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Illuminati Communism in Our Schools

by L.C. Vincent
for henrymakow.com

No one has had a more pernicious effect on American education, and


by extension the corruption of American society today than John
Dewey. Born in 1859, John Dewey turned historic American values
and logic upside down.

In Dewey's view, the individual existed only to serve society.


"Socialization" (i.e., the individual's conformity to a group) was seen as
more important than factual learning. This twisted view of education
infected all of his work, resulting in a century of ever diminishing
American academic achievement, with the resultant corruption of
American society.

TURNING EDUCATION UPSIDE DOWN

John Dewey received his doctorate from Johns Hopkins University


about 1883, and joined the staff of the University of Chicago in 1894.
In 1899 he was elected President of the American Psychological
Association and from 1904 until his death in 1952, he was a professor
of philosophy at Columbia University and Teacher's College in New
York.

According to Dewey, learning was only relevant in context of what


Society, and by extension The State, deemed necessary. The acquisition
of knowledge for its own sake was regarded as a selfish indulgence.

Feelings and emotions were far more valid a barometer of a student's


"adjustment" towards society than information, or the use of logic and
reason. It should come as no surprise, then, that throughout most of his
professional life, Dewey proudly wore the label of a "Social
Progressive."

Dewey was a great admirer of Edward Bellamy's book, "Looking


Back" (1877) which described a Utopian society built upon the ashes of
capitalism.

According to Dewey, Government comes first and its needs must


therefore be paramount over the individual. Society (government)
shapes individuals, not vice-versa, claimed Dewey.

Incredibly, Dewey ridiculed the pursuit of knowledge for its own sake,
declaring that knowledge was only valid and worthwhile if "society"
decided so.

If the Powers That Be ("society") decided literature, or geometry, or


chemistry is no longer a valid pursuit, but multicultural studies,
minority oppression, and remedial basket weaving are, then the
individual should have no alternative to that course of education.
Every virtue, including curiosity, resourcefulness, competitiveness,
ethical conduct, right reasoning, rhetorical skills, logic and
inventiveness -- could be considered to be "vices" overnight if the
Powers That Be ("Society") decided they were no longer desirable.

In Dewey's world, there was no absolute truth. Therefore


everything was malleable and changeable. There was no bedrock,
no anchor upon which mankind might attach and secure their
intellect, their character, or their conduct. Everything was
continually in a state of flux, with the only constant being one's
"duty" to society, to serve it however society chose to dictate
through its institutions.

An emphasis on group participation, group learning, group problem


solving and group activities hammered home the one unbending
principle that the individual's must always subservient to the "group."

Learning and achievement in any field of study, declared Dewey, was


"selfish," the means whereby a child might separate him or her self
from their peers.

Above all, Dewey wanted "top down" control of society. His


philosophy was essentially the Rockefeller's, who sponsored the
universities. Dewey wanted to create cogs for America commerce, just
sufficiently intelligent to follow instructions. The goal of self-
improvement were seen as a dangerous and detrimental deviation.

In our schools today, the current constant whirlwind of parties, drugs,


sports, movie stars, sexual promiscuity, video games, violence, gangs,
and celebrities -- the real unwritten core curriculum of today's centers
of higher education -- are the "new normal."
Children who differ from this norm leave themselves open to ridicule,
hostility, sabotage and disparagement for being "different" than their
group-herd mentality peers.

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