Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Thanks Kjos.

Role playing is an excellent tool to highlight the hidden influences... or... the hidden commandments of the family...."  [1]  Robert Hawley, Value Exploration Through Role Playing, 1975.
"...ten years hence it should be more accurate to term [the teacher] a 'learning clinician.' This title is intended to convey the idea that schools are becoming 'clinics' whose purpose is to provide individualized psychosocial 'treatment for the student, thus increasing his values both to himself and to society...."
[2] Today's Education, January 1969.

Cynthia, a concerned mother from the Seattle area, doesn't want her local public school to monitor her family’s values. Naturally, this letter from her son’s 4th grade teacher troubled her:
Dear Parent or Guardian:

In the next several weeks, your son/daughter will be participating in the 4th grade unit of instruction on:

 Personal Safety (child sexual abuse prevention) 
Includes T.A.L.K. Theater for 2nd, 4th, and 8th grades.

Please refer to the brochure sent to you in the fall for specific information about the various components of our comprehensive health curriculum. If you have any further questions, please feel free to contact me.   
Sincerely,
No brochure had arrived, so Cynthia asked the teacher for a copy. Since it failed to answer her questions, she called the district Curriculum Director. He explained that a group of trained actors would put on a play "with the kids." The presentation would show different ways to deal with adults who might make them feel uncomfortable by their touching or talking.
Cynthia asked if she could watch this illuminating drama with her child. He said no; other children might not disclose abuse if parents were present.
"Are you basically looking for kids that have been abused?" she asked.
Again the answer was no, but he admitted that students sometimes disclose personal secrets to an adult after a performance. The actual purpose of the theater, however, was to provide children with skills on how to handle confusing and uncomfortable situations. The facilitators or actors -- joined by a professional psychologist -- would be trained to look for kids who were "plugging their ears," "covering their face" or showing other signs of discomfort.
Cynthia didn't ask what the school would do with children who plugged their ears or were suspected to be "at risk." Later she wondered. Would the psychologist counsel or cross-examine the child? Would Child Protection Services be called? Could the child be removed from the family?
Psychological profiling and other intrusive tactics are already devastating families across the country -- for many reasons unrelated to sexual abuse. Children have been removed from loving homes because of anonymous calls, subjective speculation, unfounded accusations and irrational hostility against Christian parents whose uncompromising beliefs and values are considered inappropriate preparation for the pluralistic 21st century community.[3]  After all, home-taught values could block willingness to compromise and conform.[4]
During the last century, progressive leaders have been equating hate with faith -- and Christian child raising with emotional abuse. Consider this 1946 statement by Dr. Brock Chisholm, former head of the World Health Organization. :
"We have swallowed all manner of poisonous certainties fed us by our parents.... The results are frustration, inferiority, neurosis and inability to... make the world fit to live in....
"It has long been generally accepted that parents have a perfect right to impose any points of view, any lies or fears, superstitions, prejudices, hates, or faith on their defenseless children.... [People with] guilts, fears, inferiorities, are certain to project their hates on to others.... Such reaction now becomes a dangerous threat to the whole world...."[5] emphasis added
Two years later, the International Congress on Mental Health met in London where it presented a report titled "Mental Health and World Citizenship." It said,
"…hostility or excessive nationalism may become deeply embedded in the developing personality... often at GREAT HUMAN COST...Change will be strongly resisted unless an attitude of acceptance has first been engendered."[6] 
With help from the media, that "attitude of acceptance" has been engendered. Public schools have become therapy centers, immersing children in outrageous sex-education and multicultural experiences, values clarification and other forms of group therapy designed to
  • desensitize children to contrary values
  • produce moral confusion or cognitive dissonance
  • shift loyalty from family to peer group 
  • instill beliefs and behavior fit for the global village.[7]
T.A.L.K. Theater fits right in. "It’s psychological examination on the students without parental consent," says Cynthia. "There is no opt-out form and no written permission slip for parents to sign."
That’s because the educational establishment knows that many parents would oppose their inexcusable tactics – if they discovered them. So they hide them from traditional parents while seeking support from more liberal parents, community groups and agencies. 
For example, the Massachusetts Department of Education website tells us that 
“comprehensive school health education is a vital component of state-wide education reform.... Through collaboration with one another, health educators, academic teachers, and support staff can address a panoply of interrelated health topics....”
Those topics include AIDS education, belief and value systems, child abuse and molestation, discrimination, sexual orientation, family lifestyles and relationships, hate speech, violence prevention and other issues critical to social engineering. Each would be discussed through “innovative, student-centered teaching methods that foster critical thinking skills and responsible decision making” such as peer education, question boxes, role playing, improvisational theater.... [8]
Theater and role-playing are powerful tools for social change. The explicit purpose for bringing these processes into schools was exposed by Fannie and George Shaftel in their 1967 manual for change: Role-Playing for Social Values:
"Once values are out in the open, they can be looked at, considered compared with alternative values. Only then can one criticize, evaluate, deny or confirm and reconstruct one's value system. Children can be helped to... develop an explicit set of values. In group discussions, in role-playing enactments... they can explore their values and learn the process of criticizing and reconstructing them... under skilled guidance.
Teen violence, family breakdown, rejection of truth and mockery of parents are just a few of the devastating consequences of today's psycho-social manipulation. To stand against the skilled guides of this global age, we must know God's Word, wear The Armor of God, encourage each other, pray for guidance and look to the only One who can lead us through the battle in triumph. His faithful servant, Jehoshophat, expressed it well:
“We have no power against this great multitude that is coming against us; nor do we know what to do, but our eyes are upon You.” 2 Chronicles 20:12

1. Robert Hawley, Value Exploration Through Role Playing, 1975. Cited by Dennis Laurence Cuddy, Ph.D., Chronology of Education with Quotable Quotes (Highland City, FL: Pro Family Forum, 1994), page 57.
2. Harold and June Shane, "Forecast for the '70s" Today's Education, January 1969.Seeing parents as an enemy, the Shanes also warned that "Educators will assume a formal responsibility for children when they reach the age of two... [with] mandatory foster homes and 'boarding schools" for children whose home environment was felt to have a malignant influence."  Cited by Dr. Dennis Cuddy, page 43.
        These threats have become a frightening reality.  Those who have followed the "child abuse," know well that subjective and unreasonable accusations from coast to coast have led to horrendous violations of parental rights. With the million dollar rewards offered states with high foster care and adoption statistics, government workers are on constant lookout for "abused" children and uncooperative parents.  

3."The goal of education must be to develop a society in which people can live more comfortably with change than with rigidity. In the coming world, the capacity to face the new appropriately is more important than the ability to know and repeat the old."  Carl Rogers, "A Plan for Self-Directed Change in an Educational System" Education Leadership, May 1967.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

The True Conspiracy


"The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counsel together, against the LORD, and against his anointed, saying, 'Let us break their bands asunder, and cast away their cords from us.' He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh: the Lord shall have them in derision." Psalm 2:2-4
 
Promise from God.