Undoing the Brainwashing
By Thomas Sowell
This time of
year, as college students return home for the summer, many parents may notice
how many politically correct ideas they have acquired on campus. Some of those
parents may wonder how they can undo some of the brainwashing that has become
so common in what are supposed to be institutions of higher learning.
The strategy
used by General Douglas MacArthur so successfully in the Pacific during World
War II can be useful in this very different kind of battle. General MacArthur
won his victories while minimizing his casualties -- something that is also
desirable in clashes of ideas within the family.
Instead of
fighting the Japanese for every island stronghold as the Americans advanced
toward Japan, MacArthur sent his troops into battle for only those islands that
were strategically crucial. In the same spirit, parents who want to bring their
brainwashed offspring back to reality need not try to combat every crazy idea
they picked up from their politically correct professors. Just demolishing a
few crucial beliefs, and exposing what nonsense they are, can deal a blow to
the general credibility of the professorial pied pipers.
For example, if
the student has been led to join the crusade for more gun control, and thinks
that the reason the British have lower murder rates than Americans have is
because the Brits have tighter gun control laws, just give him or her a copy of
the book "Guns and Violence" by Joyce Lee Malcolm.
As the facts in
that book demolish the gun control propaganda fed to students by their professors,
that can create a healthy skepticism about other professorial propaganda.
There are other
books that can likewise demolish other politically correct beliefs that prevail
on campuses. My own recent book, "Intellectuals and Race," has
innumerable documented facts that expose the fallacies in most of what is said
about racial issues in most college classrooms.
For those
students who have bought the campus party line on Third World nations, the
classic study of that subject is "Equality, the Third World, and Economic
Delusion" by the late P.T. Bauer of the London School of Economics. He
made a veritable demolition derby of most of what has been said in politically
correct circles about the relationship between rich and poor countries.
For those students
who have been conditioned to regard the welfare state as the solution to social
problems, there is no book that exposes the actual human consequences of the
welfare state more poignantly than "Life at the Bottom" by British
physician Theodore Dalrymple. He has worked in both low-income neighborhoods
and in prisons, so he has seen it all.
Although
Britain is the setting for "Life at the Bottom," Americans will
recognize very similar patterns here. Problems found in low-income black
ghettoes in the United States are found in low-income white neighborhoods in
Britain, where none of the usual excuses about racism, slavery, etc., apply.
The only thing that is the same in both countries is the welfare state and its
poisonous ideology.
If your student
has been led to believe that "comprehensive immigration reform" --
amnesty, in plain English -- is the only way to go, a devastating book titled
"Mexifornia," by Victor Davis Hanson, introduces some cold, factual
reality into a subject usually discussed in sweeping and lofty rhetoric.
A book that
offers a choice between the island-hopping strategy that General MacArthur used
in the Pacific and the all-out assault across a broad front that was used by
the Allied armies in Europe is titled "The New Leviathan."
It has thirteen
penetrating articles by leading authorities on such subjects as national
security, ObamaCare, environmentalism, election frauds and more.
Those parents
who want to follow the MacArthur strategy can recommend reading one, or a few,
of these articles, while those who want to follow the strategy of attacking all
across a broad front can recommend that their student read the whole book.
However the
battle is fought, what is most important is that the battle be fought, since
the young are the future, and the propaganda of today can become the government
policies of tomorrow.
No comments:
Post a Comment