Those unanswered questions
December 3, 2002
Continually, in the context of the
transformation of education to systems education, I hear government officials
and public employees refer to children as "our children" or "the
state's children", ie, Washington's children.
Is this just a slip of the lip, or ... ?
The last I knew, my children's birth
certificates didn't show the state of Washington as their parents. So how
is it that the State of Washington refers to my children as theirs?
Has the state fed my children ...
clothed my children ... provided a roof over their head ... loved them ...
provided for them? To each and all, the answer is "no".
So how can the state claim my children as theirs?
How many times have parents, asking hard
questions about education reform, been told that the process had
"community representation" or "the input of the people"?
Oh, so I'm not part of the community, and I'm not a person? And
considering I'm forced to pay taxes to support the government school, I shouldn't
have the right to voice my concerns about the manner in which the school is
being run, what is being taught, and how it is being taught, how my tax dollars
are being spent? And, to boot, I don't remember giving anyone the right
to represent me.
So, please explain to me how it can be
said that the process had community representation or the input of the people.
It has had neither. It can't be called community representation when the
people sitting at the table were selected, no elected, and were selected based
on whether they agreed with education reform. And it can't be said the
people had input when they are facilitated to a predetermined outcome.
Oh dear, those unanswered ... or is it
unanswerable ... questions!
When it comes to my child, it is what I
think and what I want that counts. I didn't sign over my rights, either as an
individual or a parent, to the state when my child entered the government
school. I do not consider the state my master. As established by
the Constitution, the state is my servant.
Now, if the government wants to run a
school to promote its agenda and causes, then it is those who choose to send
their child/ren to that government school who should pay for it. It is a violation of the U.S.
Constitution to force people to pay taxes to support a worldview that violates
their freedom of conscience—their right not to have to pay for or promote a
worldview they do not approve of or agree with.
Oops, doesn't that mean government
schools promoting the humanist religion are unconstitutional?
So, how is it that the state refers to
my child as theirs? Because, under the paradigm shift from the Christian
worldview to the humanist worldview, my child is considered to be not more than
someone to do the bidding of the state; not an individual with free will, but
"human capital" or a "human resource" no better than a cow
in the pasture or a machine in the field, there to be taken care of in the
interests of providing for the master.
What a chilling thought that so many do
not realize, don't want to realize, the position this humanist worldview places
them in. What a chilling thought that people are so willing to be ousted
from their God-given position as the highest form of life on Earth, to a
position in which they are of no more worth than a cow or a piece of machinery.
What a chilling thought that people are willing to replace God as the
ultimate authority with the state as the ultimate authority. How chilling
that people call themselves Christians but teach humanism in the public
schools, use it in the public sector, write it into the laws that are written
and passed, both state and federal, and use it in boardrooms and businesses
nation-wide.
As for me, I'm neither a "human
resource" nor "human capital". Nor do I consider it my
mission on Earth to provide for some self-proclaimed master under the feudal
system of the Dark Ages. Amazing how mankind regresses in the name of
progress.
There is only one way to know freedom,
to live free, and that is to know God—No God, No Freedom, Know God, Know
Freedom!
© 2002 Lynn M. Stuter - All Rights
Reserved