Tag Archives: indoctrination

How schools became indoctrination centers

From Unbekoming @ substack

Preface

This essay builds primarily on Eric Dubay’s “Schools = Forced Government Indoctrination Camps,” which synthesizes and presents the historical transformation of American education into a system of control. Dubay’s work itself draws heavily on the pioneering research of John Taylor Gatto and Charlotte Thomson Iserbyt, whose decades of investigation and documentation provide the foundational evidence for understanding how schools became indoctrination centers.

John Taylor Gatto, the award-winning New York teacher who quit because he was “no longer willing to hurt children,” offers an insider’s testimony that validates everything Dubay documents. His “Seven-Lesson Schoolteacher” strips away the veneer of education to reveal the actual curriculum: confusion, class position, indifference, emotional dependency, intellectual dependency, provisional self-esteem, and constant surveillance. These aren’t failures of the system—they are the system.

The Great Dumbing

The Great Dumbing

Unbekoming

October 1, 2023

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Charlotte Thomson Iserbyt brings the receipts. As a senior policy advisor in the Reagan administration’s Department of Education, she had access to the documents that prove the deliberate nature of education’s destruction. Her book “The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America” provides the paper trail—the foundation reports, government memos, and policy documents that show this was never about education. It was always about control.

The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America

The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America

Unbekoming

November 30, 2024

Read full story

Together, these three sources paint a picture that many will find difficult to accept: that the schools we trust with our children were designed as factories to produce compliant workers and consumers, not educated citizens capable of self-governance. The evidence they present isn’t theoretical or conspiratorial—it comes from the architects of the system themselves, who wrote quite plainly about their intentions to use schooling to create a manageable society.

Understanding this history matters now more than ever. As we witness populations accepting unprecedented restrictions on their freedom, as we see adults unable to evaluate conflicting claims or think beyond expert pronouncements, as we observe the widespread inability to imagine alternatives to existing systems—we’re seeing the intended outcomes of a century-long project. The dumbing down wasn’t a mistake. The destruction of critical thinking wasn’t accidental. The production of dependent, anxious, controllable populations was the goal.

This essay synthesizes the work of Dubay, Gatto, and Iserbyt to tell the complete story: how American education was captured, transformed, and weaponized against the very people it claims to serve. The truth they reveal is uncomfortable, even painful. But until we understand how thoroughly we’ve been processed by this system, we cannot begin to reclaim our capacity for independent thought and autonomous action. And without that capacity, we remain what the system designed us to be: human resources awaiting instruction.

Introduction: The Uncomfortable Truth About Modern Schooling

Before 1852, American education consisted of one-room schoolhouses, independent teachers, and students of all ages attending of their own free will. A child in 1840s America might spend a few months learning to read from the Bible, master arithmetic through practical farm calculations, and study rhetoric from books that would challenge today’s college students. The literacy rate in Connecticut showed only one in every 579 people was illiterate. Thomas Paine’s “Common Sense” sold 600,000 copies to a population of just 3 million—of whom twenty percent were slaves and fifty percent indentured servants.

Today’s reality presents a stark contrast. After twelve years of mandatory schooling, one in five American adults is functionally illiterate. Students graduate unable to think critically, emotionally dependent on authority, and conditioned to accept their place in economic hierarchies they don’t understand. This transformation didn’t happen by accident or incompetence. As John Taylor Gatto discovered during his thirty years as a New York City teacher—including three awards as Teacher of the Year—the system works exactly as designed. The problem is that it was never designed to educate.

The architects of modern schooling stated their intentions plainly. In 1906, William Torrey Harris, U.S. Commissioner of Education, declared that ninety-nine students out of one hundred are “automata, careful to walk in prescribed paths, careful to follow the prescribed custom.” This wasn’t a lament but a goal. John D. Rockefeller, whose General Education Board would reshape American schools, was even more explicit in his mission statement: “We shall not try to make these people or any of their children into philosophers or men of science. We have not to raise up from them authors, educators, poets, or men of letters… The task is simple. We will organize children and teach them in a perfect way the things their fathers and mothers are doing in an imperfect way.”

Charlotte Iserbyt, a former senior policy advisor in the Reagan administration’s Department of Education, spent decades documenting how this agenda unfolded through the 20th century. Her research reveals a paper trail of deliberate decisions to transform American education from a system developing individual potential into one producing manageable populations. The methods evolved—from Prussian discipline to Soviet psychology to Silicon Valley algorithms—but the objective remained constant: replacing critical thinking with conditioned responses.

This is not a story of good intentions gone wrong. It’s a documented history of powerful interests using schools to solve what they saw as the problem of too much democracy, too much individual liberty, and too many people capable of questioning authority. Understanding this history isn’t merely academic—it’s essential for recognizing why millions of adults today struggle to evaluate evidence, question experts, or imagine alternatives to the systems that confine them.

The Architecture of Control: From Local to Federal

The transformation of American education from local community schools to a federalized system of control happened through calculated steps spanning seventy years. Between 1852 and 1918, every state adopted compulsory schooling laws—not because communities demanded them, but despite fierce resistance at every turn. As Edward Ross wrote in 1901, plans were underway to “replace community, family, and church with propaganda, education, and mass media.” The state would shake loose from church and reach out to school, making children belong “more to the state and less and less to the parent.”

The initial laws seemed modest. Ten to twelve weeks of attendance for children aged nine to twelve. But incrementally, like a ratchet that only turns one way, the requirements expanded. The school year lengthened from three months to nine. The age range stretched downward to kindergarten and upward through high school. By the 1970s, four-year-olds entered preschool, and by 2000, twenty-six-year-old doctors were still being institutionalized in formal education. Each extension came wrapped in the language of opportunity and progress, never acknowledging that longer schooling meant longer separation from family, community, and meaningful work.

The federalization began in earnest with the 1870 founding of the National Education Association, which immediately announced that science courses nationwide must restructure to teach evolution as fact, not theory. This wasn’t about science—it was about establishing that centralized authorities, not local communities, would determine what children learned. The pattern repeated with each federal intervention: create a crisis, propose a solution requiring centralized control, then never relinquish that control regardless of outcomes.

World War I provided the perfect crisis. The U.S. Army’s intelligence tests revealed that hundreds of thousands of recruits were illiterate—though literacy had been near-universal before compulsory schooling. Rather than question why forced education produced worse results than voluntary learning, reformers demanded more control, more standardization, more years of mandatory attendance. The military’s need for compliant soldiers who followed orders without question became the template for producing compliant workers who would accept industrial discipline without resistance.

The Reece Committee of 1953 and the earlier Walsh Commission both concluded that private foundations—particularly Rockefeller and Carnegie—had essentially purchased control of American education policy. Norman Dodd, the Reece Committee’s research director, reported a chilling conversation with Rowan Gaither, president of the Ford Foundation. Gaither told him bluntly that these foundations operated under White House directives to “use our grant-making power to so alter life in the United States that we can be comfortably merged with the Soviet Union.” When Dodd suggested this investigation might proceed, Gaither warned: “If you proceed with the investigation as you have outlined, you will be killed.”

The creation of the U.S. Department of Education in 1979 completed the architecture of control. What began as local parents teaching their children to read had become a vast bureaucracy employing millions, consuming hundreds of billions of dollars, and producing steadily declining results. Yet the worse the outcomes, the more power and funding the system demanded. Failure became its own justification for expansion.

Gatto observed this paradox firsthand: the system’s failures weren’t bugs but features. Every reform that promised to help struggling students actually extended institutional control over their lives. Every program to close achievement gaps widened them. Every initiative to promote critical thinking produced more passive conformity. The architecture wasn’t broken—it was performing exactly as its architects intended, creating what Iserbyt documented as “the deliberate dumbing down of America.”

The Hidden Curriculum: Seven Lessons of Compliance

John Taylor Gatto’s revelation came after winning his third Teacher of the Year award in 1991. In his acceptance speech—later published as “The Seven-Lesson Schoolteacher”—he exposed what he actually taught, regardless of the subject on his certificate. These seven lessons form the hidden curriculum of every American school, the real content beneath the surface of math, English, and history.

The first lesson is confusion. Nothing connects to anything else. Students jump from mathematics to literature to physical education at the ring of a bell, with no relationship between subjects, no unified understanding of the world. As Gatto explained, children learn “the un-relating of everything,” an infinite fragmentation that prevents them from ever constructing coherent meaning from their experience. A child studying the Revolutionary War at 10:15 must instantly forget it at 11:00 to memorize plant cells, then abandon those at 11:45 for Spanish conjugations. This deliberate incoherence isn’t poor planning—it’s the point. Confused people don’t ask dangerous questions.

The second lesson is class position. Students are numbered, sorted, tracked, and labeled from their first day. They learn to stay where they’re placed, to envy those above them and despise those below. The lesson penetrates so deeply that adults continue competing for position decades after graduation, never questioning why human worth should be ranked and sorted like industrial products. The gifted program teaches arrogance, the remedial class teaches shame, and everyone learns their place in hierarchies they didn’t create and can’t escape.

The third lesson is indifference. Nothing is worth finishing. No project, no thought, no conversation survives the bell. Students learn to invest themselves completely in the moment’s task, then abandon it without hesitation when authority demands. This produces adults who can’t sustain attention, can’t delay gratification, and can’t complete anything without external compulsion. They become perfect consumers, always seeking the next stimulation, never satisfied, never still.

The fourth lesson is emotional dependency. Stars, stickers, grades, and praise teach children that their worth depends on authority’s approval. The teacher’s mood becomes the classroom’s weather. A smile means you’re good; a frown means you’re bad. Decades later, these same students desperately seek validation from bosses, experts, and celebrities, unable to trust their own judgment about their own value. They’ve been taught that self-respect is arrogance and self-knowledge is delusion.

The fifth lesson is intellectual dependency. Good students wait for teachers to tell them what to think. Of the infinite things worth learning, only those assigned matter. Curiosity becomes cheating—looking ahead in the book, asking about topics not on the test, wondering about connections the curriculum doesn’t make. The successful student is one who can suppress their own interests and enthusiastically perform assigned thinking. This produces adults who wait for experts to explain reality, who cannot form opinions without official guidance, who panic when faced with questions that don’t have authorized answers.

The sixth lesson is provisional self-esteem. Report cards teach that worth is always conditional, always measured, always compared. A child who knows they’re loved regardless of performance is impossible to control. So schools ensure that no achievement is ever enough, no status ever secure. The honor student fears the first B, the athlete dreads the faster rival, everyone learns that identity itself is provisional, subject to constant evaluation and revision by authority.

The seventh lesson is that one can’t hide. Surveillance is constant and total. Hall passes, bathroom monitors, homework that invades home life, guidance counselors who demand emotional transparency, standardized tests that measure the psyche as much as knowledge. Students learn that privacy is suspicious, that secrets are dangerous, that authority has the right to know everything. They’re being prepared for a world of credit scores, social media surveillance, and employment monitoring that tracks every keystroke.

These seven lessons explain why school reform always fails. You can’t fix a system that’s working perfectly. The hidden curriculum produces exactly what it was designed to produce: emotionally needy, intellectually dependent, confused and compliant people who will fill the jobs they’re given, buy the products they’re told to want, and never question the structures that confine them.

The Rockefeller Design: Engineering Society Through Schools

The Rockefeller influence on American education represents one of history’s most successful social engineering projects. Through the General Education Board, founded in 1903 with an initial endowment rivaling the entire federal budget for education, John D. Rockefeller didn’t just reform schools—he rebuilt them from the foundation up to serve industrial capitalism’s need for manageable workers and predictable consumers.

The General Education Board’s mission statement deserves careful reading because it states explicitly what critics of education usually only suspect. “In our dreams,” it declared, “people yield themselves with perfect docility to our molding hands. The present education conventions of intellectual and character education fade from their minds, and unhampered by tradition, we work our own goodwill upon a grateful and responsive folk.” This wasn’t educational philosophy—it was industrial production applied to human beings.

Rockefeller’s lieutenants understood that direct control would provoke resistance. Instead, they used grants and gifts to make schools dependent on foundation money, then attached conditions that seemed reasonable but fundamentally altered education’s purpose. Teacher training colleges received millions, but only if they adopted foundation-approved curricula that emphasized classroom management over subject knowledge. School districts got new buildings if they implemented “scientific” tracking systems that sorted students into future roles. Universities expanded with Rockefeller funds, then found their research agendas shaped by what the foundation would finance.

The strategy worked through three mechanisms that Charlotte Iserbyt documents extensively. First, they funded the experts who would define educational problems and solutions. When the National Education Association needed research, Rockefeller foundations provided it. When superintendents wanted training, Rockefeller programs delivered it. Soon, questioning foundation-backed reforms meant questioning science itself.

Second, they created interlocking networks of influence. Foundation trustees sat on education boards, education leaders joined foundation committees, and everyone attended the same conferences, read the same journals, and cited the same research—all funded by the same source. Dissent didn’t need to be suppressed because dissenters couldn’t get hired, published, or promoted within this self-reinforcing system.

Third, they played a long game measured in generations, not election cycles. While politicians came and went, the foundations persisted, accumulating influence like compound interest. A teacher trained in 1920 under Rockefeller-funded programs would still be teaching Rockefeller methods in 1960. A superintendent who implemented foundation reforms in one district would be promoted to spread them to another. Each generation of educators grew up assuming foundation priorities were simply how education worked.

The Rockefeller foundations didn’t work alone. The Carnegie Corporation, established by another industrial titan who understood that controlling education meant controlling society, pursued parallel strategies. Together, they funded the transformation of reading instruction from phonics to “look-say” methods that produced functional illiteracy. They promoted the replacement of classical education with vocational training. They supported the elimination of history in favor of “social studies” that disconnected students from their past.

The brilliance of the Rockefeller design was making teachers and administrators complicit without their knowledge. Well-meaning educators implemented reforms they believed would help children, never realizing these reforms were designed to limit children’s potential. A teacher using foundation-created curricula genuinely wanted students to succeed—success had simply been redefined as accepting your designated role in the economic order.

By the 1950s, the transformation was so complete that Congressional investigations could barely comprehend what had happened. The Reece Committee found evidence of a deliberate agenda to collectivize American society through education, but the findings were dismissed as conspiracy theory. How could philanthropy be subversive? How could gifts have strings attached? The investigators were right but too late. The Rockefeller design had become the only design anyone could imagine.

The foundations’ own archives, which Iserbyt studied extensively, reveal they knew exactly what they were doing. Internal memos discuss “the importance of social control,” the need to “direct human evolution,” and strategies for “managing the dangerous classes.” They weren’t hiding their agenda—they were counting on a populace too well-schooled to recognize it.

From Citizens to Human Resources: The Workforce Pipeline

The transformation of students into “human resources” marks the complete industrialization of education. This shift in language from “children” and “students” to “human capital” and “workforce development” isn’t merely semantic—it represents the fundamental reconception of human beings as economic inputs rather than sovereign individuals. The U.S. Department of Education’s embrace of “lifelong learning” and “21st-century skills” masks a darker reality: the conversion of schools into workforce training centers for a managed economy.

The Secretary’s Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills (SCANS), established in 1990, crystallized this transformation. Its report, “What Work Requires of Schools,” didn’t ask what children need to become fulfilled human beings or engaged citizens. It asked only what employers wanted from their workers. The answer became the new curriculum: compliance, teamwork, acceptance of authority, and just enough literacy to follow instructions but not enough to question them.

School-to-work programs, promoted heavily in the 1990s under both Republican and Democratic administrations, eliminated the pretense that education was about anything other than economic production. Students as young as fourteen were tracked into career paths, their courses determined by workforce projections rather than individual interests or aptitudes. A child who showed mechanical aptitude would be steered toward technical training, regardless of whether they dreamed of writing poetry. One who tested well would be pushed toward college, even if they wanted to work with their hands.

Iserbyt, working inside the Department of Education, watched this transformation accelerate through the 1980s. She documented how Soviet education methods, explicitly designed for a planned economy, were imported wholesale into American schools under the guise of “effective teaching strategies.” The similarities weren’t coincidental—both systems needed to produce predictable outputs for centrally managed economies. The U.S.-Soviet education agreements of 1985, signed by Reagan and Gorbachev, formalized this exchange of “pedagogical techniques” that treated children as products to be molded rather than individuals to be educated.

The language of manufacturing pervaded education reform. Students became “products,” teachers became “delivery systems,” and schools became “production units.” Quality control meant standardized testing. Efficiency meant larger class sizes and scripted curricula. Innovation meant finding cheaper ways to produce the same outcomes. The factory model that reformers claimed to oppose had actually conquered education completely—it just dressed in the language of reform.

Outcome-based education (OBE), promoted by William Spady and implemented nationwide in the 1990s, epitomized this industrial approach. Rather than teaching subjects, schools would produce “outcomes”—predetermined behaviors and attitudes that students must demonstrate. The outcomes always emphasized workplace skills and social attitudes over academic knowledge. A typical OBE goal might require students to “work effectively in diverse teams” or “adapt to changing conditions,” but never to think critically about why they should accept constant workplace surveillance or question who benefits from their adaptation.

The tech industry’s entry into education accelerated this transformation. Companies like IBM and Apple didn’t just sell computers to schools—they shaped curricula to produce the workers they needed. Computer literacy replaced classical literacy. Coding bootcamps replaced shop class. Students learned to interact with machines more fluently than with humans, preparing them for futures in cubicles interfacing with screens rather than communities.

Goals 2000 and America 2000, federal education initiatives that promised to make American students “first in the world in mathematics and science achievement,” actually subordinated all learning to economic competitiveness. The goal wasn’t educated citizens but competitive workers. When students learned science, it wasn’t to understand nature but to staff STEM industries. When they studied mathematics, it wasn’t to develop logical thinking but to fill engineering positions.

This workforce pipeline explains why schools obsess over college attendance rates while ignoring whether students actually learn anything in college. The credential matters more than the education because employers use degrees as sorting mechanisms, not indicators of knowledge. A bachelor’s degree signals that someone can tolerate four more years of institutional processing, making them suitable for cubicle work. Graduate degrees indicate even greater compliance capacity, qualifying holders for management positions where they’ll impose the same system on others.

The conversion of citizens into human resources serves multiple functions for those Gatto calls “the guardians of the system.” It ensures a compliant workforce that won’t organize effectively for better conditions. It creates insecure workers who compete against each other rather than cooperating for mutual benefit. Most importantly, it prevents people from imagining themselves as anything other than economic units, foreclosing possibilities for different ways of living and organizing society.

The Deliberately Dumbed Down: Methods and Outcomes

Charlotte Iserbyt’s meticulous documentation reveals that the dumbing down of America wasn’t accidental decline but deliberate policy, implemented through specific techniques designed to prevent critical thinking while maintaining the appearance of education. Her archive of government documents, foundation reports, and insider communications provides the smoking gun: they knew exactly what they were doing.

The assault on literacy came first and most decisively. The replacement of phonics with “whole word” or “look-say” reading methods in the 1920s and 1930s, funded by Rockefeller and Carnegie foundations, created an epidemic of functional illiteracy. Children who could have learned to read any word by sounding it out instead had to memorize thousands of word shapes like Chinese ideograms. Those who couldn’t—particularly boys and active learners—were labeled dyslexic or learning disabled, then shunted into special education where expectations dropped even lower.

Dr. Samuel Blumenfeld’s research, which Iserbyt cites extensively, showed that prior to these reforms, literacy was nearly universal among non-slave populations. After look-say methods took hold, reading problems exploded. By 1993, the National Adult Literacy Survey found 42 million Americans completely illiterate and another 50 million reading below fifth-grade level. This wasn’t failure—it was the intended outcome. As UNESCO’s “Toward World Understanding” stated explicitly, teaching children to read too well would make them resistant to social engineering.

Mathematics instruction followed a similar pattern. Traditional arithmetic—memorizing multiplication tables, learning algorithms, practicing computation—gave way to “new math” in the 1960s, then “whole math” in the 1990s. Students used calculators before understanding numbers, discussed mathematical concepts without mastering basic operations, and worked in groups where one student’s knowledge masked another’s ignorance. The result: cashiers who can’t make change, engineers who rely entirely on computers, and a population that accepts economic statistics without understanding their manipulation.

History disappeared entirely, replaced by “social studies” that severed children from their heritage. Instead of learning about the American Revolution, students did projects on “conflict resolution.” Rather than studying the Constitution, they participated in “consensus-building exercises.” The timeline of human achievement became a catalog of oppression, teaching children to despise their civilization rather than understand it. How can people defend freedoms they’ve never learned existed? How can they recognize tyranny they’ve been taught to call progress?

The methods for achieving this dumbing down came straight from behavioral psychology. B.F. Skinner’s operant conditioning, imported wholesale into classrooms as “mastery learning,” treated children like laboratory rats. Benjamin Bloom’s taxonomy, which sounds educational but actually derives from psychotherapy, focused on changing attitudes and values rather than transmitting knowledge. Every child became a patient, every classroom a therapy session, every teacher an unwitting psychologist modifying behavior toward predetermined outcomes.

Iserbyt documented how these methods were tested first in inner-city schools on minority populations, refined through experimentation on the powerless, then rolled out nationwide once perfected. Programs with names like “Outcomes-Based Education,” “Mastery Learning,” and “Direct Instruction” all used the same behavioral conditioning techniques: break learning into tiny fragments, reward compliance, punish deviation, never allow students to see the whole picture.

The computer revolution didn’t democratize education—it completed the conditioning process. Educational software tracks every keystroke, records every wrong answer, builds psychological profiles more detailed than any teacher could compile. Algorithms determine what students learn next, how fast they progress, what remediation they receive. The machine becomes the teacher, infinitely patient with compliance, infinitely intolerant of creativity.

The results are visible everywhere. College students who can’t write coherent paragraphs. Employees who can’t solve problems without step-by-step instructions. Citizens who can’t evaluate competing claims without fact-checkers. Voters who respond to emotional manipulation rather than logical argument. A population perfectly prepared for management by experts, incapable of the independent thought required for self-governance.

The most insidious aspect is that the dumbed-down don’t know they’re dumbed-down. They’ve been taught that their limitations are natural, their ignorance inevitable, their dependence necessary. They believe themselves educated because they possess credentials. They think themselves informed because they consume media. They consider themselves free because they can choose between approved options. The deliberate dumbing down succeeded not just in limiting what people know, but in eliminating their awareness that there’s anything else to know.

Conclusion: The Cost of Institutionalized Childhood

After twelve years of compulsory schooling, American children emerge having learned primarily how to respond to bells, how to request permission for bodily functions, and how to accept arbitrary authority. They’ve spent 15,000 hours in preparation for lives of compliance, their natural curiosity systematically extinguished, their capacity for independent thought deliberately atrophied. The cost cannot be measured merely in dollars or test scores but in human potential destroyed, imaginations stunted, and spirits broken.

Gatto calculated that students spend less than 100 hours actually learning to read, write, and compute—skills that motivated children can master in months, not years. The remaining thousands of hours serve no educational purpose. They habituate children to institutionalization, teaching them to depend on experts, to wait for instructions, to seek external validation, to never trust their own judgment. School extends childhood artificially into the twenties and beyond, creating perpetual adolescents who never achieve genuine maturity or independence.

The damage ripples through generations. Parents who were themselves schooled into compliance cannot model independent thinking for their children. Communities stripped of their educational authority lose the capacity for self-governance. Families scheduling their lives around school calendars, homework demands, and extracurricular activities have no time for the conversations, projects, and relationships that once transmitted culture and values. The very idea that parents might be their children’s primary educators seems radical, even irresponsible, to people convinced that only certified experts can teach.

Yet cracks appear in the edifice. The COVID-19 lockdowns of 2020 forced millions of parents to see what their children were actually learning—or not learning. Homeschooling, once considered fringe, gained mainstream acceptance as families discovered that children learn better without schools. The internet, despite its dangers, allows motivated learners to access knowledge that schools would never provide. Some young people are rejecting the college-to-cubicle pipeline entirely, creating their own paths outside institutional frameworks.

The solution isn’t reform—it’s replacement. No amount of tinkering can fix a system functioning exactly as designed. Adding computers won’t democratize education when the software embeds the same behavioral conditioning. Smaller classes won’t help when teachers are trained in the same methods. Higher standards mean nothing when the standard itself is compliance rather than thinking. Every reform extends the system’s reach while claiming to improve it.

Real education looks nothing like school. It happens when a child’s interest meets appropriate resources—books, tools, mentors, experiences. It requires time to think, freedom to fail, and permission to pursue tangents. It involves making real things, solving actual problems, and contributing to communities. It cannot be standardized, measured, or certified because each human being’s potential is unique, irreducible to institutional categories.

The path forward requires courage to reject what we’ve been conditioned to accept. Parents must reclaim their children’s education, even at financial and social cost. Communities must create alternatives to school that nurture rather than process children. Most difficult, adults must unlearn their own schooling, recovering capacities for independent thought and autonomous action that twelve years of institutionalization suppressed.

The architects of compulsory schooling succeeded beyond their dreams, creating a population so thoroughly schooled that they cannot imagine education without school, cannot conceive of children learning without curricula, cannot trust themselves to think without expert guidance. But human nature persists despite institutional processing. Children still wonder, still question, still resist—until school teaches them not to. That resistance, that natural curiosity and independence, is the seed from which genuine education can grow, if we have the courage to nurture it outside the shadow of institutional control.

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NZLoyal – Who Approved This Book For Kiwi Children? (Liz Gunn)

Banned in Australia!

VIDEO LINK HERE

There is currently a total betrayal of the innocence of Kiwi children under this labour government.

https://nzloyal.org.nz/

Image by Anemone123 from Pixabay

The Idiot Box: How TV Hypnotizes You (James Corbett)

In preparation for James Corbett’s upcoming course on The History of the Media, The Corbett Report Subscriber is presenting a three-part series on the past, present and future of mass media. Last week we examined How the First Media Moguls Shaped History. This week we examine the history of psychological research into mass media’s effects on the public mind and explore the particular properties of the television set that render its audience susceptible to its lies.

You can tell a lot about an item by the nicknames we give it. So what do our nicknames for the television tell us about that device?

“The idiot box.”

“The boob tube.”

“The tell-lie-vision.”

READ AT THE LINK

https://www.corbettreport.com/the-idiot-box-how-tv-hypnotizes-you/

(Sick?) Denmark launches children’s TV show about man with giant penis

Grooming your children via killavision? Normalizing the abnormal? (on that topic see this post). I’m sure children have enough in these troubling times to be thinking about besides some man’s large penis. If you’re at all keen to see they are not kidding there is a link to the actual animation in the article. I saw a post today speaking of the high rate of mental illness among children now. In NZ a child tried to suicide twice last lockdown. The world is becoming a very frightening place for them. Not that the people in charge are all that concerned given they are hiding the suicide stats and more focused on electric cars and the climate change (ruse) than the health of children. (Apparently Bill Gates has written a book about climate change, you read that right. His ‘expertise’ (not) goes way beyond IT as you may well have noticed). EWR

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jan/06/john-dillermand-denmark-launches-childrens-tv-show-man-giant-penis?fbclid=IwAR3-ctIv-5buLvgtGyKyReAxy05Ziqv5vc0JqOokj5JHeu1l4rtt3g1bw0k

Image by Vidmir Raic from Pixabay

Another slogan from the globalists

Kiwis if you search the slogan ‘build back better NZ’ in google it features prolifically in NZ. Worth a listen … the globalists are fond of their slogans being the great propagandists that they are. Controlling your thoughts, one at a time. EWR

RELATED NZ LINKS, thanks to Martin Harris at Uncensored:

Post-disaster reconstruction in Christchurch: a “Build Back Better” perspective

Five ways NZ will be much better if Jacinda makes good on her promise to Build Back Better

“Build Back Better”Principles for Reconstruction

Why a children’s book about Jacinda Adern?

A book about NZ’s PM Jacinda Adern titled Taking the Lead: How Jacinda Ardern Wowed the World, was published on March 3rd 2020, just prior to the covid-19 lock down. Great timing.

Why a children’s book? One could understand an adult’s book but children’s? This to me is reminiscent of the lead up to fascist regimes like Hitler’s. The targeting of youth for adulation of the ‘beloved leader’. Now in ordinary circumstances of course (before you exit reading) this would sound like a ridiculous notion. She is the atypical ‘beloved leader’, a charming young mother, fighting for the poor allegedly. A leader who says that ‘people matter’.

However we are not in ordinary or normal circumstances any more, that all disappeared into the mist late March (earlier some would argue) with the virus lock down. So, in the light of increased Police powers including arming them, providing bullet proof vehicles, the taking away of citizens’ guns, all after the Christchurch incident we are not allowed to talk about, the pointing of guns at little kids, terrorizing them, the mysterious Police visits to Kiwis (in the night even), the very recent passing of draconian laws allowing Police entry to your home without a warrant, the extreme censorship that is now going on, supported by the NZ govt no less, and the increasing surveillance in the name of health … really … this is actually not such a ridiculous notion.

Adern is not as popular as mainstream is making out. Her recent speech about donating millions to depopulation globalists Bill and Melinda Gates’ GAVI program (so as everybody gets the opportunity to be vaccinated, especially the poor) garnered over 600 replies in objection which were promptly removed. Now there’s a sweeping bit of censorship. (Remember, when rich people suddenly appear to care about the poor, there’s a smelly rodent right there).

Remember also, Adern is a globalist. Meaning, for the unenlightened, she is a part of the push at this time in history, for a global government. Out of her own mouth in her UN speech she referred to the much touted ‘world order’. Learn about her history & her short rise to ‘fame’ in the video at this link (short version). Hear a longer more in-depth version at this link.

RELATED: The United Nations 2030 Agenda decoded

Anne Bressington former Australian politician speaks about Agenda 21 (precursor to Agenda 2030)

The image below is from ‘A is for Adolph’, part of a collection exhibited in London’s Weiner library in 2012.

The parents of we older folk, who went off to fight in WW2, they will doubtless be turning in their graves at the current goings on. EWR

RELATED: Agenda 21/2030 in NZ

And below is the book & an intro about Adern taken from Google books website.

QUOTE: “An inspiring illustrated story for children about Jacinda Ardern, and her meteoric rise to become the world’s youngest female leader. Nobody is too young to start changing the world. When Jacinda was little, she wanted to be a clown. But when she saw schoolmates who didn’t have lunch, or even shoes, she knew she had to do something. Some kids laughed at her for wanting to help people so much, or said she couldn’t do it. But that didn’t stop Jacinda. She became the Prime Minister of New Zealand, and the worlds youngest female leader. This is the true story of a trailblazer who has inspired people around the planet, told by an award-winning author and illustrator.”

READ MORE : https://books.google.co.nz/books/about/Taking_the_Lead.html?id=zKWDygEACAAJ&source=kp_book_description&redir_esc=y&fbclid=IwAR0ezDc95FnhqA4FH0sNiFz_SFQLQo-S8QQWPFAGop-mYT3q0KxlPAT9l2k

Image by Ben Kerckx from Pixabay

The collusion of those who are helping you ‘know’ what to think

Does any sane person really believe a scripted media who all say the exact same words? WHO is telling all these “journalists” to say the same thing?

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

The UN ‘Safe Schools’ think your 5 year olds need to learn about abortion, masturbation & contraception among other things

Notice Planned Parenthood is mentioned. That is the organization under the spotlight for abortion & the trade in body parts. Safe Schools is not what it seems I’ve figured that much from my research. The website describing who was influential in starting Safe Schools was an advocate of sexual love between men & boys. I will find that information and post on it when time permits. That original page has gone from the net now, unfortunately I didn’t save it, so will take a bit of digging.

From youreteachingourchildrenwhat.org

The United Nations wants to teach our kids, as young as FIVE, masturbation, abortion, gender confusion, homosexuality, contraception, fornication, and more.

The “International technical guidance on sexuality education,” is based on evidence from heavily pro-abortion groups like Planned Parenthood and LGBT advocacy group OutRight Action International.

The UNESCO guidelines Include the following:

5-8yrs: – Learn about ‘non-traditional families.’
Define ‘good touch and bad touch.’
‘Identify a trusted adult and demonstrate how they would ask questions they may have about their feelings and their body.’
‘define gender and biological sex and describe how they are different’
‘reflect on how they feel about their biological sex and gender’
‘identify sources of information about sex and gender’
‘acknowledge that perceptions about sex and gender are influenced by many different sources’
‘Define Gender Based Violence’
‘define child abuse including sexual abuse and online child sexual exploitation’
‘identify ways that men’s, women’s, boys‘, and girls’ bodies are the same; the ways they are different; and how they can change over time’
‘describe the process of reproduction – specifically that a sperm and egg must both join and then implant in the uterus for a pregnancy to begin’
‘define puberty’
Regarding Sex & Sexuality ‘understand that physical enjoyment and excitement are natural human feelings, and this can involve physical closeness to other people’
‘state that people show love and care for other people in different ways, including kissing, hugging, touching, and sometimes through sexual behaviours’
‘explain that pregnancy and reproduction are natural biological process, and that people can plan when to get pregnant’

9-12yrs: ‘identify examples of how culture, religion and society affect our understanding of sexuality’
‘demonstrate respect for diverse practices related to sexuality’
‘define gender identity’
‘explain how someone’s gender identity may not match their biological sex’
‘acknowledge that everyone has a gender identity
‘appreciate their own gender identity and demonstrate respect for the gender identity of others’
‘describe examples of sexual abuse (including rape, incest and online sexual exploitation)’
‘describe examples of intimate partner violence’
‘express confidence in understanding how the menstrual cycle or ejaculation of sperm happens’
‘describe male and female responses to sexual stimulation (knowledge)
‘state that during puberty boys and girls become more aware of their responses to sexual attraction and stimulation’
‘explain that many boys and girls begin to masturbate during puberty or sometimes earlier’
‘acknowledge that masturbation does not cause physical or emotional harm but should be done in private’
‘compare and contrast advantages and disadvantages of choosing to delay sex or to become sexually active’

READ MORE & WATCH A VIDEO:

http://youreteachingourchildrenwhat.org/2018/02/wont-believe-un-wants-teach-5-year-olds-sex/?fbclid=IwAR13aGrvwbJDUQSEpP25S1Ep57yn5qtzRTzDJum3zPPHzd7j1sgsS4pBFpk

The NZ Govt is teaching your child that Class 1A ecotoxin 1080, banned by most countries, is ‘not very dangerous to humans’

Note: As your kids head back to school, keep an eye out for the poison propaganda. IMO it is not acceptable to send an official text book message to young children that a class 1A ecotoxin, classed by WHO as ‘highly hazardous’, is not very dangerous to humans. There is no antidote to this poison & it is frequently found lying around for weeks on end after aerial drops.  (21/1/2019)


Over all, this item featuring a Year 10 Science book & its fairly ho hum description of the toxicity of 1080, appears to be normalizing the use of poisons.

Dr Meriel Watts says about 1080 poison:

“1080 is classed by the World Health Organisation as an Extremely Hazardous pesticide (Class 1a WHO). You may not be aware that as such it falls within the category of Highly Hazardous Pesticides for which the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) is seeking a global phase out.

42093980_2210072019273112_6648787559516209152_n
Image & info supplied by Carol Sawyer

There is no antidote for 1080. Poisoned  by it, you have no hope of being saved. However, our esteemed authorities in higher places have seen fit to describe it to our children as not very dangerous to humans. Wherever you stand on the use of 1080, be it for or against, I would still call such a description of an acutely toxic poison for your children’s information, highly irresponsible.

THIS IS WHAT OUR YEAR 10 NEW ZEALAND SCHOOL PUPILS ARE BEING TAUGHT!

This is from Science Plus, Book 2, Year 10. Why is the government allowed to teach our children lies?


Read the data on 1080 straight from the manufacturer’s info:

HAZARD IDENTIFIERS:
Priority Identifiers – Danger. Deadly Poison. Keep out of reach of
children. Ecotoxic.
Secondary Identifiers – Acutely toxic. May be fatal if swallowed,
inhaled or absorbed through the skin. Repeated oral exposure may
cause reproductive or developmental damage. When handling open
containers or baits, wear protective equipment as indicated below.
Toxic to terrestrial vertebrates. Take measures to reduce the risk of nontarget
animals being exposed to the toxin either through eating baits or
by scavenging the carcasses of poisoned animals. Harmful to aquatic
organisms. Manage bait application rates carefully and comply with any
restrictions imposed on placing baits over or near waterways. Avoid
pollution of any water supply with pellets or used container.

DANGEROUS GOODS

CLASS:
0.04% – 0.1% 6.1C (Packaging Group III)
0.15% – 0.2% 6.1B (Packaging Group II)
GENERAL
REQUIREMENTS:
Deadly Poison. Subject to tracking requirements for individual packs.
Available for purchase and use only by holders of Controlled
Substances Licenses. This substance must be under the control of an
Approved Handler for Class 6 and Class 9 Hazardous substances at all
times unless being transported by a transport operator with a Dangerous
Goods License endorsement.   SOURCE: Orillion Safety Data Sheet


1080 is NOT a natural substance.. it is a synthetic poison, a World Health Organisation Class 1A ecotoxin, banned in most countries. It is extremely dangerous to humans. One standard teaspoon of pure 1080 poison can kill 100 grown men. One 1080 bait (0.15% pure poison) can kill a child.

Over all, the use of poisons appears to be becoming very normalized. Videos like this below certainly illustrate that.

I read an article yesterday by Geoff Booth, a Kiwi and a B.Sc. who worked for a long time in pest eradication using poisons including 1080 & with DoC, so is very knowledgeable in the use of 1080. He said the US manufacturers are dismayed at the way we in NZ use 1080, in a totally opposite way to the labelled recommendations, ie it is ‘chucked around in a veritable lollie scramble in the bush from helicopters’.

Those of us who have lived more than 50 years on the planet know that there was little mention of poison in our childhoods. If you personally think it’s fine for our kids, you need to read Dr Meriel Watts’ book, Poisoning Our Future: Children and Pesticides.

Poisoning Our Future small

“Poisoning Our Future: Children and Pesticides” The book details the scientific evidence for the insidious effects of pesticides on children and calls on government institutions to adopt a more precautionary approach to better protect human health and the environment.

Toxic chemicals such as pesticides pollute our surroundings – from the food we eat, the water we drink, and the air we breathe in our homes, farms, communities, at schools and work and even our own bodies. Children are exposed to these pesticides and are very much vulnerable to the negative health effects of these harmful chemicals. Yet, governments and industry overlook these impacts on children’s health despite the availability of safer alternatives to pesticides.

According to Pesticide Action Network Aoteoroa New Zealand author, Dr Meriel Watts, “Children are not little adults. The activities they do make them more prone to accumulate pesticides in their bodies; and their developing bodies make them more prone to the negative effects of toxic chemicals such as pesticides. Yet government regulatory processes and tests do not look into these effects,” according to Dr Meriel Watts, author of the book. Tests used to approve use of pesticides do not look into endocrine disruption which can impact the physical, intellectual and behavioural development of the foetus and young child. The effects can include ADHD and autism and even conditions like obesity and breast cancer that can show up later in life in what is now referred to as the “foetal origins of adult disease”. Some childhood cancers like leukaemia have been linked to the exposure of parents to pesticides. Highly hazardous pesticides also damage the developing immune, nervous and reproductive systems.

SOURCE: https://foodmattersnz.com/14-15th-february-2015/poisoning-our-future-children-and-pesticides/

If you’ve been reading our articles for a while you’d be aware of photographs featuring children with their parents finding baits all over walking tracks. Here is one from the South Island recently posted by Carol Sawyer. You can read the full article here.

37229107_2152662435014071_7077455149974683648_n.jpg
School holidays & children with 1080 baits in the Timaru Creek aerial 1080 drop zone July 2018  Photo: supplied

For further articles on 1080 use the ‘categories’ drop down box at the left of the news page. Check out the 1080 pages at the main menu, particularly the sub tab, ‘suspected 1080 poisoning cases’. Educate yourself on the risks & protect your children. Read them the data safety sheets in a child friendly manner. Discuss the risks & caution them never to touch the 1080 baits.

Finally, remember what the retired MD Charlie Baycroft said recently … ‘if you die from 1080 poisoning, nobody will know  because the Ministry of Health is bullying NZ Doctors into not testing for 1080′. 

POSTSCRIPT:

(1) A week after writing this, a Facebook post describes a child in the family announcing “they had someone from DOC come into school and give a big talk about conservation and the need for 1080”. Better to get proactive then parents & have a chat with your child’s school about your preferences around what they learn on the poison topic.

(2) Someone has emailed the Poisons Centre on topic:

Kia ora,

Thank you for your email regarding high school science text books. The National Poison Centre is an emergency service that provides emergency first aid and treatment advice over the phone. We are not involved in legislation, lobbying, or teaching of science in education facilities.

I would recommend continuing to contact the Ministry of Education, or if unsuccessful contacting your local Member of Parliament to liase with Ministry on your behalf.

Nāku nā
Yvette Millard
Yvette Millard, BSc., MSc (Otago) Nat Dip Amb Pract (L5)
Poisons Information Specialist
National Poisons Centre / Te Pokapū Mātauranga Tāoke
University of Otago
P.O. Box 913
Dunedin 9054
New Zealand
Poison advice (NZ): ‪0800 764766‬ (0800 POISON)
Poison advice (World): ‪+ 64 3 4797248‬
Admin: ‪+ 64 3 4797227‬
Fax: ‪+ 64 3 4770509‬
Health professionals: ‪www.toxinz.com
Parents and caregivers: ‪www.poisons.co.nz

Good morning,

I am very concerned after viewing a year 10 science text book on an anti poison social media page  The information within the text book is incorrect and highly dangerous, to elude that one of the worlds deadliest poisons, Compound 1080 with no known antidote, ‘is not that poisonous to humans’ is ludicrous and downright evil.

How are children meant to know any different about the dangers of this poison if this is what they are taught at schools in New Zealand!!

This textbook information directly contradicts the manufacturers warning label & manufacturers data sheet:

Deadly poison. Keep out of reach of children
Avoid all waterways.
Deadly to aquatic life.
Will decompose at temperatures over 200 degrees.
Avoid secondary poisoning.
Poisoned carcasses should be burned completely or buried deeply at hazardous waste landfill
https://www.pestoff.co.nz/
assets/sds1080solution.pdf

Please alert the Ministry of Education to this terrible error! I have already emailed them with no success to have this textbook removed from the curriculum.

I look forward to your reply.

Yours sincerely,

 

LINK SUPPLIED

 

 

 

 

 

Illuminati Pedophilia: Attempts To Normalize Sex Between Adults And Children (Part 2)

I’m posting the link for this rather than reblogging. It contains a graphic & sickening image you may not want to see, however I repost because the activities of these sickos need to be exposed & their victims helped. Watch your kids, they’re being subtly indoctrinated into the new norm… media, television, the gadgets, it’s all on.

https://ift.tt/2CxqB44

Before moving on to discussing Illuminati attempts to change societal views on pedophiles and pedophilia, one more thing needs to be added to the discussion from Part 1 about the sexualization of children. It centers on the activities and advocacy of the International Planned Parenthood Federation.

Planned Parenthood arose at a time in history when some aspects of sexual liberation were, I believe, an important step for evolving Western societies beyond some rigid cultural mores. However, as we discussed in ‘Illuminati Pedophilia: What Is The Role Of The Awakening Community?‘, organizations that start off with the interests of humanity in mind have easily become infiltrated and co-opted by the ruling elite for their own agenda.

READ MORE

https://peoplestrusttoronto.wordpress.com/2018/09/07/illuminati-pedophilia-attempts-to-normalize-sex-between-adults-and-children-part-2/

The purpose of mainstream media is thought control and suppression: How to find the facts between the propaganda

(Natural News) The average person living in the modern world today is bombarded with so much information on a daily basis, much of it conflicting, that he or she is likely to oscillate within a constant state of cognitive dissonance. Making sense of what’s true and what’s “fake” has basically become a full-time job, and people who already work full-time for a living and take care of their families simply don’t have the extra time necessary to make heads or tails of the increasingly complex reality in which we all live – hence why so many people simply accept whatever they’re told or what comes naturally to them.

media

Discovering what’s actually true in today’s world is a difficult endeavor, despite the fact that we now have the internet right at our fingertips like never before. That’s because there’s simply too much information out there now to try to sort through it all, especially when it counters the official narratives being spread by the mainstream media. Much of what people are told is “news,” in other words, is little more than propaganda designed to control people’s thoughts while suppressing all forms of thought that are independent or critical.

media-con

“From mainstream media to social media. From ‘real’ news to ‘fake’ news. From Facebook political pokes to Twitter Trumpisms. It’s getting more and more difficult to navigate the wide-open waters of the information age,” writes Gary McGee for Waking Times about the severity of this widespread problem.

“All too often we take the easy route and unquestioningly stick to our political party line. But when it comes down to it, it is our responsibility alone to think clearly. It’s not our chosen news outlet’s responsibility. It’s not our teacher’s responsibility. It’s not our political party’s responsibility. It is ours and ours alone.”

Beware of ‘newspeak,’ ‘doublethink,’ and the agenda of total thought control

One conspicuous tactic that the propaganda overlords love to employ on the masses is known as “newspeak,” which centers around the idea of keeping people confined to thought “baskets” that prevent them from discovering the full truth about the matter. Oftentimes there’s a little bit of truth contained in newspeak in order to cleverly disguise the full extent of it, while simultaneously making those who fall for it believe that they’ve attained understanding.

In his book The Common Good, Noam Chomsky writes about how newspeak, a term that was first coined by George Orwell in his famous book 1984, is used to create the illusion of free speech and press while accomplishing the exact opposite.

https://www.naturalnews.com/2017-11-17-the-purpose-of-mainstream-media-is-thought-control-and-suppression-how-to-find-the-facts-in-the-propaganda.html


 

See also our Mainstream Media pages at the main menu for further info

For other articles on this topic search categories, top left of the page

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