lunes, 22 de abril de 2013

Sometimes indoctrination works, and sometimes it doesn't.

Left Behind


After Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed in 1953, it was no surprise that the adoptive parents of their two sons chose to send the orphaned brothers to the Little Red School House, a New York private school. 

In the McCarthy era, Little Red and its high school, Elisabeth Irwin, were havens for teachers displaced from the public schools by their refusal to sign a loyalty oath to the United States government. 
The schools offered students a very distinctive—Stalinist—political education, and parents knew their children would not be corrupted by bourgeois capitalist values.
To this day, the schools’ combined website describes both Little Red and Elisabeth Irwin as “progressive.” 

They are “committed to social justice,” which they define as “equity in race, ethnicity, gender, religion, sexual orientation, socioeconomic means and family structure.” 

This commitment, in the 1950s and ’60s, meant allegiance to the American Communist party (CPUSA).


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Read more: www.weeklystandard.com

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