Multiculturalism in Education

August 21st, 2007 By: marc moore | Tags:

School is about to start in Texas and all over the state children and teenagers are alternately awaiting and dreading the beginning of another 180-odd days of enlightenment that will be delivered by the finest teachers a sub-standard pay rate, a regressive labor union, and a back-end loaded retirement system can deliver (along with more than a few woefully underqualified football coaches who must darken a classroom doorway or two lest their irrelevance in the education process be noted).  But this post is not about them.

Along with the life wisdom that will be dispensed this year will come an unhealthly dollop of multicultural spam thick and disgusting enough to stop an artery or a brain dead in its tracks.  Western democracies, these fragile young minds will be told, are no better than any other form of society found on Earth, of which there are several that are - or were - just as laudable.  In particular, no particular preference should be given to America and her traditional values of strict constructionism, Christianity, the Protestant work ethic, the rule of law, or even the English language itself.  What is better, is relative to one’s perspective, after all.  Or so they will hear.

Elan Journo of the Ayn Rand Institute disagrees, writing:

Many parents and teachers regard multiculturalism as an indispensable educational supplement, a salutary influence that “enriches” the curriculum. But is it?

With the world’s continents bridged by the Internet and global commerce, multiculturalism claims to offer a real value: a cosmopolitan, rather than provincial, understanding of the world beyond the student’s immediate surroundings. But it is a peculiar kind of “broadening.” Multiculturalists would rather have students admire the primitive patterns of Navajo blankets, say, than learn why Islam’s medieval golden age of scientific progress was replaced by fervent piety and centuries of stagnation.

Leaf through a school textbook and you’ll find that there is a definite pattern behind multiculturalism’s reshaping of the curriculum.

What these textbooks reveal is a concerted effort to portray the most backward, impoverished and murderous cultures as advanced, prosperous and life-enhancing. Multiculturalism’s goal is not to teach about other cultures, but to promote–by means of distortions and half-truths–the notion that non-Western cultures are as good as, if not better than, Western culture. Far from “broadening” the curriculum, what multiculturalism seeks is to diminish the value of Western culture in the minds of students. But, given all the facts, the objective superiority of Western culture is apparent, so multiculturalists must artificially elevate other cultures and depreciate the West.

If students were to learn the truth of the hardscrabble life of primitive farming in, say, India, they would recognize that subsistence living is far inferior to life on any mechanized farm in Kansas, which demands so little manpower, yet yields so much. An informed, rational student would not swallow the “politically correct” conclusions he is fed by multiculturalism. If he were given the actual facts, he could recognize that where men are politically free, as in the West, they can prosper economically; that science and technology are superior to superstition; that man’s life is far longer, happier and safer in the West today than in any other culture in history.

It is a gross misconception to view multiculturalism as an effort to enrich education. By reshaping the curriculum, the purveyors of “diversity” in the classroom calculatedly seek to prevent students from grasping the objective value to human life of Western culture–a culture whose magnificent achievements have brought man from mud huts to moon landings.

Indeed.  In America multiculturalism is arguably less malignant than in Europe.  Yet on both continents it is still a corrosive, self-defeating mental balm intended to ease the minds of sensitive souls who feel the pain of other people’s injustices so intensely that they would destroy their own society rather than accept the guilt of having made a judgment against their way of life.

In my opinion a discussion of multiculturalism is most relevant in the context of Islam, its rejuvenated war against the west, and the reasons why Muslims are actively seeking to destroy the world’s democracies.

Melanie Phillips says:

The Islamist goal is to destroy the virus of freedom and modernity before it infects the Islamic world, and to replace it with Islam. That is the core of the profound threat it poses to the west, a threat mounted through the pincer movement of both terrorism and cultural takeover.

But many in the west do deny it. They ignore the clear evidence of the goal of Islamising the west. They choose to believe instead that the reason for Islamist terror lies in the wrongs the west has done to the Islamic world —Iraq or Palestine, discrimination or Islamophobia. Indeed, even to speak in this way is to invite the deadly label of Islamophobia — a term invented to shut down legitimate and vital debate about Islamism. Far from defending core liberal values that are thus singled out for destruction, such people thus side with or appease those who attack them. So Europe — bastion of free speech — attacked those newspapers which published and re-published the Mohammed cartoons. And liberals committed to human rights march on the streets of London, behind banners saying Free Iraq and Free Palestine, shoulder to shoulder with Islamists who believe in death to gays.

Why is a liberal society so reluctant to defend its own most cherished values of freedom and tolerance?

My answer, which I believe to be the fundamentally correct one, is that people in the west have lost the ability to make independent judgments about what is right and wrong.  In one respect, the cause of this is obvious:  objective standards have been replaced by rules of tolerance.  Everything is acceptable under the new way of thinking, even the path toward appeasing a terrible, ruthless enemy.

This is true.  But the truth is, as always, more complex than that.  The one exception I take to Journo’s article is this sentence:  “Many parents and teachers regard multiculturalism as an indispensable educational supplement”.

In reality, many, many more parents and teachers understand that multiculturalism is a waste of educational resources at best and a divisive element that is undermining western society at the worst.  But they do not act on their knowledge.  Why?  Because they are held in check by the power structure that, in significant ways, has already been corrupted.

It is difficult or impossible for an individual to act against the forces of multiculturalism because its proponents have one very effective weapon - that of victimhood, alleged or otherwise - and are not overly discriminating in its use.  To oppose them is to be a woman-hater, a gay-basher, a racist, or a Christian fundamentalist wacko.  Political correctness demands obedience.

Melanie Phillips again:

Many people think multiculturalism just means showing respect and tolerance to other cultures and faiths. If that were so, it should be unarguable. We should all support respect and tolerance. But that’s not what multiculturalism is at all. It holds that all minority values must have equal status to those of the majority. Any attempt to uphold majority values over minorities is a form of prejudice. That turns minorities into a cultural battering ram to destroy the very idea of being a majority culture at all.

Multiculturalism has produced furthermore two particularly lethal effects. First, it has left all immigrants abandoned, and none more lethally so than young Muslims. For if there is no longer an overarching culture, there is nothing into which minorities can integrate. Many young Muslims in Britain, stranded between the backward Asian village culture of their parents and the drug, alcohol and sex-saturated decadence that passes for western civilisation, are filled with disgust and self-disgust. They are then given, in our multicultural schools and wider culture, absolutely nothing to educate them about or fill them with respect and affection for the western society of which they are citizens.

Melanie wrote this months before the Brits in their wisdom decided that Winston Churchill wasn’t relevant to children’s history lessons any longer.  Not relevant?  Sorry, but there wouldn’t be a United Kingdom if not for Churchill.  The courage he exhibited in the face of the Nazi attacks is needed in Europe now just as much as it was during WW II.  Sadly, it is sorely lacking there as the Brits, while standing more or less with America abroad, consistently appease Muslims at home in the U.K and are losing their national identity as a result.  Winston Churchill once noted, “An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping that it will eat him last.”  Yet this is exactly what his country is doing in its domestic policy.  Small wonder he had to be excised from history.

Easy for a damn Yankee to say, isn’t it?  After all, America’s Muslim population isn’t as virulent as that of Europe.  That brings me to my most important point, the question of where it will stop.

It will stop, this business of allowing Muslim viewpoints to disproportionally impact western civilization from within.  It is only a question of when that happens.  Will Americans, the British, et al, decide act on their own initiative and say, “No more Muslim foot baths will be paid for with tax dollars when Christian organizations are banned from campus” or “We’ll run cartoons of Mohammed the Mad Bomber whether you like it or not”?  Or will they wait until the war against the west is utterly undeniable, like the Allies watching Poland burn?

At the risk of plagiarizing Ms. Phillips, here’s one more quote that says it all:

Liberals also think they are superior in intelligence to everyone else. So they don’t understand that the Islamists are actually playing them for suckers, exploiting the intrinsic weakness of a liberal society they correctly assess as decadent: no longer prepared to fight for its values because it no longer even knows what they are.

What we are living through in the west is nothing short of a repudiation of the Enlightenment, a repudiation of reason; and its substitution by irrationality, obscurantism, bigotry and clerical totalitarianism — all facilitated by our so-called ‘liberal’ society, and all in the name of ‘human rights’. Western liberalism now embraces its Islamist mortal enemies and attacks its American and Israeli allies in the fight to defend civilisation.

We are giving the Islamists the message that we are theirs for the taking. This is how liberalism may disappear up its own backside.

In short, we must stand up for what we know to be right and demand that our public institutions do the same.

Cross-posted at Black Shards.

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  1. Xel
    August 21st, 2007 at 09:51
    Reply | Quote | #1

    I jumped over everything from the Ayn Rand Institute. Apart from the rest, multiculturalism ISN’T about accepting and equalizing everything because it is cultural. It is about ignoring the cosmetical, and not worrying about something because it is isn’t “usual”.

    Multiculturalism != Multimorality.

    “No more Muslim foot baths will be paid for with tax dollars when Christian organizations are banned from campus” The school issued them from the budget voluntarily, and since they can be used for a secular function by everybody there is no problem here. The issue is pathetic in comparison with others.

    “exploiting the intrinsic weakness of a liberal society they correctly assess as decadent: no longer prepared to fight for its values because it no longer even knows what they are.”

    How does one fight for these values, then? Also, intrinsic weakness is utter [edited by mvdg] - this is more [no ad hominem attacks permitted]

    No, a liberal society confirms human rights above all else. There is no cultural web that holds that together, only law and market. By besmirching liberalism you besmirch everything that built Europe.

  2. Xel
    August 21st, 2007 at 10:06
    Reply | Quote | #2

    I just had to laugh at this as well. “What these textbooks reveal is a concerted effort to portray the most backward, impoverished and murderous cultures as advanced, prosperous and life-enhancing.”

    BAhahaahahaaaaa. All these textbooks? Any quotes from them? Any publishing houses or examples given? Sorry, randroids, I think I’m going to continue condemning the Iraq war and not spend all day watching over my shoulders.

    “Any attempt to uphold majority values over minorities is a form of prejudice.”

    It kinda is. Consensus has no objective value. This is not about values, this is about law, economic equality and the same standards for all. There will be no return to any “traditional values” on my watch.

    “They choose to believe instead that the reason for Islamist terror lies in the wrongs the west has done to the Islamic world”

    Strawman. Why does this Phillips character waste pixels and bandwidth? Johann Hari’s column on the failed Glasgow attacks makes this spiel redundant and useless to anyone concerned with “the West”

    “That turns minorities into a cultural battering ram to destroy the very idea of being a majority culture at all.”

    What is sound culture is not defined by the majority, and the notion isn’t a good way to build a society either. The core is ethics, the rest is probablistics. This is pathetic, this. The culture of a country should be the end result of complete equality and the same standards applied for all, and the due application of society’s resources - not a *means* to reach a respectful environment.

  3. Alan/Tom
    August 21st, 2007 at 12:36
    Reply | Quote | #3

    I largely agree with Xel. I have to say, if you’re worried about Christian-bashing, I wonder why you’re quoting the Ayn Rand Institute. Rand, like many libertarians, really didn’t like Christianity or any other religion.

  4. Xel
    August 21st, 2007 at 13:20
    Reply | Quote | #4

    “I largely agree with Xel. I have to say, if you’re worried about Christian-bashing, I wonder why you’re quoting the Ayn Rand Institute.”

    The objectivist voices I’ve had the misfortune to listen to seem ready to allow more sick strains of christianity to harm the position of gays and women in society as long as they get to have guns. They prioritize freedoms differently, and therefore choose utilitarianism over ethics in the one area where ethics must reign supreme.

    As for the problems with culture/decadence/Islam/whathaveyou the solution is simple. Enforce laws based on ethics and let the market reign more. Those muslims who seek to use force (the opposite of freedom) will be frustrated in their mediveal designs, and will either be forced to humiliating coexistence with us lecherous, non-cultural, unnationalistic Euroweenies, or they will be aggravated into using force against innocent westerners, at which point we lock them away or kill them.

    Of course, since a perverted form of multiculturalism and liberalism has esconsed itself in the ruling classes of Europe, any failures are possible.

  5. marc
    August 21st, 2007 at 13:43
    Reply | Quote | #5

    Xel, values can be re-learned, with a little effort, just as they were learned in the first place. How? By thinking, of course.

    The idea that a sub-culture which exists to spread terror and a religion of oppression must be tolerated as equal to the largely peaceful “native” inhabitants of western democracies is false.

    I’m sure you know that the free market does nothing to protect you against guns, since you pointed this out. Nor do ethics when your enemies possess no such idea of proper behavior.

    Thinking about these things is not enough. Action is required in that some percentage of Muslims actively seek to use the freedoms inherent in western societies to break them down from the inside.

    Will you let those freedoms go simply so that you can say that your ethics weren’t compromised by reality?

    I see by your last answer that you won’t.

  6. marc
    August 21st, 2007 at 13:56
    Reply | Quote | #6

    Alan/Tom, I’m not particularly concerned with Christian-bashing so long as freedom of expression is restored where needed and maintained otherwise.

    Ayn Rand’s denial of spirituality was an absolute in her mind but that does not mean she was correct. For all her brilliance she was only human.

    Her understanding of the value of freedom, individuality, and achievement speaks clearly to me, whether she would approve of my beliefs or not.

    In many respects - most, I would say - her philosophy is compatible with the Protestant work ethic that at one time defined America.

  7. Alan/Tom
    August 21st, 2007 at 15:29
    Reply | Quote | #7

    Didn’t Ayn Rand’s philosophy also denigrate the value of compassion and generosity? That also seems pretty incompatible with Christianity.

  8. Michael van der Galiën
    August 21st, 2007 at 16:55
    Reply | Quote | #9

    Alan / Tom: yes it did. I watched two interviews recently - (if you want to watch them, check out Jessica Schneider’s blog - right sidebar, editorial staff) and that is basically what she believed. Especially self-sacrifice though - she thought it was ‘evil.’

  9. Rafar
    August 21st, 2007 at 17:39

    “the drug, alcohol and sex-saturated decadence that passes for western civilisation, are filled with disgust and self-disgust.”

    I am confused. If the majority values of Western civilization are drug, alcohol and sex-saturated decadence then are we supposed to be promoting them above Islamic values of sobriety and strictly regulated sexuality?

    As far as I can tell the values of Western Civilization that are good are things like the law being derived from consent and fundamental rights rather than religious edict. They are the recognition of people’s right to act as they choose as long as it does not overly impact another’s life without their consent. Freedom of the press, religion, conscience, speech, etc.

    I may be grossly ignorant, but I have never seen any textbook comparing the opposites to these as preferable.

    As with so many of these sorts of diatribes, they are long on accusations and short on evidence. Where are these people who say that all cultures are equal? Where are these textbooks that say that, say, the USSR or Iran represent better systems than western democracy?

  10. Lit3Bolt
    August 21st, 2007 at 19:00

    When I was in college, I remember letting slip my scorn of Islamic culture because of its attitudes towards women. This is pre 9/11, and I was rebuked harshly by multiple people, who said, “Who says we don’t treat our women better than Islamic culture? Our society encourages them to act a certain way, etc.” Yes, but at least they have a choice and we don’t condone honor killings and such. At least we let our women drive. At least our women might even lead us, etc etc.

    At some point the relativism has to stop, especially when it comes to convinction to the ethics and values that allow us to move forward and socially, economically, and scientifically progress (Enlightenment values).

    Even when I was in High school in Tennesee, textbooks abounded with multicultural attitudes. Pages in each chapter of US history were devoted to women, blacks, and Native Americans, each passage a feel-good story about what these minorities accomplished in 1790-1960. The reality is, not much and the textbook failed to reinforce how while some of these people managed to defy the hordes of WASPs of the era, millions more were treated like chattel, slaves, or massacred. That is a fact and our particular brand of multiculturism ducked that issue completely.

    I don’t mind “live and let live” multiculturism. What I mind is multiculturism as an agenda to excuse barbarism and ignorance in other cultures and white wash history. And I don’t think it’s a bad thing to spread the Enlightment and its thinking as far and as wide as possible.

  11. David
    August 21st, 2007 at 20:08

    “What I mind is multiculturism as an agenda to excuse barbarism and ignorance in other cultures and white wash history. ”

    I agree.

    The biggest problem with West-bashing is not scepticism of our own society, that is fairly healthy. The biggest problem is the utter naivete about other cultures and the desire to always see them as the noble savage. I tend to think that a lot of bad multiculturalism is actually a very narrow and introspective critique of western society that flows from a general ignorance of other societies in general and of their problems and bad points in particular.

  12. Michael van der Galiën
    August 21st, 2007 at 20:11

    The biggest problem with West-bashing is not scepticism of our own society, that is fairly healthy. The biggest problem is the utter naivete about other cultures and the desire to always see them as the noble savage. I tend to think that a lot of bad multiculturalism is actually a very narrow and introspective critique of western society that flows from a general ignorance of other societies in general and of their problems and bad points in particular.

    I agree with the first part, but disagree wth the second part. I always get the impression that they are familiar with the bad points, but simply decide to conveniently ignore them.

  13. Davebo
    August 21st, 2007 at 21:26

    I would also point out since we are referring specifically to Texas here that my home state has staggering influence over what textbooks students get nation wide. More here.

    As that piece points out, there are lots of influences at work in the decision making process of the State Board of Education which, unsuprisingly, is dominated by Republican members.

    It just seems to me that there’s very little to support such serious accusations here.

  14. marc
    August 22nd, 2007 at 02:42

    @Alan/Tom - Rand’s position on charity, etc., was that one should perform these works to the extent that they bring value to the giver (and not an iota more).

    This may not be in line with St. Paul’s definition of self-sacrifice but is a standard that makes sense to me.

    @Michael - I’d have to agree. Without western influence I doubt seriously that India would be out of the 18th century. Everything that’s been done there, from an industrial and infrastructure perspective - and there’s much more still to do - has been copied from western ideas.

    Yet we’re supposed to accept their greater grasp of personal and social spirituality?

    @Davebo - Don’t get me wrong, Texas is a much better place to live than almost anywhere else on Earth.

    But the points are these:

    1) That the western values that Lit3Bolt touched on are superior to those of other social systems on an absolute scale,

    2) That this superiority is not seen as important by a significant segment of western society that, through ignorance, stupidity, apathy, or recklessness, professes to honor as equivalent forms of governance that are deliberately designed to create oppression and virtual/actual slavery, and

    3) That the very principles of our legal and social systems are being used against us and these systems by an enemy with no regard for human life, ethics, or values as we know them.

    Even Texas is not immune.

  15. rightwingprof
    August 22nd, 2007 at 18:07

    “Where are these people who say that all cultures are equal?”

    Visit your nearest university campus. Better, come here and I’ll be glad to take you to as many “presentations” and “seminars” spouting cultural equivalence as you can stomach.

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