Culture Wars
The Bomber as School Reformer | The Bomber as School Reformer |
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October 6, 2008
Sol Stern on Ayers and Obama City Journal The Bomber as School Reformer Voters-and debate moderators-shouldn't let Bill Ayers and Barack Obama off the hook. Back in the early eighties, in an interview with David Horowitz and Peter Collier, Bill Ayers remembered his reaction upon learning that he would not be prosecuted by the government for his bombing spree as a member of the Weather Underground. "Guilty as hell, free as a bird-America is a great country," he exulted.
Ayers is now a university professor, but he must have been exulting all over again after reading Saturday's front-page story in the New York Times.
Calling Bill Ayers a school reformer is a bit like calling Joseph Stalin an agricultural reformer. (If you find the metaphor strained, consider that Walter Duranty, the infamous New York Times reporter covering the Soviet Union in the 1930s, did, in fact, depict Stalin as a great land reformer who created happy, productive collective farms.)
As I have shown in previous articles in City Journal, Ayers's school reform agenda focuses almost exclusively on the idea of teaching for "social justice" in the classroom. This has nothing to do with the social-justice ideals of the Sermon on the Mount or Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech. Rather, Ayers and his education school comrades are explicit about the need to indoctrinate public school children with the belief that America is a racist, militarist country and that the capitalist system is inherently unfair and oppressive. Despite the Times story, American voters still don't have an accurate picture of the relationship between Obama and Ayers during their work on the Annenberg Challenge. The paper's account quoted several people who worked on the project as saying that they didn't think Ayers had any role in selecting Obama for his position as chairman. But we haven't heard a word about the subject from the two principals. For the first time in his life, Ayers seems to be observing Democratic Party discipline and won't be talking until after November 4. Meanwhile, in one of the Democratic primary debates, Obama said that Ayers was just "a guy I know in the neighborhood"-which certainly qualifies as one of the biggest fibs told by any of the candidates so far. Is it too much to hope that one of the moderators of the two remaining debates will press Obama for a fuller accounting of his work with Bill Ayers on the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, and also ask Obama what he thinks of Ayers's views on school reform? If the mainstream media deem it important that voters know which newspapers one of the vice presidential candidates reads, they certainly ought to be demanding more information from a presidential candidate about whom he collaborated with in distributing $160 million to the public schools. How about it, Tom Brokaw? Sol Stern is a contributing editor of City Journal and the author of Breaking Free: Public School Lessons and the Imperative of School Choice.
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