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IMPORTANT
FACTS
1. The psychological
program “values clarification” emerged from Germany and was introduced into
U.S. classrooms in the 1960s under various names, including Outcome Based Education
(OBE).
2. At least five teens
responsible for U.S. school massacres had undergone psychological behavior modification
school programs like “death education,” including Columbine High School shooters,
Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold.
3. In Japan, the destructive
impact of psychological and psychiatric programming in schools was highlighted
by the case of a teacher dressing up as a terrorist and bursting into his classroom,
terrifying children in an effort to “teach” them about violence.
4. Beverly Eakman, an
educator and bestselling author, makes clear that the agenda of psychiatrists
and psychologists is to “jettison systematic academic knowledge” in favor of
manipulative psychological programs and dangerous psychotropic drugs.
Psychiatric drugs and psychological practices were behind the violence in
U.S. high schools such as the shooting in Columbine, Colorado (above) in 1999
and have been implicated in teen violence in other countries.
CHAPTER
FOUR Eradicating Right and Wrong
In March 1998, Andrew Golden, 11, and cousin Mitchell Johnson, 13, sounded the
alarm at Westside Middle School in Arkansas, prompting students and teachers
to crowd into the courtyard. Then the two boys opened fire, randomly shooting
at their victims, killing four students and one teacher.
In Germany, during final preparations for school examinations in 2002, an expelled
student killed 18 people and then himself. In Japan, a 14-year-old beheaded
his 11-year-old friend, while another teen stabbed an elderly neigh- bor to
death because he wanted to experience killing someone. A drastic increase in
school violence has been reported in Japan, Canada, Israel and France. In the
U.K., there are now special schools for disruptive, sometimes violent youngsters
who have been permanently excluded from other schools.
There are many possible explanations why—violence on television, the accessibility
of guns and other weapons among them.
Yes, children can be influenced by violence on TV. Yes, guns are accessible.
So are knives. They were also available 40 years ago, and children didn’t go
out and coolly commit premeditated massacres with them.
To discover the true reason, it is necessary to examine modern schools, especially
the programs for teaching moral values. In education in the United States, morals
have been heavily and adversely focused upon since 1967, when “values clarification”
first appeared in schools.
“Values clarification” initially emerged from Germany and was introduced into
United States’ classrooms under various names: sensitivity training, encounter
groups, self-esteem training, moral reasoning, conflict resolution and critical
thinking, to name a few. None are any more than mental techniques designed to
modify behavior—or more bluntly, alter young people’s values.
Children and teenagers are manipulated and molded with the purpose of bringing
about certain desired psychological “outcomes.” This process involves breaking
down and subtly invalidating the child’s already acquired values—in particular,
his family’s values— and replacing them with the idea that there is no set right
or wrong, only personal opinion.
Tom DeWeese of the American Policy Foundation tells the story of a 9-year-old
boy who “told his mother that he ranked lumberjacks in the same class as murderers
and bigots” after a values clarification class. “These psychologically-based
programs are harming children. ... It’s mind control from womb to tomb,” said
DeWeese.
According to William Kilpatrick, author of Why Johnny Can’t Tell Right From
Wrong , “[N]o time is spent providing moral guidance or forming character.
The virtues are not explained or discussed, no models of good behavior are provided,
no reason is given why a boy or girl should want to be good in the first place.”
Educator Beverly Eakman describes the impact of psychiatric and psychological
influence on schools: “Their clear and stated agenda has been to jettison systematic,
academic, knowledge-based curricula.”
At least five teens responsible for school massacres had undergone psychological
behavior modification school programs like “death education” or “anger management.”
The Arkansas school health and social science curriculum included “conflict
resolution” classes emphasizing that students “examine the possible
causes of conflict in schools, families and communities” and “demonstrate
strategies to prevent and manage conflict in healthy ways.” The
Westside Arkansas school shooting was triggered by one of the
boys breaking up with a girlfriend, which he apparently “solved”
by coldly killing his fellow students. And while “anger management”
is claimed to teach individuals to control their aggression and
anger, in one class, a boy beat up a classmate so badly that six
days later the boy was still in the hospital.
Death education, a psychological experiment that has been used
in many countries since the 1970s, requires children to discuss
suicide, and write their own wills and epitaphs. One U.S. “death
education” (euphemistically called “forensic education”) class
involved taking students to a deserted river shoreline to observe
a mock crime scene complete with a “dismembered mannequin in the
car trunk, a severed arm in a grocery bag and a bloody hacksaw.”
In Kyoto, Japan, in a bizarre attempt to educate children about
violence, a teacher disguised in a cap and sunglasses, and brandishing
a 20-inch metal rod, burst into a class of 11-year-olds sending
them stumbling over desks and chairs trying to escape.
Concerned parents and educators cite Columbine High School shooters
Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold as prime examples of the failure
of “anger management” and “death education.” Harris was taking
an antidepressant that can cause violent mania. He and Klebold
had attended courtordered psychological counseling, including
“anger management.” Further, Harris was told to imagine his own
death. He later dreamt that he and Klebold went on a shooting
rampage in a shopping center. After turning the story of his dream
in to his teacher, Harris and Klebold acted it out by killing
a teacher, their classmates and themselves.
By combining a value-neutral system or “anger management” together
with a heavy emphasis on the “educational” use of violence-inducing,
psychiatric drugs, one has created a powder keg waiting for a
spark.
Eric Harris
Jeremy Strohmeyer Kip Kinkel These young felons murdered 22 people
between them after being subjected to psychiatric or psychological
behavior modification techniques and drugs.
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