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PERRIN LOVETT

~ Deo Vindice

PERRIN LOVETT

Tag Archives: education

COLUMN: “Scholasticide” While The World Watches

21 Friday Jun 2024

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education, Gazacaust, Scholasticide, War

“Scholasticide” While The World Watches

 

When they’re not wiping out entire families, and when they’re not murdering journalists, food aid workers, and doctors, and when they’re not cutting little girls in half with American-made munitions, possibly those marked “Finish Them!” and autographed by the sociopathic witch Nimarata, the Zionist occupiers of Palestine appear to delight in exterminating literacy and educational opportunities. The destruction of learning in Gaza is a sub-war in the greater genocide. And just like the attendant murder, maiming, displacement, torture, terrorism, impoverishment, and starvation, it is designed to have and is having a terrible effect on its victims.

Samir Mansour’s bookstore, the largest in Gaza, was a bibliophile’s dream. In addition to carrying hundreds of thousands of books, the shop also served as a community center, a haven for readers, students, and happy families. The Zionists bombed it to rubble in May 2021. Mansour reopened the outlet, bigger and better, in 2022. Last fall, the IGF (Israeli Genocide Force) destroyed it again. One may have heard that the Zionists are still defending themselves from a surprise attack that happened eight months ago. The incident was so much of a surprise that no one knew or warned about it three weeks in advance … except for Egyptian Intelligence and the Zionist’s 8200 ISNU Command. Many overlook the fact the incident was a byproduct of the Zionist’s violent occupation and dehumanization of Palestine for most of the past century. Of course, these minor details are part of history, a subject studied in books and schools, and, thus, something for the IGF to eradicate.

As for the ongoing destruction of schools and interruption of formal learning in Gaza, I’ve come across more than a few articles explaining the disaster, both in terms of numerical count and personal tragedy. I’ve also come across a term that perfectly describes what the Zionists are doing: ”Scholasticide.”

Award-winning Gaza journalist Maha Hussaini wrote a must-read column about the effects of the Zionist’s scholasticide at Middle East Eye. She describes the new-to-Palestinian parents phenomenon of homeschooling their children. So far as it goes in the US and much of the greater West, I am ordinarily a strong proponent of homeschooling. That is primarily due to the hard fact that most of the public schools in places like the US, and many private academies, are worse than useless. Mine is not the experience with good schools that actually educate and nurture children and which parents and students enjoy. Evidently, that was the condition of the schools in Gaza. Thus, the new and unexpected imposition of home education is, to say the least, trying on all parties involved. I’m also aware, based on the accounts of homeschoolers in the US, Canada, and Russia, that while homeschooling is rewarding, it can be, at least initially, a somewhat intimidating challenge. Imagine that challenge magnified by the daily dropping of American-made bombs, a lack of food and utilities, and the general horrific conditions of war. That is what Palestinian families now face each day. But, temporarily daunted or not, they are carrying on.

Ms. Hussaini also provided updated numbers and information on the scope of the anti-erudition calamity:

Before the war, there were 796 schools in the Gaza Strip, including 442 public schools, 70 private schools and 284 run by the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, Unrwa. 

There were 12 universities and higher education institutions. 

Gaza had one of the lowest illiteracy rates in the world, with the percentage decreasing from 13.7 percent in 1997 to 1.8 percent in 2022.

Around 700,000 children and young people were enrolled in schools and universities out of the strip’s 2.2 million population. 

In its ongoing bombardment, Israel has damaged or completely destroyed all universities and more than 80 percent of all schools in Gaza. 

They have killed and wounded thousands of students and hundreds of teachers, including at least 100 professors.

This total devastation of education is a war crime within a war crime, one that will inconvenience and afflict the population for years. I remain, however, cautiously optimistic that those years will be relatively short in number because of the extreme patience, intelligence, dedication, and determination exhibited by Gazans—a people who seemingly cannot be subdued. 

Still, many of them are understandably filled with grief, fearing their “future is stolen by the war.” That quote is taken from the title of another article by one of those students, Mrs. Noor Alyacoubi, written for the Palestine Chronicle. In another must-read, she tells the stories of two Gaza university students who, like all of the others, have had their lives completely turned upside down. As Alyacoubi surmises, “Their stories reflect the broader tragedy of a generation whose education, ambitions, and futures have been stolen by war. Amid the chaos and uncertainty, their resilience and hope stand as a testament to the enduring human spirit.” Alyacoubi knows about the chaos and testament personally as she is studying English literature at Al-Azhar University. Or, rather, she was before the school was bombed by the IGF.

Mrs. Alyacoubi is also a young mother. In March, she relayed her experience trying to safeguard and raise her precious baby girl under violent occupation in a story at the We Are Not Numbers forum. “My baby is now 12 months old. Her name is Lya and she has spent 155 days of her life in fear, evacuation, and starvation. I know she is so young and she might be unaware of what is happening around her, but I am sure she feels everything.” In closing, she asks that we on the outside keep her family and her people in our prayers. If we possess any humanity at all, then we must do that if nothing else. We should also listen to some of the voices from the inside. Accordingly, I recommend readers pay attention to the many young people speaking to us through assorted personal reports, stories, and poems at We Are Not Numbers. 

After all, understanding, resisting, and resolving these matters is a process up to all of us. As the bold and brilliant Al-Mayadeen network anchor Zeinab Al Saffar said the other day at SPIEF24, quoting professor Alexander Dugin and speaking to him on-stage, “Humanity is us, not them.” It’s time we did something other than just watch things like scholasticide and genocide. How about we resist them? And stop them?

Deo vindice.

COLUMN: Families, Children, And Legitimate Higher Education

07 Friday Jun 2024

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Alexander Dugin, college, education, Leonid Savin, RSUH, Russia

Families, Children, And Legitimate Higher Education

 

In the fading remains of the United States, there really are dark forces at work against the American people. A new study from Illinois uncovered mixed benefits and drawbacks associated with men becoming fathers. However, the popular US media spin was: “Having kids may shorten a man’s life, groundbreaking study reveals.” In other words, “Kids are messy, you can’t afford them, and they’ll just kill you anyway”. That might as well be America’s family planning mantra. Societies do not survive this way. Populations like America’s, that do not exceed two children per family, do not last. 

Elsewhere, more decent and intelligent people understand the importance of forming, promoting, and protecting families. Some countries are encouraging men to become fathers and women mothers. Russian Federation President Vladimir Putin recently stated that families with three or more children should become the norm. He also reassured families that the Russian government would be there to assist them as they perpetuate the existence of Russia. “Families with children” is the mantra of Russia. 

Part of assisting families and their children is maintaining excellent education at all levels. As for elementary and lower schools in Russia, I am not as familiar with the processes as I’d like. The consensus of those I’ve asked or read is that the learning afforded is good and better than the equivalent in America. At the college and university level, I trust things are also better in Russia. That’s because I trust the people in charge, from President Putin right down the line. I also know there is a necessary movement to separate Russian education from Western standards, a part of the larger bifurcation and liberation associated with Russia’s multipolar quest. 

Another man I trust, Leonid Savin, wrote a heckuva good article on intellectual standards and the need for Russian sovereign refinement. He noted that 1990s Western interference “led both to the meaninglessness of deep meanings and their replacement with surrogate terms, which began to be used at the reflex level, and to a constant movement to Western theories and concepts, instead of developing our own.” This is exactly what happened to American schools over the past century and a half. Whatever lingered from the Soviet system, even if deficient in some areas, was better than and preferable to the foisted alternative. The movement to reflexive surrogacy would have quickly given way to the total abandonment of literacy, numeracy, and public morality. The fact this progression was stopped or is being stopped is a miracle in and of itself.

Savin goes on to discuss the pro-Russian transformation of college social sciences by keeping cherished traditions alive though updated to reflect the complexities of the evolving world. Call it “whole process” social science education, something in scholastic keeping, on Russian terms, with Professor Alexander Dugin’s Fourth Political Theory. Savin mentions Dugin’s work as the leader of the new Political Training and Scientific Center at Moscow’s Russian State University for the Humanities (RSUH). The Center’s purpose is “the development and implementation of a new approach (a new socio-humanitarian paradigm) to the domestic teaching of humanitarian and social disciplines, aimed at the formation of the worldview of students based on the Russian civilizational identity and traditional Russian spiritual and moral values.”

In January, Dugin said at RSUH’s Transformation of Humanitarian Education seminar, “There has been a catastrophic degradation in Western historical science. …. This is evidenced by gender problems, postmodernism, and ultra-liberalism. We can study the West, but not as the ultimate universal truth. We need to focus on our own Russian development model.” Dugin’s program leadership earned the ire of the CIA Washington Post and some CIA pro-Western Telegram bots, so he must be off to a good start. (I suppose they were taken aback, like vampires offered Holy Water, by mention of spiritual and moral values.) I’m unsure when Dugin last visited an American university, but his first observation of catastrophe is an understatement. About the only courses of study in America that retain any semblance of excellence are those in mathematics and the hard science programs at certain elite engineering schools—and they are under heavy attack. However, he is correct that Western schools should be studied. They should be studied in two ways. First, they should be scanned for any useful remnants from the time when the West represented an actual Christian civilization. Second, they can be forensically studied like a cadaver in a postmortem examination in an attempt to find out what killed them. 

As part of its Western and non-Western integration, RSUH’s website asserts: “International cooperation is an important part of the internationalization strategy at RSUH. It is aimed at strengthening the university’s competitive ability in Russia and abroad and its integration into the global education and research space.” This is, as stated, very important, yet the manner of execution might be even more important. My advice, should anyone want it, is to keep studying the cadavers while also selectively affiliating with the wider world. This could and probably will mean making adjustments to things like Russian participation in the Bologna Process and looking deeper into connections with BRICS+ countries and the Global South in general. Without my advice, they appear to be doing fine as-is, with RSUH being one of four Russian universities in a pilot program to monitor international cooperation.

Russia’s societal heritage is the envy of much of the world because it has survived and built upon its ancient traditions. Those traditions, having yielded beauty, strength, and prosperity, obviously work. So does Russian innovation, in technology, economics, and other facets of (post)modern existence. Russians must continue to cling affectionately to the positive, purposefully abandon the negative, and embrace any helpful new processes or ideas in keeping with Russian customs regarding what is good, true, and beautiful. And, of course, it all starts with the Russian people themselves, with strong families and many wonderful children.

Deo vindice.

Homeschooling Under Genocide: Teaching In Tents

17 Wednesday Apr 2024

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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education, Gazacaust, Palestine

I have previously written about the zionist entity’s sub war on Palestinian education. Yet even as the zionists have bombed practically all schools and colleges in Gaza, and even as no children there have been formally educated in over six months, the learning cannot be stopped.

During the six months of genocidal war on Gaza, Israel has also systematically targeted schools.

According to the latest figures provided by the Palestinian Ministry of Education, at least 378 schools were destroyed and damaged in Gaza. Additionally, at least 4,327 students, 231 teachers and 94 professors were killed.

Fatima Muhammad told The Palestine Chronicle that she was shocked when she learned that Israel had completely destroyed her children’s school.

“My children, Muhammad and Ahmad, used to study at the Malaysian Quranic School, located north of the Nuseirat camp. But Israel bombed it and destroyed it, depriving my children of their place of learning,” she said.

…

“The truth is, the occupation aims to destroy all aspects of life in the Gaza Strip, to punish its residents for their refusal to migrate,” Abu al-Rous added.

“Also, by bombing schools, the occupation tries to deprive future generations of their right to education, but it will not succeed,” Abu al-Rous continued.

“We will teach our children in tents, under the sun, and anywhere else. We are determined to raise an educated and informed Palestinian generation, capable of resisting the occupation and exposing its crimes in all international forums.”

This is a great experiment in homeschooling. It’s better than the one carried out during the C19 hoax as that was conducted under a systemic plan and doomed to failure. This time, in Gaza, bright children are learning from caring adults, all of whom are interested in education. In the future, when the zionists are defeated, these children will use what they’ve learned to rebuild and better their society.

Securing the Future of Education

17 Saturday Feb 2024

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes

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education, future, Palestine, Russia

…or destroying it.

President Vladimir Putin embarked on a Urals tour where he melded the future of education, industry, and happy civic life. Read all about it, translation may be required.

Elsewhere, Nadda Osman builds on the sad tale I began telling last month about the war on higher education in Gaza. Read his article which provides much more detail on the targeted destruction of Palestinian educational facilities and, especially, critical intellectuals.

After more than 130 days of war on Gaza, many of the coastal enclave’s universities and educational institutions lie in ruins.

At least 28,700 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces since the start of the war on 7 October and around 70 percent of the Strip’s buildings have been damaged or destroyed.

Palestine has one of the highest literacy rates in the world, but the war on Gaza has devastated the education sector, killing thousands of students, and leaving hundreds of thousands out of school for almost five months.

According to the Euro-Med Monitor, Israel’s army has so far killed 94 university professors, along with hundreds of teachers, in what the rights group describes as “deliberate and specific air raids” on the homes of academic, scientific or intellectual figures.

“The targeted academics studied and taught across a variety of academic disciplines, and many of their ideas served as cornerstones of academic research in the Gaza Strip’s universities,” the rights group said.

This is further evidence of the Zionists’ genocide, the part aimed at depriving Palestinians of any manner of a better future. Osman mentions Saeed al-Dahshan, now murdered, and his 2021 book, [How To Sue Israel]: The International Prosecution of Israel and its Leaders for Their Crimes Against the Palestinians. The book outlines an approach via the ICJ, the route SA has taken 3 years later. I have not found an intact copy nor an edition in a language I understand. However, several chapters are available in Arabic.

‘Murican Edjumuhcashun Lower and Lower

13 Friday Oct 2023

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

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education, IQ, terminal decline, USSA

ACT scores for the first fully-vaxxed(!) batch of USSA high school inmates are available! And they are … not good.

The average ACT composite score for U.S. students was 19.5 out of 36. Last year, the average score was 19.8.

For grins and giggles and gags, I tried to extrapolate an IQ measure equal to a 19.5 ACT score. This was difficult as my conversion calculator uses the pre-1995 SAT as a proxy, and since 1995, the SAT has been, uh, messed with. But, after a few attempts, I came up with a college-ready(!!!) IQ of 95. That’s the college student average – the smart people. I thought that sounded bad enough, but I wanted to use that very-FOX “News”-viewer-ish score to assess the total college aged IQ. I gave the process one listless try and gave up. The great news is that if you enjoy an intelligent functioning society, then there are a number of them beyond the USSA’s virtually nonexistent borders.

Public Schools: Devoid of Faith

10 Tuesday Oct 2023

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Christianity, education, schools, The Substitute, Walt Garlington

Walt Garlington examines the dire shortcomings of public “education” in Louisiana, offering a most plausible course of correction!

There is something that will drive away these evils, but these school officials, and most other government officials in Louisiana from school boards to the Governor’s Mansion, seem afraid to name it: Christianity.

If there is faithfulness and love towards God, if there is constant remembrance of God, lawlessness in adults and children is much less likely to arise. A holy man we have mentioned before, St. Dimitri of Rostov, a native of the Ukraine, explains it this way:

In Paradise, to do and to keep was the first commandment given Adam, that is, to do with the mind2 in order to comprehend well, and to keep the commandment so as not to break it. But since he did not do with mindfulness, he did not keep the commandments, and because he did not practice mental action above all else, unbelief arose in Adam – disbelief in God, Who spoke and commanded; then from unbelief were born disobedience and transgression; from the transgression came the falling away from the Lord’s grace and estrangement from His Divine love.

If Adam had comprehend the Benefactor and reflected upon the commandment, and if he had believed, he would not have disobeyed the commandment; nor would he have eaten of the forbidden tree and been cast out of Paradise, and fallen into death and corruption . . . .

Unbelief is born from imprudence, and disobedience is born from unbelief, and every sin and transgression are born from disobedience. If someone comprehends nothing, how can he believe? How can a person devoid of faith, and thus he understands nothing, keep the commandments of the Lord? Further, how can he who does not keep the commandments of the Lord have trusting hope in God and love for Him? It is not at all possible.

Without constant reminders of God and his commandments, St. Dimitri is saying, all kinds of sins will be committed. We now have the fulfillment of that statement of his in our own schools.

Read the whole thing. At the end, Walt does the strangest thing: he recommends a novel:

Coda:  For more illustrations of the numerous pitfalls that come about from relying on the bureaucratic professionalism mentioned earlier to improve the public school system, we recommend Perrin Lovett’s short James Bond-esque novel The Substitute, available from Shotwell Publishing.

Thanks, Walt!

On the Hideous Total Failure of ‘Murican Education

01 Sunday Oct 2023

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Ann Barnhardt, education, schools

Ann Barnhardt on the “schools.”

TOLDYA: “These kids can’t read. They can’t write a sentence. They don’t know what state they live in. No math skills. They can’t even attend to a three-minute video clip.” Don’t say you weren’t warned.

Watch the included video. Someone wrote about this tragedy in a rather entertaining novel. Maybe buy a copy of 12 of it.

COLUMN: A Review of SCHOOL FOR GENIUS

09 Wednesday Aug 2023

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book review, education, ETH, SCHOOL FOR GENIUS, Tom Moore

A Review of SCHOOL FOR GENIUS

 

What’s genius got to do with it?! What did Tina Turner have in common with Boston’s Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge? That’s right! Sensing the impending final chapter of American history approaching, the late, talented, and wise Turner removed herself to Switzerland, settling comfortably in a magnificent chateau just down the lake shore from a school most Americans may not have heard of. And one will literally drive over the engineering legacy of that same school as one heads north on I-93, passing TD’s new Garden, perhaps lamenting the loss of the old Garden, and slowly realizing the Red Tavern up in Methuen has been closed for twenty years.

Hello. It’s another book review. Today we briefly examine School For GENIUS: The Story Of The ETH – The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, from 1855 to the Present, Front Street Press, (2005/6). ETH, short for the Allemand “Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule,” is that famed engineering school in Zurich with which some might not be familiar. It’s also sometimes referred to simply as “the Poly.” It is Switzerland’s and Europe’s preeminent technical school and consistently ranks as one of the world’s top ten universities.

(© Front Street Press. Photo by PL.)

I purchased School for Genius for two very special, personal reasons. First, I am giving the book as a gift to a most important person who may choose to study at ETH in the near future. Second, it is yet another fine work authored by my dear friend, my brother, and our champion of the West, the late, great Thomas G. Moore. That last point alone should sell this review to my readers. 

As many know, Tom and I first met at a school. Many might not know that Tom held three advanced degrees from two European universities. The man understood academia. He knew Europe. Previously, I was vaguely aware of ETH, and he and I had discussed the book and his resident process of researching and writing it. Reading it was nonetheless eye-opening.

As usual, Tom did something utterly fantastic with ETH. He crafted an authoritative history, apology, and exposition that flows and reads like one of his thrilling fictional narratives. It’s not quite like reading an Erik Larson book; one need not constantly remind oneself that Albert Einstein and Carl Jung were real men and not novel characters, but it’s somewhat close. 

The book opens with words of knowledgeable praise from Hon. Faith Whittlesey, a two-term former US Ambassador to Switzerland. Tom begins with a bit of history and culture, wherein he compares the ancient and functional idea of Swiss “diversity” with the doomed and deadly buzzword of late American fame. He then moves into the school’s genesis as it was founded based on the established principles of Paris’s École Polytechnique (another school someone might consider). 

The rise of ETH coincided with, was governed by, and helped steer the rise of the industrial revolution and the modern world. Tom beautifully covers how a decent and intelligent people bridged the transition from a rural agrarian culture to an advanced industrialized society while maintaining the best elements of both. Repeated emphasis is given to the stubborn independence and decentralization that has marked the Swiss people and their Cantons for centuries. He also delves as deeply into the copious scientific and academic contributions and achievements the school and its score-plus Nobel laureates have given the world as 270 pages will allow. 

Here I will stop and highly recommend School For Genius. If not for my two privy circumstances, I might not have ever developed an interest in the subject matter. It is, I suppose, a niche study. Yet, if you or someone you know has an interest in educational history, engineering, math, Tom Moore prose, or the continuation of civilization, then do consider adding the book to your reading list. 

As for gifted young American students who might contemplate ETH as their future alma mater, Tom perhaps outdoes even his own general curiosity and kindness. He dedicates a short section towards the end of the book to just those American kids who might follow Mrs. Turner toward Zurich. The requisite standards are high. Therefore, so too should be the intellectual caliber of the potential scholar. If one is qualified, and one decides to pursue this select excellence, then the process is doable. At Tom’s original press time, the annual cost of attending ETH was approximately $950. This year, it is closer to $1,500. That figure applies to all students, domestic and international. Compare that price to the tuition at MIT. Compare Zurich to Boston, and the CH to the US. ETH is oftentimes referred to as the “MIT of Europe.” That moniker might be reversed. 

For general education buffs, Appendix II provides a cursory examination of the general Swiss school system. As one might guess, compared to what passes for schooling in the US, the CH’s approach is, in a word, “better.” In a self-propagating system of merit and advancement, ETH does its part to keep the cycle spinning much like CERN’s ETH-affiliated Large Hadron Collider. The adventuresome American pupil might further assist this grand process. Learn much more in Moore’s School For Genius.

A special note: Based on my outstanding experience, I also highly recommend Booketeria of San Antonio, Texas as a used bookstore of great worth. If you order School For Genius or any other preowned book from Amazon, do look for them as a source. At their website, they maintain an independent catalog of titles. For the ridiculously low price I paid for my copy, what was delivered bordered on the unbelievable. My mint condition book arrived early and double wrapped like a Christmas present. I sincerely thank these good people for their extreme dedication to quality and service.

Up there in Heaven, I once again thank you, mon frère. Really miss you.

Deo vindice!

COLUMN: Another Word On Education

02 Wednesday Aug 2023

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education, IQ, schools, society

Another Word On Education

 

August is again upon us, and that means the great majority of American children will soon march back to their child sacrifice and slave training camps, aka “schools”. Well, like so many little victims in this strange, nation-shaped kind of place, the kids in the suburban small town where I exist started last month. “School” in July. If their parents were capable of thinking above the first or second logical order, then they might know that almost all of their “schools” are now majority vibrant. If they knew, then I suppose they’d be proud. I’d ask, “Who, really, cares?” But, of course, I do. Somewhat. A little, and less every year. The only future for education in fading America is homeschooling.

Thus I was greatly encouraged by Katie O’Neal’s latest article on homeschooling and by the great comments left by Joe Putnam and Dr. Clyde Wilson. Dr. Wilson knows a thing or two thousand about education, and Katie and Joe have direct, personal experience with homeschooling. My best plausible contribution might be my role as an amateur psychometrist and whistle-blower. Another strong suit (or hindrance) might be my concentration on the right tail of the old intelligence distribution bell curve. Regardless, I’ve decided today to present a rerun of a 2021 column with a few minor editions. That old column was itself a follow-up to another one that dealt with related demographic issues. A fun fact for Newton County, GA: a few more years have done the opposite of improving those demographics. 

Make Them Invulnerable

(April 14, 2021, modified today)

Last week’s column struck a nerve with me, a depressing if predictable nerve. Compared to those at the top, the people at the bottom of a double Hollingworth gap are not just relatively retarded. They are, in a relative sense, profoundly retarded. It’s akin to the mental difference between a person of ordinary intelligence and a house cat. This week, happily, I’m addressing those of us on the far right tail of the curve.

I never liked school – from kindergarten through graduate school. I especially detested my short-lived experience with the “enrichment” program in middle school. I only lasted a few days or maybe weeks before I absolutely refused to participate. The pitiful government school I attended was bad enough. The special program was worse. At the time, someone should have foreseen the incompatibility. 

Just before I was subjected to that particular draining make-work project, a relevant paper was published: Wendy Roedell, Vulnerabilities of Highly Gifted Children, Roeper Review, Vol. 6, No. 3 (1984)(read it HERE). Roedell briefly outlined the difference between “gifted” and “extraordinarily gifted,” ever cognizant of the semi-subjective assessment and application of both labels. 

Her work is good, great even, and thus, it has been roundly ignored, especially her overly-optimistic conclusion: “As information about the needs of highly gifted children becomes more widespread, and society’s expectations become more closely attuned to the realities of gifted development, the degree of vulnerability of these children will diminish.” If only.

The ensuing period of nearly forty years has seen many things. America has degenerated into a ridiculously stupid third-world cesspool. The schools – almost all public and most private – have dropped even the pretense of former Western educational standards. And, while the existence of the UHIQ is reluctantly acknowledged, society has adopted an almost universal bias against the cognitive elite. This is the phenomenon Tom Ironsides observed in THE SUBSTITUTE when he occasionally encountered a languishing child of true intelligence in the wild. It is the same treatment he received from a system blindly obsessed with meaningless credentials. Sadly, the experience is not limited to fiction. Consider The Genius Famine by Edward Dutton and Charlton for the negative effects of this bias on society. One of Charles Murray’s four simple truths in Real Education was that the future of society is dependent on how well high-IQ children are educated. As a country and a nation, the USSA and America have failed; hence, our future looks like war, fracture, and a diminished quality of life.

More recently, thought criminal on the lam, Gonzalo Lira, had this to say about our “schools”:

TERRIBLE EDUCATION: The education bestowed in schools and universities in the US and Europe are atrocious. Children finishing high-school without knowing how to read or do simple math. University students who can’t tell you what centuries Shakespeare lived—or who he was!

Education has become a way to enslave the minds of children, teaching them ideological lies and preventing them from thinking critically. And university education is a way to get an empty accreditation and (not incidentally) turn every student into a student loan debt slave.

That was part of a list of reasons to evacuate out of the West before it’s too late. In general, some European schools, and especially colleges are in better shape than others. European education is vastly preferable to what passes for the same thing in the USSA. Still, he’s not wrong. At the higher levels, on both sides of the Atlantic, hard science and engineering departments are, by and large, still holdouts against the rot, even if their host schools have already succumbed. Once a child is effectively homeschooled, he and his parents should think long and hard about college. Aside from exceptions to the horrible new rule, there are outside alternatives for learning at that level.

No child deserves to be trapped in a failed modern K-12 Amerikan school. While some do much better than others, exceptional children are failed in exceptional fashion. Most of those children above 140-145 WAIS (or SB) are utterly tortured. Especially boys. In many cases, programs allegedly there to help, in fact, hinder. 

As I’ve written previously, the only way to assist a truly intelligent child is for his parents to point him in what they think is the right direction and then step aside and see how far he can go. This isn’t necessarily easy. The parents may not know the correct direction. They may have communication difficulties with their son. And, as is usually the case, they may be plagued with a desire to control that which is not ultimately controllable. Homeschooling is really the only option. 

Back in 1984, Roedell saw the need to remove the bright child from the doldrums of the standard classroom: “Highly gifted children experience increased vulnerability when they spend large portions of their time in inappropriate educational settings. The more a gifted child’s abilities differ from the norm, the more inappropriate becomes the educational program offered in the regular classroom.” She nailed the problems with “enrichment” programs: 

Many programs for gifted children also constitute inappropriate environments for the extraordinarily gifted child … In some school districts, the content of the gifted enrichment class is not linked logically to the identification system. … Even when the child’s abilities and the content of the program are linked, the learning pace of the program may be geared to the level of the moderately gifted child.

The cat comparison is hyperbole, but it is accurate.

It is important to remember that a child with an IQ of 164 is as different intellectually from a child with an IQ of 132 as that child is different from the 100 IQ child. Forcing a child with an IQ of 164 to learn at the pace of the average child, or even the pace of the moderately gifted, is akin to placing an average child in a special education classroom and asking that his/her learning rate be slowed down to keep pace with the rest of the class. The frustration of highly gifted children forced to stifle their love of learning in inhospitable environments can result in withdrawal, behavior problems, or psychosomatic symptoms.

That was my experience in both the special program, specifically, and the schools in general. There was a reason why I independently reached the same conclusion about my subject program as the professional and why I reached it faster with less information. Then, and worse today, the problem is compounded by a number of factors. First, the schools are geared towards low-achievers; ultra and very high-ability students are seen as nonconforming nuisances. The programs, all of them, are designed to indoctrinate rather than to educate. The people who plan and organize curriculum, general and advanced, have ulterior motives. The “gifted and talented” courses are most appropriate for the “all-rounders”, and, these days, best suit the needs and proclivities of female students. That is of no service to the young minds with the most to offer an ailing country and culture. Additionally, the instructors in charge of even the special programs, in most cases, simply cannot communicate at the appropriate mental level with the most advanced students in their care. The average school teacher in the USSA has an IQ of 110. 

A child forced to endure such low-level foolishness will endure. He may very well continue to perform well, grade-wise, into college or even graduate school. But by being denied a real start, he will always be behind his potential. And he will come to resent or even hate the system and those who operate it and those to whom it primarily caters. There is the danger he might take up the digital pen. In the end, he will become adrift in a society that denigrates intelligence – more to its detriment than to that of the high-IQ pariahs. 

Chris Langan, a genius if ever there was one, was brutally punished in the USSA for his high intelligence. Wang Huning was allowed to maximize his intellectual potential from an early age in China. One man’s nation rises while the other’s collapses. 

The sane alternative is relatively simple even in the absence of something controlling like the CPC. Don’t expect smart children to succeed and do not “help” them. Rather, let them succeed. Give them the necessary tools and encouragement and then let them build. What is rightly seen as vulnerability, if properly channeled, can become great strength, beneficial both to the children and to the greater society. A system designed by and for 90 IQ simpletons cannot and will not help. This is up to us. They are our children, after all. Make them invulnerable.

*****

It is my reasoned suspicion that the foregoing approach will work for children of all ability levels. It will at least work better than the one-size-fits-none ways of the “schools”. By my count, this is education article number 439. And while it may not yet be time for me to fully put down my baton, I sense the time has arrived to lay off some of my education scribbling. At least in English. (Друзья мои, продолжайте делать то, что работает! Если я могу вам помочь, мы поговорим.) In any event, I look forward to more genuine wisdom about what really works from Katie, Joe, and any and all of you who know. Onwards.

Deo vindice!

PS: I dedicate this song to Gonzalo Lira. Go, boy! Good luck, and maybe make for Russia.

PPS: Regarding all the building excitement about choosing ‘Murica’s next national dinosaur, I just cannot get excited. Allosaurus or Triceratops, you say? Friends, I truly don’t think these critters exist anymore if they ever did.

Homeschool or Rape Cover-Up

07 Wednesday Jun 2023

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

≈ Comments Off on Homeschool or Rape Cover-Up

Tags

education, rape, schools, Vox Day

I’ll just quote Vox in full here regarding this latest predictable, predicted truth about the failed “schools”:

If, at this point, you are still putting your children in public schools, you are committing child abuse by proxy:

US public school employees who sexually abuse children are typically moved to different schools three times before they are finally arrested, preying on as many as 73 victims before they are eventually punished, according to a new report by a conservative think tank.

Published last week by the Defense of Freedom Institute, the report details hundreds of cases in which teachers in public school districts were accused of abuse, but had their records scrubbed before being moved to new positions, where the abuse continued.

Citing earlier research by the Government Accountability Office, the report noted that firing teachers can be a costly process for school districts. As such, the districts often negotiate confidentiality agreements with unions whereby a teacher can resign or be demoted to avoid disciplinary action, before being transferred to another school with a clean slate.

The average employee accused of abuse is passed to three different school districts before facing legal consequences, and can abuse up to 73 children in this time.

This system has allowed sexual assault to proliferate, the report claimed. According to the most recent Department of Education data, 13,799 cases of sexual violence and 685 cases of rape or attempted rape were recorded in schools during the 2017-2018 school year, up from 9,649 and 394 in 2015-2016.

Homeschooling your children should be your #1 first priority. It doesn’t matter if you have to move, add a side-hustle on top of your primary job, or lower your standard of living. Just do it! Neither your nor your children will ever regret it.

There is an entertaining novel, now available directly from the publisher in EPUB and print(!), that goes into great detail about these kinds of hideous schemes. Maybe it’s worth buying and reading.

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Perrin Lovett

From Green Altar Books, an imprint of Shotwell Publishing

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