Families, communities, and the nation are stronger when the rising generation is taught the exceptionalism of America, and they are weaker when they are taught the nation is systemically racist. Therefore, the education system needs to be overhauled.
President Donald Trump is calling
for school choice for every child in America and a return to teaching American
exceptionalism. School choice provides the right and means to make the decisions
about the schools where their children will best learn and thrive. Teaching
American exceptionalism is perhaps the only way of avoiding more summers
watching our cities burn and our statues and monuments defaced and destroyed.
Mike Gonzalez and Jonathan Butcher
published an article about a return to teaching American exceptionalism in the
classroom. They
explained that older Americans are the strongest supporters for “the idea that
America is an exceptional country” with “75.2% of Americans 60 and over [in
agreement].” They also said that young Americans ages 18 to 29 have the weakest
support for the idea that America is exceptional.
The authors indicated that academic
studies and performance are behind the above noted differences. “Our best
indicators of K-12 student performance in U.S history, geography, and civics
indicate that our students cannot explain the ideas behind representative
government that set the U.S. apart.” They said that “test scores in those
subjects had declined in recent years” to the point that “fewer than 1 in 4
students posted scores at what is reasonably considered appropriate for their
grade level.”
It seems that our schools are not
successfully teaching U.S. history, geography, and civics, while “progressive
media outlets are pushing the narrative that American history should be
reframed around the idea that slavery be made central to U.S. history instruction.”
Young Americans are obviously listening to the progressive voices as shown by
the summer of riots, looting, burning, and killing.
Parents are often told, “If you do
not teach your children to have faith in God, other people will teach them that
there is no God.” The same is true about patriotism. If the rising generation
is not taught American history, civics, and geography and does not learn about American
exceptionalism, progressives will teach them false ideas.
Gonzalez and Butcher wrote that it
is not enough to teach American exceptionalism. We must also teach the rising generation
why America is exceptional. It is true that citizens of every nation love their
country and think that it is wonderful. However, “American exceptionalism is
rooted elsewhere, a mixture of the liberal traditions of the Anglo-Scottish
Enlightenment and the Colonial experience.”
The social scientist Louis Hartz, whose
groundbreaking 1955 book “The Liberal Tradition in America” has influenced
generations of future thinkers, posited the idea that because America lacked a
feudal past it made unfertile soil for either socialism or the European
conservatism that unites church with big government.
“It is not accidental that America, which
has uniquely lacked a feudal tradition, has uniquely lacked also a socialist
tradition. The hidden origin of socialist thought everywhere in the West is to
be found in the feudal ethos,” wrote Hartz, for whom America possessed a “fixed,
dogmatic liberalism of a liberal way of life.” In his book, Hartz observed
repeatedly that America was “unique.”
Gonzalez and Butcher used the word “exceptional”
to describe America, while Hartz used the word “unique.” An internet definition
for exceptional is “unusual; not typical; unusually good; outstanding.”
Synonyms include unusual, uncommon, extraordinary, out of the ordinary, rare,
singular, unprecedented, unexpected, remarkable, excellent, unequaled,
unparalleled, unrivaled, and surprising. An internet definition for unique is
“one of a kind, unlike anything else.” Synonyms include distinctive,
individual, and special. I believe that both exceptional and unique are
good descriptive words for America. Gonzalez and Butcher continued their discussion
with the following.
America thus is exceptional because it is
the only country in the world that derives its legitimacy from its start not
from a common ethnicity or monarch, but from natural rights – the idea that
rights, such as the right to free speech, property, and self-preservation can
be observed in nature and precede politics or government.
This liberal tradition was mixed with a Colonial
experience that also made America unique in terms of the people who were attracted
here.
To prove their point, the authors
included a quote from a speech given by Edmund Burke in the House of Commons in
1775. The statement was a warning by Burke to the other members of the House about
the type of people living in America.
Protestants, and of that kind which is the
most adverse to all implicit submission of mind and opinion…. All Protestantism,
even the most cold and passive, is a sort of dissent. But the religion most
prevalent in our northern colonies [Burke meant New England] is a refinement of
the principle of resistance: it is the dissidence of dissent, and the
Protestantism of the Protestant religion…. The colonists left England when this
spirit was high, and in the emigrants highest of all.
Even that stream of foreigners which has
been constantly flowing into these colonies has, for the greatest part, been
composed of dissenters form the establishments of their several countries, and
have brought with them a temper and character far from alien to that of the people
with whom they mixed.
America is exceptional because it
was founded on an idea that all men are created equal. The founding fathers and
mothers, as well as those men who framed the Constitution, were mere mortals.
However, they were “raised up” by God, prepared for their task, and inspired in
their decisions. They created an entirely new type of government. They included
the things that they liked about other governments and excluded the things that
they did not like.
Because the Framers were mere
mortals, they had faults and weaknesses as well as gifts and strengths. For
example, most of the Framers wanted to do away with slavery in their new
country. However, they needed the southern colonies to be part of their new
United States, and the southern colonists were not ready to give up slavery.
The Framers knew that slavery would rear its ugly head in the future, but they
acted to form the Union with what they had available and trusted that future
Americans could deal with the horrors of slavery.
The Constitution and the government
formed under it are exceptional. Every American child deserves to be taught
that their country is exceptional – a shining city on a hill that is a light to
the world. At the same time, every American man and woman should stand forth to
help our nation become stronger and better in the future. Adults in America owe
it to the rising generation to teach the exceptionalism of America. By doing
so, we can strengthen our families, communities, and nation.
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