Friday, March 4, 2016

Brainwashing our Children

If you have read either of my previous blog posts you know by now that I think political correctness is a waste of time. Some of you may be thinking, well I'm not always concerned about being politically correct so is this really that big of a deal? Plus, the people who worry about being politically correct are just the politicians who have to hold up to all standards, right?

Wrong.

Well then it's just college aged kids and adults trying to get jobs and secure a future without offending potential employers. when they are surrounded by people with all different backgrounds.

Wrong again.

In America, we start teaching political correctness from the day we are born. Think about it, when a little kids hears a politically incorrect word and uses it they are reprimanded and taught to never use that word again, even if they don't understand why it is a bad word. In some cases adults don't understand why the word is considered bad.

While this post is not about race a great example of teaching kids political correctness at a young age is the N-word. An ABC TV show called Blackish recently did an episode where the son, who is black, uses the N-word in elementary school and is potentially expelled from the school. In this episode the kid was confused as to why the word was bad and no one could quite explain it to him besides that it was offensive and he shouldn't be using it.

A real life example comes from my school district's elementary schools. My township back home has a Facebook page that has over 5,000 members. It acts as a public forum and one day someone went on a rant over the fact that the elementary school's were referring to Christmas trees as Holiday trees. The post sparked over a thousand comments when the average post has maybe 20 comments on a good day.




I agree with the original poster over the ridiculousness of this. At a young age, kids are still learning about different religions and cultures, including their own. So why should we remove this ability from their learning and limit what they are allowed to discuss simply because we want to be sure no one gets hurt or is offended. Guess what, that's not the real world. 

Another thing with schools is how Christmas Break/concerts/ect. must always be called Holiday or Winter Break ect. so the other religions don't feel left out. This is ridiculous. Members of the other religions know they aren't in the majority and would expect the majority to get the say in this manner.

Children are continued to be brainwashed with more secular holidays like Valentines Day or even Birthdays where everyone has to get a Valentine, birthday treat, or invitation to the party based on classroom rules. Once again, this is not how the real world works.

Schools are supposed to be preparing kids for the real world so why do we stand by and let them get softer and softer while they walk on their tippy toes to not offend someone. If this continues, kids won't be able to handle criticism or insults when they come and they are bound to come. 

Political correctness has a lot to do with how people feel. Another thing that bothers me to no end is how everyone these days has to say how they feel, or how something someone else is doing makes them feel, and what they wish they would do to stop it. You can no longer just ask someone to cut it out because you may say something offensive in the process. 

One of the reasons schools tend to be brainwashed towards political correctness is the tendency for them to be run by liberals. While there is nothing wrong with being Liberal, conservatives push their views too, I have always been taught by teachers that politics were a no go, especially in public elementary schools.

Photo By: DonkeyHotey

Come high school you are allowed to start discussing the separate parties and what you think of the different views. However in elementary school and even middle school we could never discuss politics and teachers were supposed to teach all classes without a tilt one way or another; they were supposed to be impartial. So why is it that "impartial" elementary teachers can push so hard a liberal idea of being very politically correct all the time.

I have a hard time seeing how today's youth will function in a society with obstacles and harsh realities lined with insults when we are brainwashing them to be ultra-politically correct and to share all the time how they feel. Neither of these things exist in the real world and they will be unprepared for the one thing schools are supposed to be preparing them for, the real world.

3 comments:

  1. Even when I was in middle school they began calling it "Winter Break" instead of Christmas Break. I somewhat agree with it because not everyone in the school celebrates Christmas, and it is indeed a Winter or Holiday Break. The one thing I do not agree with is calling it a "Holiday Tree" because it is actually a Christmas Tree. I think schools need to find a balance between political correctness and expressing other viewpoints.

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  2. Your blog is pointing out the problem with political correctness. Quite simply it is wrong. I enjoy your posts as they are a refreshing change of scenery.

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  3. I practice political-correctness as much as I can. In my experience it's usually not particularly difficult to not use words that others find disrespectful as the English language is really rather large. Plus I like to think in terms of marginal utility. Using an offensive word would probably do someone more harm than it would inconvenience the person who would have used the word.

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