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The election of Barack Obama as the 44th
President of the United States created quite a buzz at
the 18th annual conference of the
National Association
of Multicultural Education [NAME], held in New
Orleans from November 12-16, 2008.
Radical multiculturalists consider Obama as an ally who
is likely to advance key aspects of their agenda with
the promise of increased federal funding.
And the economic stimulus bills now before Congress do
indeed contain $140 billion of federal spending on
education—which will, will, rest assured, find its way
to
"discretionary" spending for
"civil rights"
programs in the Department of Education.
Obama's recent pick of black
"education
activist"
Russlynn Ali, a vociferous advocate of reforms to
close the "education
gap" between blacks and whites, for assistant
secretary for civil rights at the Department of
Education ensures that
"social justice" "equity"
and "diversity"
and other forms of social engineering will be high
priorities under Obama's team at Education.
"Beyond Celebrating Diversity: Reactivating the Equity
and Social Justice Roots of Multicultural Education" was the theme of the
2008 NAME conference. Attendance comprised the usual
turnout of hundreds of teachers, administrators, and
academics. About half were black, there were a few
Asians, and the rest were granola-headed whites,
including perhaps 15%-20% Jews. The 5-day program was a
festival of left-oriented seminars and workshops.
The choice of
This year's NAME program included a
"Hurricane
Katrina Tour" for $28.75—billed as
"an eyewitness account of the events surrounding the most devastating
natural and
man-made disaster on American soil."
Numerous vendors, including several academic publishers
(Peter Lang, Routledge, Teachers College Press), had
paid to offer the latest Marxist-flavored literature.
For example, Peter Lang prominently displayed a
collection of essays titled Undoing Whiteness in the Classroom: Critical Educultural Teaching Approaches for Social Justice Activism. The book targets graduate-level teacher
candidates and seeks
"alternative
approaches" for recognizing
"whiteness
as a hegemonic process in the school context."
Student teachers are
"required…to
reify the process of whiteness." One
illustration in the book is a computer-enhanced image of
the profiles on
Also for sale:
Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Brazilian radical
ideologue
Paulo Freire. The book, a pillar of the education
left, develops a revolutionary theory for action,
quoting Lenin to emphasize Freire's point that
"Without
a revolutionary theory there can be no revolutionary
movement." Cuban revolutionary
Che
Guevara also receives honorable mention.
The full gamut of extreme multiculturalism and social
justice was explored throughout the various 215
workshops, seminars, symposia, and lectures:
"Freedom Dreams
and Whiteness Nightmares: Future Educators on Struggling
for a Democratic Counterpublic in Teacher Education,"
"Beyond White
Liberalism: A Critical Analysis of Whiteness in Our
Pedagogy and Ourselves,"
"Centering Race
to Address the Intersections of Privilege and
Oppression,"
"The Illusion of Race,"
"Immigration and
Oppression: Strategies to Promote Justice Through
Authentic Cultural Experiences,"
"Beyond 'Heroes
and Holidays': Using Digitizing Ethnic Group Archives
for Developing Critical Learning Modules,"
"Hip Hop as
Critical Pedagogy in Secondary Education,"
"Undoing Whiteness in the Classroom: Critical Educultural Teaching
Approaches for Social Justice Activism," and
"Multicultural Spirituality and One-hand Clapping."
This year's NAME conference included three well-attended
general sessions with keynote speakers. Perhaps the most
notable keynote address was given by sociologist
James W. Loewen.
[Email him] As
a retired professor of sociology at the
and Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism
,
have been national bestsellers.
The subject of Loewen's speech,
"Teaching What
Happened," urged educators to motivate their
students to question the conventional accounts of
history in their course textbooks. Since the mid-1990s,
he frequently asks his students: What is the
Reconstruction period of American History? Sixteen
out of seventeen students in one class responded that
"blacks took
over" southern state legislatures. According to
Loewen, blacks did not
"take over"
southern state legislatures during Reconstruction; state
constitutions were reformed and were better managed
under Reconstruction; and
"
In contrast, Loewen thinks the period of 1890-1940 is
the "nadir of race relations." The South actually prevailed for several
decades, rejecting the 14th Amendment and
largely nullifying the outcome of the Civil War.
Reconstruction was overthrown by southern resistance;
many southern states implemented segregation policies.
Loewen also views the massacre of
Wounded Knee as another victory for
"white
supremacy."
Near the end of his talk, after noting that
"we have had a
wonderful election," Loewen expressed outrage at the
"Sky Mall"
catalog, which air travelers frequently peruse on
flights. The consumer retail outlet features a range of
electronic devices, home improvement products, the
latest audio gadgets for iPods and home stereos, toys
and collectibles, etc. Loewen held up a copy of the Sky
Mall catalog and said it was
"a sundown catalog—an apartheid catalog" (Loewen coined the phrase "Sundown
Towns" to refer to
rural communities where blacks were
not allowed), noting that the various models in the
catalog's 98 pictures were all white.
"It's an outrage!"
Loewen exclaimed. He urged attendees to contact Sky Mall
and express their outrage over the lack of diversity
among the Sky Mall's selection of models.
(In fact, the last time I checked,
the website of
Sky Mall—www.skymall.com—prominently featured an African
American female model holding a Sky Mall gift card in a
promotion of $100 for reviewers of Sky Mall
merchandise.)
Another workshop,
"The Illusion of Race," addressed the legacy of
eugenics in American society. The workshop was sponsored
by "Facing
History and Ourselves," a Brookline,
Massachusetts-based
"educational"
organization with satellite offices in
Hanging on the walls of the conference room were early
twentieth-century photos of the
"Fitter Family Contest"
and the eugenics movement's major
figures:
Charles Davenport and
Harry Laughlin. The presenter covered the basic
aspects of eugenics, noting that at one time many
colleges offered some courses in eugenics.
The workshop presenter's narrative was vastly
simplistic, featuring the preconceived notion that
eugenics was established to eliminate entire racial
groups. Inconvenient details were excluded: there was no
mention that
icon in the progressive pro-choice community, was
also an
enthusiastic eugenicist. No one mentioned the fact
that one of the sponsors of
"Facing History's" literature, the
Kellogg Foundation, had historic family ties to the
Race Betterment Foundation, founded by
John Harvey Kellogg.
Most of the attendees had at best a crude notion of the
subject matter. One associate professor struggled to
identify
Herbert Spencer as the source of
"Social
Darwinism." Contemporary IQ findings, notably
The Bell Curve,
and other research in the social and behavioral sciences
were cited only to suggest that the underlying purpose
of eugenics was genocide. That the principle of bringing
healthy children into the world could be applied to
any race was
simply never considered.
This workshop and others at the NAME conference exposed
the radical and rigid dogma of the ideologues in
attendance—educators and administrators, lacking a
rudimentary understanding of the subject matter under
discussion, busy working to
"educate" the
next generation of young Americans.
Set up as a non-profit educational organization, NAME
collects a sizable portion of its annual revenue through
membership dues and annual conference fees. For 2007,
NAME listed its total revenue at
$443,660[PB1].
It profits directly from the turnout of teachers and
administrators who attend the annual conferences. These
are usually reimbursed or subsidized from their
educational institutions. Taxpayers, in essence, are
indirectly subsidizing this annual radical Marxist
festival. One
institution[PB2]
covered the expenses of no fewer than five individuals
to attend the 2008 conference in
The real
scandal for taxpayers is the backdoor channel to federal
money that individual members or directors of NAME have
secured under the guise of innocuous-sounding projects
funded by the Department of Education. For example,
Consider the Department of Education funds the
The annual budget of the U.S. Department of Education is
$68.6 billion, $59.2 billion of which is in
"discretionary
appropriations." And President Obama has pledged to
increase annual education spending.
The cultural Marxists of the 1960s have enmeshed
themselves into the fabric of
During the course of the presidential campaign, Barack
Obama's ties to
William Ayers—a draft-resister,
fugitive from justice, former organizer of Students
for a Democratic Society and one of the founders of the
militant Weather Underground—surfaced repeatedly as
Obama struggled to adequately answer questions as to his
relationship with Ayers.
As Diether H. Haenicke, president emeritus of
"Every admissions committee in professional schools
questions a candidate's suitability for the profession.
Past known drug use poses a problem for someone who
wants to be a
pharmacist or a
physician. A former wife-beater has a hard time
being admitted to the practice of social work. Law
schools want to know about the ethical standards of
applicants. Accounting departments are careful not to
admit shady characters.
"How can people who escaped the law, threw bombs, stole,
cheated and threatened the government with violence
end
up as educators of the
next generation?"
[Ayers'
ties to higher education are more troubling than ties to
Obama,
Of course, the multiculturalists have problems too. They
fear that many whites will wrongly conclude that the
election of
a bi-racial president shows that
But the bottom line is that when conservatives
vigorously opposed the creation of the Department of
Education, they were right. It has been fatally infested
by radical egalitarians, vigorously working to transform
our public educational system since the 1960s.
An Obama Administration will certainly further their
efforts—until grassroots American opposition blocks
their funding and finally kills the
monstrosity now known as the Department of
Education.
Cooper Sterling [email
him]
is a freelance
writer in the