The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday concerns the need for public education systems to teach correct history. For individuals to love their country, they must be taught the good parts of history, particularly in the younger grades. Older students can be taught the good, the bad, and the ugly parts of America’s history.
One
example of incorrect teaching took place at this year’s Grammy Awards when pop
artist Billie Eilish made her statement that “no one is illegal on stolen land.”
A previous essay discussed the obvious things wrong with the statement:
“no
one is illegal” would mean that “immigration laws have no moral authority,” so
we should just allow anyone and everyone into our nation.
“on
stolen land” would mean returning the land to its original inhabitants: “Let’s
give the Southwest back to Mexico, then back to Spain, then back to the Aztecs,
and then back to the people the Aztecs slew and enslaved. Let’s give the
Northeast back to the Iroquois, and then back to the Native Americans the
Iroquois slew and replaced. Let’s give Florida back to the Seminoles, and then back
to the people the Seminoles slew and replaced.”
The
statement by Billie Eilish may become a “gift that keeps on giving” for
conservatives because there are so many different ways that the message can be
attacked. Paul Runko, senior director of Strategic Initiatives, K-12 Programs
for Defending Education, criticized the statement from the education angle. Runko
shared his thoughts about Eilish’s statement in an article published at The
Daily Signal.
This
comment echoed two familiar positions of modern, progressive left-wing
ideology: first, that the United States should allow unrestricted immigration and,
second, that Americans are living on land illegitimately taken from Native
Americans.
While
it may be tempting to dismiss such rhetoric as another example of celebrity
activism at an awards show, doing so would miss a more troubling reality. The
idea that America is fundamentally “stolen land” is not confined to award show
stages, it has become increasingly embedded into the schools that teach America’s
children.
In
2024, Defending Education released a report revealing that 155 school
districts, representing more than 2.7 million students, have adopted so-called
land acknowledgements.
These
are formal statements intended to recognize Indigenous or Native peoples as the
original inhabitants or stewards of the land a school district, staff, and
students occupy.
On
the surface, land acknowledgments may appear benign or even respectful.
In
practice, however, they function as a form of virtue signaling by institutions
and leadership. Students are often asked or told to recite these statements,
seeding the belief in young students’ minds that they occupy “stolen land” that
is morally illegitimate and does not rightfully belong to the United States,
but to Indigenous tribes.
Consider
the land acknowledgment used by Frances C. Richmond Middle School in Hanover,
New Hampshire: “We, the RMS community, would like to acknowledge that our
school is built upon the unceded land of the Abenaki and Pennacook people. The
land was stolen.”
For
a young student, this is not a neutral historical observation. Imagine hearing
this as an elementary or middle school student. What conclusions are they
expected to draw about their families, their neighbors, or their town?
Rather
than learning history, students are pushed toward a moral judgment that their
community, their country, and even their family bear collective guilt simply
for existing where they do.
For
a child who trusts the public school system to teach facts, not an
ideologically skewed version of the past, this can be deeply troubling. Instead
of fostering civic understanding, these statements frame American history
primarily through grievance and condemnation.
This
messaging is not limited to land acknowledgments alone.
Another
example comes from District of Columbia Public Schools that in 2021 sent a
message to families ahead of Thanksgiving encouraging them to “Decolonize your
Thanksgiving” by not “sugarcoat[ing] the past.”
They
advised parent[s] to use terms like “genocide,” “ethnic cleansing,” “stolen
land,” and “forced removal” when discussing the American history of the
holiday.
While
older students should be exposed to both the proud and the dark side of our
nation’s history, language such as “stolen land” means schools have replaced
education with ideological indoctrination.
The
messaging extends beyond words to art and images in classrooms as well.
In
one Los Angeles Unified School District high school, a poster was displayed
reading, “Make Israel Palestine again and Make Amerikkka Turtle Island Again.”
Such
imagery does not invite critical thinking or intellectual diversity to play
out. It asserts, as fact, that nations such as the United States and Israel are
illegitimate occupiers whose existence should be undone.
A
student exposed to these messages repeatedly could reasonably conclude that the
United States has no rightful claim to its own territory. Over time, this
worldview cements students’ belief in a far-left orthodoxy where law
enforcement, people who express traditional views, and eve our fundamental and
treasured American institutions can no longer be allowed to exist.
Parents
and other adults should understand that the words spoken by Eilish are not just
the words of a pop artist receiving an award. “… they are not isolated or
inconsequential.” In fact, “They reflect a broader ideological worldview that
has overtaken public education….” They are part of the vast number of people
and organizations who are striving to overthrow the government of the United
States.