the
district. Even educators in the English as a Second Language (ESL) program
have begun teaching the principles of critical race theory to immigrants and
refugees.
According
to a document that I obtained, ESL teachers are told to develop
"counterstories" to the dominant American culture and to focus
instruction on "advocacy for racial equity for emergent
bilingual/multilingual students." As part of the curriculum, they are
asked to teach immigrants that "racism in the
USA is pervasive and operates like the air we breathe" and that
"civil rights gains for people of color should be interpreted with
measured enthusiasm."
ED Noor: This image and the video clip I saw last year has been completely scrubbed from the internet. It is from a Floyd demonstration.
To combat the pernicious influence of their own
"Whiteness," the district recommends that white teachers adopt a
series of affirmations, beginning with "getting to know myself as a racial
being" and then "[deconstructing] the Presence and Role of Whiteness
in my life and [identifying] ways I challenge my Whiteness."
Finally,
after shedding their racial limitations, the teachers can begin the work of
"interrupting institutional racism" and "the perpetuation of
White Supremacy."
ED Noor: Allow me an ignorant observation. What a load of
hogwash.
This
is a bewildering curriculum decision. Portland has a significant population of
immigrants and refugees from countries such as Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea,
Guatemala, and El Salvador. These families have escaped some of the most
nightmarish conditions in the world, including civil war, genocide, starvation,
and grinding poverty. 
Portland is not perfect, but it is certainly a haven of
peace and opportunity for the foreign-born. In my own experience with the
Eritrean community in the Pacific Northwest, most families have fled civil war
and spent years in refugee camps. They express nothing but gratitude for their
new lives in the United States.
Yet Portland schools are intent on teaching the
children of this community that their adopted country is systematically racist
and will deprive them of opportunity.
How
does all this translate in the classroom? At Forest Park, Whitman, and
Marysville elementary schools, a teacher named Sarita Flores, who runs the
information technology program, has transformed her role into that of a
political inquisitor. According to leaked internal documents and
whistle-blower testimony, Flores holds weekly "antiracism" sessions
in which white teachers are expected to remain silent, "honor the feelings
of BIPOC" ~ black, indigenous, and people of color ~ and "make space
for and amplify BIPOC educators."
In
presentations resembling Soviet-era struggle sessions, Flores instructs
teachers that they must "deepen [their] political analysis of racism and
oppression" and "start healing with public apologies about [their]
racism and then go back and apologize through an audit through an anti-racist
lens."
During
one of these sessions, Flores hosted an exercise resembling Orwell's Two
Minutes Hate, in which minority teachers were allowed 90 seconds to berate
their white colleagues.
During
the exercise, Flores denounced one of her white female colleagues by screaming,
"You make me feel unsafe, you make me feel unsafe" repeatedly for 90
seconds. Afterward, Flores boasted on Facebook that she had publicly humiliated
a racist, despite providing no evidence of racism or misconduct. It was a pure
display of racial dominance. (Flores did not return request for comment.)
For
Flores and other teachers in the social-justice wing of Portland Public
Schools, the only solution is revolution. During one presentation to teachers,
Flores claimed that "an educator in a system of oppression is either a
revolutionary or an oppressor." In a folder hosted on the district
website, Flores shared a meme with teachers that justified the ongoing
political violence in Portland:
"The
root cause of every riot is some kind of oppression. If you want to end the
riots, you have to end the oppression. If you want to end a riot without ending
its root cause, your agenda isn't about peace and justice ~ it's about
silencing and control."
Her
message to students was similar. In a series of videos delivered to her
elementary school students, Flores declared:
"Black people were used as
slaves in the U.S." and therefore students must become "justice
fighters."
At the height of the Portland riots, Flores released another
video message telling the children that
"protesting is when people hold up signs and march
for justice. You've trained for this moment all year: the fight for
justice."
By
high school, the basic education about "skin color" and "justice
fighters" turns into advanced race theory and live-action street
protesting.
At Lincoln High, a wealthy public school with only 1 percent black student
enrollment, some students take two full years of "critical race
studies."
The
courses, taught by Jessica Mallare-Best, begin with training on racial
identity, white supremacy, institutional racism, and racial empowerment, with
the goal of providing "methods in which students can begin to be activists
and allies for change." The following year, students take two semesters of
critical race theory ~ studying white fragility, intersectionality,
"whiteness as property," "the permanence of racism,"
"collective organizing," and "being an activist," with an
eye toward training them to "do [their] part in dismantling white
supremacy."
The abstract becomes concrete, theory is transformed into
action, and the young people of Portland come of age steeped in race analysis
and revolutionary logic.
ED Comment: The infiltration began in earnest in
2014: Dateline Wednesday March 19, 2014 - Portland Oregon: Portland Public
Schools teachers participated in a training session where a controversial new
curriculum including "Critical Race Theory," is explained.
The next step is obvious.
Children, endowed with conviction in their own moral purity,
head to the front lines.
In
2018, Ockley Green Middle School invited "police abolitionist"
Teressa Raiford to hold an assembly on social justice, after which she led hundreds
of students into the streets to perform a "die-in" in the middle of
an intersection ~ without seeking permission from or notifying their parents.
During the Floyd protests, the teacher- and student-led protests accelerated.
Children as young as five held a mock protest at Sabin Elementary School
and raised the Black Power fist alongside their teachers. Middle school students in northeast Portland led a
public march advocating for defunding the police. High school students marched through a neighborhood in
southwest Portland ~ "the whitest part of the city" ~ demanding that
residents provide "reparations" to blacks.
 |
Teressa Raiford |
More
than two millennia ago, Aristotle understood the connection between
education and the political regime:
"That
the legislator should especially busy himself about the education of the young
would be disputed by no one, as the regime is damaged in cities where this is
not done. The young need to be educated to the regime, since the character
proper to each regime is what customarily preserves it and establishes it to
begin with."
In Portland, the educators have abandoned this classical insight
and implemented a revolutionary program ~ pedagogy, praxis, power ~ explicitly
against the regime of the U.S. Constitution. They have discarded Aristotle for Marx
and enlisted children as their revolutionary foot soldiers.
Violence has followed. The Youth Liberation Front, one of the most active
and violent protest groups in Portland, was founded by teenagers and has recruited
hundreds of young people to fight against the American regime. The group is
organized into autonomous cells to avoid law-enforcement infiltration and has
armed itself with shields, weapons, gas masks, and explosives.
The
group organized a walkout of Portland high schools and then rioted for more
than 100 consecutive nights following George Floyd's death.
"We
are a bunch of teenagers armed with ADHD and yerba mate," the group declared on social media. "We can
take a 5 a.m. raid and be back on our feet a few hours later. We'll be back
again and again until every prison is reduced to ashes and every wall to
rubble." Over
the course of the summer, Portland and Multnomah County law enforcement
arrested dozens of minors, including members of the Youth Liberation Front, for
protest-related crimes, including rioting, burglary, property destruction,
throwing rocks and bottles at police officers, brandishing a handgun at a crowd, setting fire to the police union
headquarters, and stomping a man unconscious.
Their
teachers, too, have immersed themselves in the destruction. Over the course of
the summer unrest, police arrested at least five school teachers for
riot-related crimes:
~
Rose Addis, an award-winning Portland Public Schools
elementary school teacher, was arrested for felony riot, disorderly conduct,
and attempting to steal an officer's baton;
~
April Epperson, a Portland Public Schools elementary school teacher, was
arrested for disorderly conduct and interfering with a police officer;
~
Jacob Soto, a Portland Public Schools middle school band teacher, was arrested
for felony riot and interfering with a police officer;
~
Cody Porter, an avowed Communist and Multnomah County school instructor, was
arrested for assaulting a federal officer; and
~
Hannah Fewster, a preschool teacher, was arrested for disorderly conduct and
interfering with a police officer.
All
except one were released immediately without bail; according to publicly
available directories, at least two of the Portland Public Schools teachers
appear to be still employed by the district.
(Ed Noor: Lest ye forget, bail for most of these violent activists was covered by a fund donated by many celebrities most notably Kamala Harris.)
In
one case, the eventual consequence of Portland's bad education was a grisly
death. Throughout the summer, a 16-year-old girl armed with a metal baseball
bat accompanied her 48-year-old father, antifascist radical Michael Forest
Reinoehl, to protests and riots across Portland. In July, the elder Reinoehl
was arrested for rioting and possessing a loaded gun in public; at a separate
protest, he was shot in the arm during a violent
confrontation outside a bar ~ all in his daughter's presence. As Reinoehl told reporters:
"I
have my daughter here with me because I'm trying to give her an education. The
fact is, she's going to be contributing to running this new country that we're
fighting for. And she's going to learn everything on the street."
The
following month, Reinhold hunted a Trump supporter through downtown Portland,
lay in wait for him behind a parking garage, and then seized him from behind
and fired two shots, with one bullet piercing the man's chest and killing him
on the spot. Reinoehl fled to Washington State and, after an armed
confrontation with law enforcement, was shot and killed by U.S. marshals.
Educators
and parents in Portland are playing with fire. They have filled the heads of
the young with dark visions of America and then told them to find fulfillment
through revolution.
But that revolution is devoid of positive values;
it is a war of negation, destruction, and death.
The child soldiers have been promised
"a new world from the ashes,"
but the real outcome, if they get their way,
would be a world of ruin ~ cold, empty, and salted over.
ED Noor: When you read of what these children are being taught
from the start, it is amazing if they would ever understand true freedom. Or
have a concept of optimism and the beauty of life. They are being condemned to
a lifeless, joyless mode of mere existence. Utterly soul killing.
It's
hard not to see this as a cynical game: teachers and administrators, ensconced
in the public bureaucracy and secured by the public trust, engage in an absurd
theater of cultural Marxism, spinning stories about the "pedagogy of the
oppressed" to their privileged, suburban, predominantly white students.
For all the talk about "liberation" and "critical
consciousness," they are indoctrinating these children in a profoundly
pessimistic worldview, in which racism and oppression pervade every
institution, with no way out but revolution.
We have reached the strange reality
in which the state,
through the organs of education,
agitates for its own destruction.
Educators
have condemned the entire structure of the social order and celebrated those
who would tear it down. They might get what they wish for, though not in the
way they imagine. The ancient Greeks warned about the degeneration of democracy
into ochlocracy, or "mob rule," which occurs when the populace loses
faith in constitutions and the rule of law. The result is anarchy.
In
Portland, educators are shaping the character of the young into this regime of
disorder. When the city's rioters chant "Whose streets? Our streets!"
in call and response, we should heed them ~ and beware of what's to come.
THE SOLUTION TO SO MUCH OF THIS TRAUMA!
Christopher F. Rufo is a senior fellow
at the Manhattan Institute and a contributing
editor of City Journal. Sign up for his newsletter
here.