In searching for a new enemy to unite us, we came up with the
idea that pollution, the threat of global warming, water shortages,
famine and the like would fit the bill...' The Club of Rome
I pledge allegiance to the Earth and all its sacred parts,
Its water, land and living things and all its human hearts.
Earth Pledge, Global Education Associates
To fulfill state
requirements for environmental education, California students -- like
others across the country -- participate in weekend or week-long nature
camps. "We were supposed to learn about science, but it's political
too," explained eleven-year old Laura after her off-campus experience.
"They told us how terrible it would be if there was any oil drilling
off the coast."
The spiritual part was
worse. "The counselor led us through the forest," the fifth-grader
continued. "He told us to stop to absorb the moment and hug the trees.
'You are the tree,' he told us. 'You are one with all natural things.'
He was treating everything as sacred and calling trees 'mother and
father trees.' He was really teaching us pantheism."
Laura asked him if he
believed in God.
"God is in all
things," he told her.
Each student had to
collect natural objects "of beauty or curiosity" such as tree bark,
shells, or acorns. "Then we had a ceremony, but they didn't call it
that. We had to take all our natural objects to a sacred place and put
them in a circle. The counselor lit a candle and quoted an Indian
saying, 'We're part of the earth and the chain of life. We're of the
earth...' Then we sang a Christian song with the names of natural
objects replacing the name of Jesus."
"This is an offering
to nature," explained the counselor.
Later, Laura expressed her surprise that more children didn't recognize
the deceptions. "When they told us Indian myths, I was the only kid in
the class that didn't say, 'Oh, I believe that'." It hurt when her
classmates refused to support her either at the camp or in discussions
afterwards, but she wasn't discouraged. "I lost some of my friends,"
she said. "I know we'll face persecution for being Christians, but
knowing God is much better!"
Laura's experience is
multiplied across the country. Earth Day flung school doors open to a
rising tide of pseudo-science and environmental activism. In the weeks
surrounding Earth Day, children from coast to coast celebrate nature,
give thanks to Mother Earth and chant prayers to the Great Spirit.
Using computers that supposedly "simulate the real world,"
students recreate environmental disasters and "solve" global problems.
Many go home to scold their parents for destroying their planet.
It's time--they are told--for the world's children to unite, fight,
grow in consciousness, and save the planet.
ECO-MYTHS AND
PSEUDO-SCIENCE.
Genuine concern for
the environment is good and needful, for countless environmental abuses
are painfully real. The depletion of ocean life through over-fishing,
soil erosion through unwise farming practices, the destruction of
rainforests, all kinds of pollution... demand our attention and
practical solutions. Yet, contrary to popular perceptions, most true
environmental crises are local, not global.
Since local problems
seldom capture the imagination of the world community, they fail to
serve the political purposes of leading environmentalist. They simply
don't stir enough emotions to inspire global action. "We must make
rescue of the environment the central organizing principle for
civilization," said former Vice President Al Gore. But what nation
would yield their sovereignty to rescue the earth if the main problems
were half a planet a way?
Rousing the nations to
action and orchestrating a unified call for planetary management
requires global disasters--the kind of scary scenarios Al Gore
described at the 1992 United Nations conference in Rio de Janeiro.
"...an enormous hole is opening in the ozone layer," he said, "[and]
huge quantities of carbon dioxide, methane and chlorofluorocarbons are
trapping heat in the atmosphere and raising global temperatures."
"But isn't that true?"
you might ask.
No, it's not. Many of
our nation's most distinguished scientists are finally speaking up to
counter the astounding public acceptance of the pseudo-scientific
pronouncements about the dire state of the planet. Censored by the
liberal media, the voices of respected scientists such as Bruce Ames,
Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and Director of the
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Center at the
University of California at Berkeley, are finally being heard. You can
study their evidence and conclusions in a book aptly titled The True
State of the Planet: Ten of the World's Premier Environmental
Researchers in a Major challenge to the Environmental Movement.
To understand the
global politics behind the environmental movement and the curricula it
feeds to our schools, take a look at the social ambitions that drive
it. Its agenda was formed during the sixties, when four overlapping
anti-establishment groups joined to form the Green Party in Germany:
radical feminists, Marxists, peace-niks (the anti-war movement), and
hippies seeking spiritual enlightenment. Militant U.S. "Greens" formed
a similar agenda: radical population control, a global welfare system
(eliminating poverty and capitalism), planetary governance (including
national disarmament), and earth-centered spirituality.
This blend of
four counter-culture philosophies helps explain why earth-based
spirituality and Marxist economics pervade the environmental teaching
that infuses social studies, arts, math, reading, and every other
classroom topic. Consider the sobering fact that William Reilly, former
head of the Environmental Protection Agency, has stated that private
ownership of land is a "quaint anachronism" 5
and therefore sought the "repeal of the Fifth Amendment to make it
easier for government to seize private land."
Native American
spiritism provides the perfect model for the new global value
system-and brings the least resistance from concerned parents. Children
learn that the earliest Americans lived in peace and harmony with
nature and people, sharing their possessions and revering the earth.
They are not told that Indians-like other pagan cultures around the
world-cut down forests, slaughtered herds of animals, hated competing
tribes and nations, and were terrorized by demonic forces. It's no
wonder that Al Gore, in his book, Earth in the Balance, presents
Native American spirituality and various Mother Earth religions
7 as models for healing our
"dysfunctional civilization" 8
and restoring "our feeling of connectedness to the rest of nature."
9 Few parents realize how
this seductive combination compromises home-taught faith.
MYTH, MAGIC, and
MOTHER EARTH.
"Long ago, no rain had
fallen on the land for many days. Grass died and animals starved. There
was nothing to eat."
Designed to touch the
hearts of third-graders from coast to coast, these sad words introduce
a lesson titled "The Medicine Wheel" in the popular social-studies
textbook, From Sea to Shining Sea. At the end of the exciting
story, a Cheyenne couple hear the deep voice of the spirit Roaring
Thunder. It "told the man and woman how to perform a dance. The dance
would bring life back to the grasses of the earth and would bring herds
of buffalo back to the people."
The text identifies
the story as a myth but redefines this crucial word to fit the
new politically correct ideology: "A myth is a story that explains
something in nature." So does science. Does that mean that myth is the
same as science? The text fails to differentiate.
After the story,
Review Question 1 asks, "Why was the Medicine Dance important to the
Cheyenne?" The teachers' guide gives the correct answer: "The
Cheyenne held a Medicine Dance when they needed help from the powers of
nature. They celebrated the Medicine Dance to make sure the cycle of
nature would continue?" Did the cycles continue because of the occult
ritual? The biased selection of facts leaves that impression.
The author of
this popular textbook, UCLA scholar Gary Nash who led the committee
that wrote the controversial national History Standards, never explains
that a Medicine Dance is irrelevant to the natural rain-making process.
Nor does he warn students about the devastating consequences of
inviting "help" from demonic spirits. When Review Question 2 asks, "How
are Cheyenne ideas about nature like Kwakiutl [Indians] ideas about
nature?" the text's answer fits: "Both Cheyenne and the Kwakiutl
respected nature." 11
The contrasting view that European invaders do not
respect nature threads through the entire series of Houghton-Mifflin
texts.
Do you see what is
happening? These kinds of lessons teach a political ideology, not
facts. They demonize Western culture and replace Christianity with a
new global spirituality which blends all religions except biblical
monotheism-belief in the one God who created the earth. Any pantheistic
religion can be used to model the spiritual unity of all: Buddhism,
witchcraft, Native American, Greek or Norse myths.
The text
identifies the story as a myth but redefines this crucial word
to fit the new-paradigm perspective: "A myth is a story that explains
something in nature." 12
So does science. Does that mean that myth is the same as science? The
text doesn't differentiate, but a look at some other environmental
lessons may give a clue.
THE OZONE HOLE.
Today children around
the world can catch the U.N. Agenda 21 vision through a picture book
titled, Rescue Mission Planet Earth: a children's edition of Agenda
21. Not only is it written for children; it is also written
by children--"in association with the United Nations." One of
its well-tutored authors, 14-year old Rekha Menon from India, blames
the "First World" for introducing destructive luxuries like
refrigerators: "fluorocarbons from the fridge make ozone holes we
cannot bridge..."
The surrounding
text is more specific: "The Ozone layer is an essential protective
filter in the upper atmosphere that surround the Earth. . . . During
the last 20 years, ozone levels above Antarctica have decreased by
nearly 40% each springtime. It's all caused mainly by our use of
chlorofluorocarbons (CFC).... The consequences are catastrophic: about
100,000 people die each year from skin cancer.... ALL CFC-use
must be stopped immediately!"
(Emphasis in the original)
What are the FACTS?
Actually the ozone "hole" is not a hole at all. It is a seasonal
thinning discovered back in 1956 by Dr. Gordon Dobson, explains Dr.
Edward Krug, who has degrees in environmental and soil sciences and is
listed in Who's Who in Science and Engineering. Each spring,
after the long sunless southern winter, the ozone layer thins over the
Antarctica. Conversely, it always expands after the southern
summer when ultraviolet radiation once again creates ozone. (The media
didn't tell you that the "hole" closes each year, did it?) The annual
thinning varies from year to year. In fact, less ozone was measured in
1985 than in 1990 though more freon was used. Why? Scientific data
indicate a strong consistent correlation between ozone depletion and
major volcanic explosions and other natural factors.
The cost of the ozone
hoax defies comprehension. "The ban on CFC's will cost as much as $5
trillion by 2005," says Dr. Krug. "Eight hundred million refrigerators
and freezers will have to be replaced worldwide as non-corrosive CFC's
will be replace by highly expensive and corrosive chemicals like
HCFC.... [This ban will] severely undermine efforts to feed millions in
the Third World."
Dr. Frederick Seitz,
past President of the National Academy of Sciences, former Chairman of
the Defense Science Board, and recipient of the National Medal of
Science shares those concerns. He writes,
"That natural
factors may be involved in the variations in the ozone layer is
clearly understood by most atmospheric scientists. Unfortunately,
this fact was omitted, presumably intentionally, from the
summary which accompanied the master report issued by the United
Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.... It was
prepared by a special group of participants who apparently had a
personal interest in recommending tighter environmental
controls.... Moreover, the speed with which the Montreal Protocols
are being put into effect is entirely unjustified in view of
the enormous price society will pay in cost, convenience, and
health....
"To summarize, there
is reason, based on sound scientific work, to express doubt that we
are in immediate danger from either global warming or depletion of
the ozone layer as envisaged by some extreme activists in the
environmental movement."
So why are government
and media scientists so insistent that our world will roast and the
ozone vanish? "A lot of scientists promote the greenhouse effect
because of increased funding," said S. Fred Singer, atmospheric and
space physicist at the University of Virginia. Stanford University
environmentalist Stephen Schneider's admission adds more insight:
"On the one hand, as
scientists, we are ethically bound to the scientific method, in
effect promising to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but.
. . On the other hand, we are not just scientists but human beings as
well. And like most people, we'd like to see the world a better
place. . . . We need to get some broad based support, to capture the
public's imagination. That, of course, entails getting loads of media
coverage. So we have to offer up scary scenarios, make simplified,
dramatic statements and make little mention of any doubts we might
have... Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between
being effective and being honest."
Classroom Activism
Naturally,
environmental curriculum and children's ecology books echo the "scary
scenarios" that spur global consciousness and political action.
children blame "parents and grandparents" for worldwide problems. "They
may deny it," says Captain Eco, the high flying superhero of a large
picture book called Captain Eco and the Fate of the Earth, "but
. . . they're stealing your future from under your noses."
Captain Eco takes two
children on a soaring tour of the damaged earth. After showing them all
the familiar abuses in the worst possible light, the captain points
them to the final mega-problem: "and that's YOU."
"We're not that bad,
are we?" they respond.
"Not you personally,
but the whole human race. There are so many of you, it's getting harder
and harder to meet everyone's needs--and harder for other creatures to
find breathing space...." Saving the planet means the kind of family
planning and government controls.
"You young ones have
got to speed things up," concludes the Captain. "Keep the pressure
on.... Either you go on... cutting down the forests and never thinking
of replanting them, polluting all over the planet, killing other
creatures without care or respect... Or you can work toward a better
world.... Things are changing very fast, and it's time for you young
earthlings to make peace with the earth. Will you help me?"
Just so you know:
There are more trees in the U.S. today than when the Pilgrims
landed at Plymouth rock
Lots of children are
willing. They plant trees and clean river banks--which is great! They
join Kids for Saving the Earth, Kids for a Clean Environment, Kids' in
Nature's Defense, the K-12 Network, and all kinds of other
organizations that help them save the planet. They become vegetarians,
peace activists, and Enviro-Cops who receive badges and recite oaths to
protect the earth. They write letters by the thousands--to the White
House, to their senators, and to their local newspapers.
Spurred by activist
teachers, students sign pledges and join worldwide environmental
networks through global computer links, which can tap into advocacy
groups like PeaceNet and EcoNet. Nearly 300 schools in 21 countries are
linked through the International Education and Resource Network
(I*EARN) which was formed in 1991 when the Copen Foundation expanded
its New York/Moscow project.
Clean Sweep, an
environmental curriculum published by the Iowa Department of Education
demonstrates the same biased information and politicized solutions
found in other environmental curriculum. In one of its lessons, the
"learners" divide into two groups. One group, the people of the earth,
sit on chairs in a circle representing the Earth. The others, the
"unborn" people of the world, are waiting "to be born." Played like
musical chairs, the game tells children to gather natural resources
whenever the music stops. Meanwhile, new children are " born", adding
to the rising "population" using the dwindling resources. Guess what
happens. The world runs out of resources. Once again the villain is the
Western world.
Like most
environmental children's books and myths, the game doesn't match
reality. This exercise is designed to change attitudes, not show
real life. It teaches neither scientific facts nor social statistics.
What it does is far more dangerous than what it omitted: it
gives children an alarming view of an imagined reality. They
feel the exaggerated dangers. They want to do something
about them.
The discussion
questions prod the children in the "right" direction: America is the
villain of the world. Its demand for resources deprives poorer nations
of their equal share. Greedy nations must reduce consumption (through
government controls and global socialism?), slow population growth
(through abortion?), and make whatever sacrifices needed for common
good.
RESISTING
ENVIRONMENTAL MYTHS.
To withstand the
classroom and peer pressures to accept the scary environmental
scenarios and their global "solutions", children need to....
Know science facts
that (1) provide evidence against false scenarios and (2) show
genuine problems and practical solutions. For scientific data, read
The True State of the Planet: Ten of the World's Premier
Environmental Researchers in a Major Challenge to the Environmental
Movement, edited by Ronald Bailey.
- Understand some of the political
visions which fuel the environmental movement.
- Remember that the classroom
computer programs and models replacing textbooks don't simulate the
real world. At best they match environmental ideology. The
programmers determine what the computers will demonstrate.
- To avoid compromise with mythical
thinking and earth-centered environmentalism, children should
watch out for....
- Songs and poems that encourage
earth worship.
- Classroom exercises or rituals
that "empower" children to connect with Mother Earth, hear her
voice, learn her wisdom and visualize her healing.
- Environmental programs that
promote the lifestyles of pagan cultures.
- Native American chants and
prayers to the Great Spirit.
- Buzzwords like
interconnectedness (referring to spiritual oneness rather than
biological interdependence) and reverence (suggesting a
response reserved for the Creator, not creation).
- A pledge of allegiance to the
Earth.