Political Activism Takes Center Stage With The NEA
July 28, 2004 by Phyllis Schlafly
To no one's surprise, the annual National Education Association convention
voted six-to-one (7,390 to 1,153), to endorse John Kerry for President.
The head of the NEA, Reg Weaver, opened the annual convention in July in Washington,
DC with a call for public school teachers and employees to mobilize to defeat
President Bush this fall. He said the union's political activism "takes
center stage," and he predicted that "our 2.7 million members can
be the X-factor in this election."
For the 2004 political campaign, the NEA will "partner" with the
leftwing organizations MoveOn.org, ACORN (Association of
Community Organizations for Reform Now), and the pro-Democratic Campaign for
America's Future in order to achieve "the largest mobilization for education
ever." Through a nationwide political strategy called "house parties"
to be held on September 22, these activists will plan political rallies, register
voters, meet with congressional candidates, and organize a get-out-the-vote
program to cover teachers and parents.
John Kerry was to have been the convention's headline speaker, but he stood
them up, choosing that very day to announce his choice of John Edwards as his
running mate. The delegates were more than pleased with his replacement, Hillary
Clinton, who was introduced as "one of our closest allies; she's so close,
in fact, that she needs no further introduction."
Hillary brought the delegates to their feet with what the NEA's official newspaper
called her "sharp wit," such as, "We are one day closer to the
end of the Bush-Cheney Administration." Actually, she was just a warm-up
for a showing of Michael Moore's anti-Bush movie, "Fahrenheit 9/11,"
right after her speech.
The NEA's lobbying goals for next year's Congress include federal funding for
public school child care, early childhood programs that are school-based, before-
and after-school programs, big spending for school counselors, and school-based
health care for children.
The NEA's non-education-related lobbying goals include funding for the National
Endowment for the Arts, national health care,
reparations to African Americans, statehood for the District of Columbia, taxpayer
funding of federal elections, and a national
holiday for Cesar Chavez. The NEA's foreign policy goals include ratification
of the United Nations treaties on the Rights of the Child and on Discrimination
against Women.
The NEA's feminist lobbying goals include "reproductive freedom without
governmental intervention" (but, of course, with tax funding), affirmative
action, assigning women to military combat, and the Equal Rights Amendment.
The NEA's gay goals include a federal statute prohibiting employment discrimination
on the basis of sexual orientation, income tax benefits for domestic partners,
and hate crimes legislation.
The NEA opposes all varieties of school choice, tuition tax credits,
vouchers, parental option or "choice" in education programs,
designating English as our official language, and any possible action that might
impinge on the secularists' notion of "separation of church and state."
The most controversial vote at the NEA convention turned out to concern one
word in the anti-homeschool resolution. B-69 as
introduced read: "The Association also believes that unfunded home-schooled
students should not participate in any extracurricular activities in the public
schools."
The word "unfunded" precipitated a lively debate. Some schools provide
funding for homeschoolers to participate in after-school
activities such as sports. The amendment to remove the word "unfunded"
was designed to put the NEA on record as opposed to
letting homeschoolers darken the door of public school grounds regardless of
whether or not there is money to finance their
participation.
In the end, the majority of delegates voted to delete "unfunded."
Whether or not homeschoolers' participation in public school
activities is funded, the NEA does not want them in any way to compete with
students who are "with us all day."
The NEA thus made its animosity against homeschoolers loud and clear. The
only thing this powerful and wealthy union fears is
homeschooling.
The convention opened with an invocation by the president of the National Council
of Urban Education Associations. A few delegates complained that his message
sounded suspiciously like a reading from the Democratic Party platform.
Washington D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams was not on hand to welcome the delegates
to the nation's capital because he supports
school vouchers, a politically incorrect position for NEA speakers. The delegates
were welcomed instead by U.S. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, who used her time
at the podium to pitch for her legislation to give congressional representation
to the District of Columbia.
The speakers voiced the usual complaints about a stingy Congress not appropriating
enough money for education. In fact, federal
spending on education increased 51 percent since Bush took office, and Title
I spending (for low-income schools) has increased from $8.8 billion in the Clinton
administration to $13.3 billion this year.
ATG: Nowhere in the above rhetoric is concern for the student in the schools
being taught by these socialist teachers. Parents who do not pay attention to
the curriculum being taught in government/paid for/sponsored school systems
cannot complain when their children fail or become totally unmanageable at home.
Their taxes are paying for this travesty and can only be stopped by total removal
of all students from this farce called education.
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