We used to laugh in this country at the crude propaganda the the government of the Soviet Union used to brainwash the people under their rule. In the United States, we don’t call it propaganda. We call it education, but the government has a very conscious mission to brainwash Americans to buy into the system.
A reader who’s going to remain anonymous shared with me this scan from his kindergarten child’s homework, presumably for Presidents’ Day. The students had to read the material and then answer a question. Some of it is just factual, such as the White House being in Washington. Others aren’t so factual, such as, “Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President, was an honest man.” Oh, really? And, “The president works hard every day to protect our country, the USA!” Do they know the difference between opinion and fact?
Do you believe Barack Obama works hard to keep us free? Do you believe that George W. Bush worked hard to keep us free? Or do you believe that each of them had his own political agenda — and that achieving that agenda was far more important than “keeping us free”? (Of course, the question ignores the little matter of what freedom is, too.)
If you grew up in government-run schools and haven’t given a lot of thought to what you were taught, you might look at these statements and find it bewildering that anyone would object to them. But these statements have nothing to do with educating children about how the world works. They have everything to do with getting children to accept and believe national fairy tales.

Why do we put off changes that might give meaning to our lives?
Love & Hope — Update:
What if we planted for future instead of spending for today?
Global warming or a new ice age? Anyone who claims to know is lying
Doing it for the children? No, they’re doing it for the TV cameras
Politicians trying to stamp out innovation to help monopolies
Is there life on Mars? Is there love? Where can we find what’s missing?
Youth and death are bookends pointing toward truth between