If you ever want to make a conservative touchy, the quickest way—out of
many quick ways—is to hint that the connection between ignorance and
holding right-wing views is more than a coincidence. But when you look
at what repugican politicians get up to these days, especially in state
legislatures, it starts to look like repugicans are purposefully
trying to make Americans more ignorant. The attacks on education are, if
anything, just getting bolder all the time. Here are 5 recent examples.
1) Oklahoma is about to ban AP history classes. Under the guise of “emergency” legislation,
the education committee in the Oklahoma legislature had an 11-4 vote to
advance a bill that would ban the advanced placement history curriculum
from Oklahoma schools. There’s not even a real attempt here, as with
other conservative assaults on education, to hide that the goal is to
keep students ignorant so that they are more susceptible to right wing
propaganda. The bill’s sponsor, state representative Dan Fisher, argued
that the schools should be teaching “American exceptionalism,” and
avoiding teaching parts of American history that are less than
flattering.
Sadly, this push to remove history courses that teach
actual history and replace them with a bunch of flattering lies designed
to imply that America can do no wrong is hardly limited to Oklahoma.
The
repugican national coven has endorsed the
idea that AP history courses should teach less strife and present a
more rah-rah view of American history. In Colorado, attempts to
whitewash the history classes
even resulted in student walkouts, garnering national attention.
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2) Scott Walker has it out for the University of Wisconsin. The
University of Wisconsin is a point of pride for the state at large, to
the point where their mascot, the badger, is blanketed over everything
Wisconsin-related,
including government services that aren’t affiliated with the school. Despite this, Scott Walker, flush
with confidence after decimating public service unions in Wisconsin, has it out now for the university, apparently not caring that it’s the state’s pride and joy.
The goal is to slash a whopping $300 million from the University of Wisconsin system over the next two years.
There
may be some lip-smacking about “fiscal conservatism” going on with
this, but Walker and his staff haven’t really taken many pains to hide
that this is rooted in a deeper hostility to the very idea of knowledge
itself. “A harbinger of what Walker might face came in an immediate
uproar on social media this month after his staff proposed changing the
university’s ethereal focus on the pursuit of truth, known as the
‘Wisconsin Idea,’ to a grittier focus on ‘workforce needs,’” reports
the
Washington Post. Walker backed off recasting higher
education as nothing more than job training after his critics pointed
out he is a college dropout, but the fact that this wording change was
proposed at all shows that the hostility to education is
ideological and has little to nothing to do with saving money.
3) Redefining education as “welfare” Mississippi repugican Gene Alday made national headlines recently by
saying one of the most bone-headedly racist things to come out of a
politician’s mouth in recent years, which is saying a lot. “I come from a
town where all the blacks are getting food stamps and what I call
‘welfare crazy checks.’ They don’t work,”
he said during his rant.
He added that he once went to an emergency room and, “”I liked to died.
I laid in there for hours because they (blacks) were in there being
treated for gunshots.”
The comments got coverage because they were
clearly delusional, the result of a man substituting racist urban
legends for actually bothering to learn about policy or reality. But
what got lost in the shuffle a bit was that Alday went on his rant in
part because he was trying to
justify his opposition to increased funding for elementary school education.
Mississippi schools are abysmally underfunded, resulting in shockingly
high rates of kids being held back. Alday’s little racist spiel was an
attempt to insinuate that teaching kids reading and writing amounts to
“welfare” and to suggest that education is wasted on black people in
particular. While his comments were extremist, the refusal to properly
fund schools is mainstream in Mississippi. Gov. Phil Bryant, for
instance,
has revolted against the idea of putting more effort towards teaching kids to read, and suggesting that he’s fine with just holding them back instead.
4) Threatening to arrest teachers for sex education. In Kansas, which seems to get more lunatic fringe wingnutty by the year, repugicans are
no longer satisfied with laws requiring teachers to
pretend that it’s normal and expected for people to wait until marriage
to have sex. Now there’s growing support for having teachers fear jail
time should they ever hint, during sex education, that sex is a thing
people do for pleasure.
Using a teacher who had a poster up in class that suggested—gasp!—that
sex is sometimes used to show affection, repugicans in the state are
sponsoring a bill that would allow officials to criminally charge
teachers for daring acknowledge such a thing ever again. The poster in
question had no pictures on it, just words, suggesting advocates of the
bill happily equate even the most minor acknowledgements that sex is fun
with providing children with pornography.
5) Continued demands that science education be replaced with magic.Other pro-ignorance forces get more headlines these days, but creationists haven’t gone anywhere. In South Dakota,
repugicans once again pushed
for a bill that would “allow” teachers to “question” evolution in the
classroom, which is a fancy way of saying that teachers would be
permitted to treat being ignorant as the equivalent of being educated.
These
kinds of laws don’t do well in court, so it’s no big surprise that
legislators abandoned it. But that doesn’t mean that the wingnuts are giving
up on creationism any time soon. Asked recently about evolution,
Scott Walker stuck to the narrative that
elevates ignorance over education, saying, “That’s a question
politicians shouldn’t be involved in one way or another. I am going to
leave that up to you. I’m here to talk about trade not to pontificate
about evolution.” Far from a politician trying to have it both ways, the
comment was the exaltation of ignorance over education. Evolutionary
theory is a knowable thing. The basics can be grasped simply by watching
an episode of
Cosmos or reading a basic biology textbook. By
treating something as simple as giving 45 minutes over to a TV show or
an hour to a book as more education than he should be expected to
handle, Walker epitomized the new conservative mentality of ignorance
uber alles.
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