Core of Conviction : My Story (9781101563571) (25 page)

BOOK: Core of Conviction : My Story (9781101563571)
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And so I will drive a freedom-and-prosperity train from all parts of the nation to Washington. I will call it the Liberty Express. Conservatives will be on board, of course. Then we will stop and invite soccer moms to join us, and the women concerned about their children and families. And then men without jobs or who are worried about their jobs. We will include the hardworking, sometimes neglected singles, because they are vital and welcome in the family of community and country. We will stop too for African Americans, who share our vision of faith and family, who are seeking true hope. And Hispanics as well, hardworking values voters who will also want to come aboard. And Asian Americans and all the minorities in this ethnically diverse country of ours, all those who look with a hope for the day when a change will come. Get ready: Better days are ahead. Even before we get to Washington, we'll set our job-creating/economic-growing/government-reforming agenda in motion.

Together we can do this. We can come together and stick together as we renew our nation. A plan for America's renewal. As the great Daniel Webster declared as he commemorated the fiftieth anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill, we must always be “one cause, one country, one heart.”

And of course, we will pray. As Abraham Lincoln said, the issue isn't whether God is on our side; the issue is that we are on God's side. That's my prayerful hope. And so, in the spirit of our great president, I have faith that right makes might. And in that faith I will, to the very end, dare to do my duty for God and country.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I would first like to thank Marcus, who has been with me every step of the way, over thirty-three wonderful years. And I would like to thank my five biological children and my twenty-three foster children. I love you all. You have given me both joy and strength. It's been said that love can be divided endlessly and yet still not diminish. That's certainly been true for me.

I would also like to thank my parents and my grandparents, all of whom worked so hard, gave me so much—and asked for so little in return. Their example, their work ethic, and their wisdom forged the core of conviction that guides me to this day. And I thank my siblings, who have always been friends as well as beloved family. I must also express gratitude to my ancestors, including the Munsons, whose story has provided inspiration to me, more than 150 years after they first came to Iowa from Norway. I may never know the stories of others in my family, but I realize that they all contributed, in their way, to weaving the fabric of this country—a fabric both durable and wondrous.

I also thank God for the many generations who built our nation, beginning with the founding men and women who gave us this land of liberty and opportunity. It is their example over the centuries—from brilliant vision to heroic sacrifice to quiet duty—that inspires me to fight in my own time for a return to greatness under the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and the Bill of Rights.

I would also like to thank my friends and colleagues, my co-workers and co-laborers—all those whom I have been blessed enough to know and to work with. So many of you have helped me, and mentored me, on causes great and small. I have listened to your voices, I have read your writings, and I have derived strength from your deeds. From campaigns to capitals, I have been proud to know you—and you have contributed greatly. And, of course, I must thank the people who have trusted me with their votes and their support. I am honored and humbled, as well as grateful, and will strive always to earn your continued trust and confidence.

And thanks also to Alex Hoyt and Adrian Zackheim, who first saw I had ideas that I could share with the nation. So thanks also to the whole team at Sentinel, Emily Angell, Jackie Burke, Tricia Conley, Susan Petersen Kennedy, Tiffany Liao, Noirin Lucas, Allison McLean, Eric Meyers, Joe Perez, David Shanks, and Will Weisser.

And thanks also to my research and writing partner, Jim Pinkerton, who helped me put onto these pages my memories, my reflections, and my goals.

But I must return once again to acknowledge and honor our country—to give thanks to this beacon of hope, these United States of America, this sanctuary for so many who have yearned to breathe free. A long time ago, in a little corner of the heartland, some sturdy pioneers spoke for all of us when they described the young nation as “this fertile land, where freedom and equality prevail in civil and religious affairs.” In counting their blessings as more wonderful than riches, they were inspired and motivated to help build the American Story.

With God's grace, may it always be so.

APPENDIX:

Goals 2000 in the Context of a Global Power Grab

AS discussed in chapter 8, the origins of Goals 2000 and other similar U.S. legislation can be seen in international agreements, such as “The World Declaration on Education for All,” proclaimed at a 1990 United Nations conference in Jomtien, Thailand. That document, building on numerous previous documents generated by myriad UN conclaves—and augmented by myriad more documents since—is open in its declared ambition to remake the nations of the world on a vast scale. Few Americans know about this world government “mission creep”—the federal government certainly hasn't told them—but as we shall see, the influence of the international education bureaucracy is reshaping American public schools.

For example, Article VIII of the UN's “Education for All” tells us that education, by itself, isn't good enough; society, too, has to change: “Supportive policies in the social, cultural, and economic sectors are required in order to realize the full provision and utilization of basic education for individual and societal improvement.” In other words, society has to be remade to meet bureaucratic specifications—and not just those of national bureaucrats, but those of international bureaucrats as well. Moreover, Article IX puts some mobilizing muscle behind these goals: “If the basic learning needs of all are to be met through a much broader scope of action than in the past, it will be essential to mobilize existing and new financial and human resources, public, private and voluntary.” Now here's an oxymoron for you:
mobilize voluntary resources.
Well, what if those “resources”—that is, you and me and everyone else—don't volunteer to be “mobilized” by some nascent world government? And what do you do when you are “mobilized” anyway? Think about it: It's hard enough to fight city hall. It's even harder to fight your state capital. And harder still to fight Washington, D.C. So how are you going to fight some ruling bureaucracy in another country, a far-away institution that might not even acknowledge your legal standing to put up a fight? By now, we are starting to see more clearly that “education” is just the thin edge of the wedge for a remaking of the world. And here's another one: Article X, “Strengthening International Solidarity”; the first lines of this article read, “Meeting basic learning needs constitutes a common and universal human responsibility. It requires international solidarity and equitable and fair economic relations in order to redress existing economic disparities.” In other words, “education for all” isn't really about education; it's about establishing a new international world economic order to fix “existing economic disparities.”

Some will say, of course, that these are just words—word castles erected by expense-accounted bureaucrats with too much time on their hands, living out a fantasy life of jargon as they junket their way around the globe. But actually, no; these ideas have big consequences. Amid all this word piling, we can see the antecedents to the Goals 2000 legislation that was, in fact, enacted by the U.S. Congress just four years after the Jomtien conference. That is, in both the UN document and the U.S. document, we see the same bureaucratic exhortation, the same commitment to greater government funding, and the same commitment to government power at the expense of local autonomy. (The National Education Goals [Section 102] of Goals 2000 is included at the end of this appendix.) The added twist, of course, is that once the decision-making power goes international, codified in obscure agreements and treaties, it is then beyond the reach of Americans, who are never consulted in these decisions and would certainly never approve of them if they were. There's a term for this phenomenon: “democracy deficit.” That is, the bureaucrats in distant institutions make unaccountable decisions, and citizens and taxpayers find out about them only later. This phenomenon has been happening in Europe under the European Union for years as central planners gather power into Brussels and then seek to impose liberal secular homogenization upon the Continent as a whole. As a most flagrant recent example, people across Europe have awakened to discover that some minister in Frankfurt has just written a huge check to bail out some wastrel government.

This democracy deficit is evident here in the United States, too: American judges now freely cite foreign law in their decisions, and the Environmental Protection Agency—joined by an archipelago of other bureaucratic entities scattered across the federal government—seeks to bend America to rules written by international environmental authorities, most egregiously, in the area of climate change. These legal precedents are ominous to American sovereignty—but that's not an accident, that's the goal. And what if America's legal sovereignty and economic viability are crushed under the weight of international rule making? A small price to pay, the bureaucrats will answer, for global justice. And besides, we know full well that the bureaucrats always seem to flourish, no matter what the state of the economy.

One expert who saw early on this larger context for education policy was my fellow Minnesotan Allen Quist. Decades ago, Allen saw that the true global source of trendy new education policy lay in the central-planning mind-set of international bureaucrats. He asked: “Are we doing what's right for kids? Or are we doing what's right for central planners? Who is calling the shots? Is it school boards, cities, states, federal government, or international bodies? The struggle has never been about good education—it's been all about power.” The good fight against the international central planning of education had to start somewhere, and I am proud to say that we in Minnesota were at the forefront. After five years, we finally beat back the Profile of Learning, which was just one of many efforts to regiment children, and parents, according to the dictates of bureaucratic utopians.

Yet even so, as we have seen in the “No Child Left Behind” legislation of 2001, the same top-down education mind-set persists. And as Allen says, the “top” isn't Washington, D.C.; the top is actually international institutions, including the UN. So that's a fight that must continue into the future. It's a fight on behalf of all those who wish to see children educated in a properly structured school environment, guided under the leadership of parents and teachers, not bureaucrats.

Please take a look at the “National Education Goals” within Goals 2000 listed below. I think you will see the same ponderous bureaucratic style as in the international “Education for All” document—and the same ponderous bureaucratic mind-set. That is, children are, in effect, resources or inputs who must comport to a politically correct list of requirements, even as governments at all levels grow larger and stronger to “implement” these goals. I believe that if the American people knew where so much federal education “reform” was coming from, they would rise up and reject these bureaucratic dictates, reclaiming decision-making authority and restoring it to where it belongs—to taxpayers, parents, and students.

Section 102. National Education Goals

The Congress declares that the national education goals are the following:

(1) School Readiness.

(A) By the year 2000, all children in America will start school ready to learn.

(B) The objectives for this goal are that—

(i) all children will have access to high-quality and developmentally appropriate preschool programs that help prepare children for school;

(ii) every parent in the United States will be a child's first teacher and devote time each day to helping such parent's preschool child learn, and parents will have access to the training and support parents need; and

(iii) children will receive the nutrition, physical activity experiences, and health care needed to arrive at school with healthy minds and bodies, and to maintain the mental alertness necessary to be prepared to learn, and the number of low-birthweight babies will be significantly reduced through enhanced prenatal health systems.

(2) School Completion.

(A) By the year 2000, the high school graduation rate will increase to at least 90 percent.

(B) The objectives for this goal are that—

(i) the Nation must dramatically reduce its school dropout rate, and 75 percent of the students who do drop out will successfully complete a high school degree or its equivalent; and

(ii) the gap in high school graduation rates between American students from minority backgrounds and their non-minority counterparts will be eliminated.

(3) Student Achievement and Citizenship.

(A) By the year 2000, all students will leave grades 4, 8, and 12 having demonstrated competency over challenging subject matter including English, mathematics, science, foreign languages, civics and government, economics, arts, history, and geography, and every school in America will ensure that all students learn to use their minds well, so they may be prepared for responsible citizenship, further learning, and productive employment in our Nation's modern economy.

(B) The objectives for this goal are that—

(i) the academic performance of all students at the elementary and secondary level will increase significantly in every quartile, and the distribution of minority students in each quartile will more closely reflect the student population as a whole;

(ii) the percentage of all students who demonstrate the ability to reason, solve problems, apply knowledge, and write and communicate effectively will increase substantially;

(iii) all students will be involved in activities that promote and demonstrate good citizenship, good health, community service, and personal responsibility;

(iv) all students will have access to physical education and health education to ensure they are healthy and fit;

(v) the percentage of all students who are competent in more than one language will substantially increase; and

(vi) all students will be knowledgeable about the diverse cultural heritage of this Nation and about the world community.

(4) Teacher Education and Professional Development.

(A) By the year 2000, the Nation's teaching force will have access to programs for the continued improvement of their professional skills and the opportunity to acquire the knowledge and skills needed to instruct and prepare all American students for the next century.

(B) The objectives for this goal are that—

(i) all teachers will have access to preservice teacher education and continuing professional development activities that will provide such teachers with the knowledge and skills needed to teach to an increasingly diverse student population with a variety of educational, social, and health needs;

(ii) all teachers will have continuing opportunities to acquire additional knowledge and skills needed to teach challenging subject matter and to use emerging new methods, forms of assessment, and technologies;

(iii) States and school districts will create integrated strategies to attract, recruit, prepare, retrain, and support the continued professional development of teachers, administrators, and other educators, so that there is a highly talented work force of professional educators to teach challenging subject matter; and

(iv) partnerships will be established, whenever possible, among local educational agencies, institutions of higher education, parents, and local labor, business, and professional associations to provide and support programs for the professional development of educators.

(5) Mathematics and Science.

(A) By the year 2000, United States students will be first in the world in mathematics and science achievement.

(B) The objectives for this goal are that—

(i) mathematics and science education, including the metric system of measurement, will be strengthened throughout the system, especially in the early grades;

(ii) the number of teachers with a substantive background in mathematics and science, including the metric system of measurement, will increase by 50 percent; and

(iii) the number of United States undergraduate and graduate students, especially women and minorities, who complete degrees in mathematics, science, and engineering will increase significantly.

(6) Adult Literacy and Lifelong Learning.

(A) By the year 2000, every adult American will be literate and will possess the knowledge and skills necessary to compete in a global economy and exercise the rights and responsibilities of citizenship.

(B) The objectives for this goal are that—

(i) every major American business will be involved in strengthening the connection between education and work;

(ii) all workers will have the opportunity to acquire the knowledge and skills, from basic to highly technical, needed to adapt to emerging new technologies, work methods, and markets through public and private educational, vocational, technical, workplace, or other programs;

(iii) the number of quality programs, including those at libraries, that are designed to serve more effectively the needs of the growing number of part-time and midcareer students will increase substantially;

(iv) the proportion of the qualified students, especially minorities, who enter college, who complete at least two years, and who complete their degree programs will increase substantially;

(v) the proportion of college graduates who demonstrate an advanced ability to think critically, communicate effectively, and solve problems will increase substantially; and

(vi) schools, in implementing comprehensive parent involvement programs, will offer more adult literacy, parent training and life-long learning opportunities to improve the ties between home and school, and enhance parents' work and home lives.

(7) Safe, Disciplined, and Alcohol- and Drug-Free Schools.

(A) By the year 2000, every school in the United States will be free of drugs, violence, and the unauthorized presence of firearms and alcohol and will offer a disciplined environment conducive to learning.

(B) The objectives for this goal are that—

(i) every school will implement a firm and fair policy on use, possession, and distribution of drugs and alcohol;

(ii) parents, businesses, governmental and community organizations will work together to ensure the rights of students to study in a safe and secure environment that is free of drugs and crime, and that schools provide a healthy environment and are a safe haven for all children;

(iii) every local educational agency will develop and implement a policy to ensure that all schools are free of violence and the unauthorized presence of weapons;

(iv) every local educational agency will develop a sequential, comprehensive kindergarten through twelfth grade drug and alcohol prevention education program;

(v) drug and alcohol curriculum should be taught as an integral part of sequential, comprehensive health education;

(vi) community-based teams should be organized to provide students and teachers with needed support; and

(vii) every school should work to eliminate sexual harassment.

(8) Parental Participation.

(A) By the year 2000, every school will promote partnerships that will increase parental involvement and participation in promoting the social, emotional, and academic growth of children.

(B) The objectives for this Goal are that—

(i) every State will develop policies to assist local schools and local educational agencies to establish programs for increasing partnerships that respond to the varying needs of parents and the home, including parents of children who are disadvantaged or bilingual, or parents of children with disabilities;

(ii) every school will actively engage parents and families in a partnership which supports the academic work of children at home and shared educational decisionmaking at school; and

(iii) parents and families will help to ensure that schools are adequately supported and will hold schools and teachers to high standards of accountability.

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