It would be the easiest thing in the world to make this about Sarah Palin.
She makes mistakes like Apple makes iPhones, so there is a temptation to catalogue her recent bizarre claim that Paul Revere’s midnight ride in April of 1775 was to “warn the British” (He actually rode to alert patriots Samuel Adams and John Hancock that British troops were coming to arrest them) as superfluous evidence of intellectual mediocrity. The instinct is to think her historical illiteracy speaks ill only of her.
But the thing is, she is not the only one.
You may think that statement is meant to encompass the likes of Glenn Beck (who said conservatives started the civil-rights movement), and Michele Bachmann (who said the Founding Fathers ended slavery) and it is. But the troubling thing is, it also encompasses many of the rest of us as well.
Where history is concerned, this is fast becoming a nation of ignoramuses and amnesiacs.
The alarm bell has been ringing for years. Consider “Losing America’s Memory: Historical Illiteracy in the 21st Century,” a 2000 study by the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, a Washington-based advocacy group. Researchers found that the majority of seniors at the nation’s best colleges could not identify the words of the Gettysburg Address or explain the significance of Valley Forge. They did not know, the study concluded, because they had not been taught. History, the study said, was no longer a requirement in the nation’s top schools.
And then, there is a 2006 assessment by the Education Department’s National Center for Education Statistics, often called The Nation’s Report Card. It found that nearly 40 percent of 12th graders could not identify the purpose of the Lewis and Clark Expedition and only 14 percent could identify and explain a factor leading to U.S. involvement in the Korean War.
Some may think that failure insignificant. History is but the dust of yesteryear, is it not? It is just rote memorization of names and dates and something about the Smoot-Hawley Act. If kids are bored by that, who can blame them? And who cares?
We all should. No child should be able to finish public school, much less college, without a firm grasp of American history. Because history is not dust. Nor is it myths we tell to comfort and acquit ourselves. Nor is it a lever we twist in order to gain political advantage. No, our history is the master narrative of who we are.
It is a narrative of slaves and soldiers, inventors and investors, demagogues and visionaries, of homicide, fratricide and genocide, of truths held self-evident and of government of the people, by the people and for the people. It is a narrative of Europeans leaving Europe yearning to breathe free and the children of slaves leaving the South yearning for the same. It is a narrative of blood on French beaches and a man on the moon.
And we allow all that to be forgotten at our own peril. How can our children write the next chapter of a story they don’t even know?
So, while it is comforting to think Palin’s gaffe speaks only to her own considerable limitations, it is also short-sighted. The evidence suggests that she is less an exception to, than a reflection of, a nation that is in the process of forgetting itself.
Heck, we are all Sarah Palin now.
There’s a big problem with the “Sarah Palin” premise of this article. It’s not that we’re all Sarah Palin now (whose mistake was obviously a slip of the tongue), but that liberals have infected the educational system of this country and set the teaching of history aside in favor of politically correct subject matter.
The great historian David McCullough, who received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, told the Wall Street Journal in 2011 the following: “We’re raising young people who are, by and large, historically illiterate… History textbooks are “badly written…so politically correct as to be comic. Very minor characters that are currently fashionable are given considerable space, whereas people of major consequence are given very little space or none at all.”
McCullough remarked in October of last year that the reason people are so taken with books, is because they never learn about the subjects he writes about in school, particularly American History, which is politically incorrect unless it’s about how “bad” America is. This is the result of liberal policies (political correctness, focusing on minorities, diversity, tolerance, self-esteem, etc., instead of the timelines of history and the historical figures involved). Has nothing to do with Palin or Beck. Or even the fact that Barack Obama said there are 57 states (is he not then, by your standard, an idiot too?). It’s liberals that are the problem, and their teachers unions that preserve the status quo.
McCullough continues, saying, history is “often taught in categories — women’s history, African American history, environmental history — so that many students have no sense of chronology…no idea of what followed what.” Those are liberal subjects, and the reason more than one fourth of students surveyed in 2008 believed Christopher Columbus set sail for the New World after 1750. (Columbus, after all, is the most politically incorrect figure of all, so why learn about him, except to denigrate his place in history?)
The dumbing down of America results from liberal ideology being inserted into our schools and replacing the teaching of actual history. Conservatives oppose that, and if allowed to do so could put us back on the right track.