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An American Affidavit

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

134. The Struggle for Homogeneity: The Underground History of American Educatioin by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org

The Struggle for Homogeneity 

The thesis I venture to submit to you is as follows: That during the past forty or fifty years 
those who are responsible for education have progressively removed from the curriculum 
of studies the Western culture which produced the modern democratic state; That the 
schools and colleges have, therefore, been sending out into the world men who no longer 
understand the creative principle of the society in which they must live; That deprived of 
their cultural tradition, the newly educated Western men no longer possess in the form 
and substance of their own minds and spirits and ideas, the premises, the rationale, the 
logic, the method, the values of the deposited wisdom which are the genius of the 
development of Western civilization; That the prevailing education is destined, if it 
continues, to destroy Western civilization and is in fact destroying it. 

I realize quite well that this thesis constitutes a sweeping indictment of modern education. 
But I believe the indictment is justified and here is a prima facie case for entering this 
indictment. 

— Walter Lippmann, speaking before the Association for the Advancement of Science, 
December 29, 1940 

The Struggle For Homogeneity 

In 1882, an Atlantic Monthly writer predicted a coming struggle for preservation of the 
American social order. European immigrants were polarizing the country, upsetting the 
"homogeneity on which free government must rest." That idea of a necessary 
homogeneity made it certain that all lanes out of the 1880s led to orthodoxy on a national 
scale. There was to be an official American highway, its roadbed built from police 
manuals and schoolteacher training texts. Citizens would now be graded against the 
official standard, up to the highest mark, "100 percent American." 

In the thirty years between 1890 and 1920, the original idea of America as a 
cosmopolitan association of peoples, each with its own integrity, gave way to urgent calls 
for national unity. Even before WWI added its own shrill hysterics to the national project 
of regimentation, new social agencies were in full cry on every front, aggressively taking 
the battle of Americanization to millions of bewildered immigrants and their children. 

The elite-managed "birth-control" movement, which culminated one hundred years later 
in the legalization of abortion, became visible and active during this period, annually 
distributing millions of pieces of literature aimed at controlling lower-class breeding 
instincts, an urgent priority on the national elitist agenda. Malthus, Darwin, Galton, and 
Pearson became secular saints at the Lawrence and Sheffield Scientific Schools at 
Harvard and Yale. Judge Ben Lindsey of the Denver Children's Court, flogging easy 



access to pornography as an indirect form of sterilization for underclass men, was a 
different tile in the same mosaic, as was institutional adoption. The planned parenthood 
movement, in our day swollen to billion dollar corporate status, was one side of a coin 
whose obverse was the prospering abortion, birth control, and adoption industries. In 
those crucial years, a sudden host of licensing acts closed down employment in a wide 
range of lucrative work — rationing the right to practice trades much as kings and queens 
of England had done. Work was distributed to favored groups and individuals who were 
willing to satisfy screening commissions that they met qualifications often unrelated to 
the actual work. Licensing suddenly became an important factor in economic life, just as 
it had been in royal England. This professionalization movement endowed favored 
colleges and institutes, text publishers, testing agencies, clothing manufacturers, and 
other allies with virtual sinecures. 

Professional schools — even for bus drivers and detectives — imposed the chastening 
discipline of elaborate formal procedures, expensive and time-consuming "training," on 
what had once been areas of relatively free-form career design. And medicine, law, 
architecture, engineering, pharmacology — the blue-ribbon work licenses — were suddenly 
rigorously monitored, rationed by political fortune. Immigrants were often excluded from 
meeting these qualification demands, and many middle-class immigrants with a 
successful history of professional practice back in Europe were plunged into destitution, 
their families disintegrating under the artificial stresses. Others, like my own family, 
scrambled to abandon their home culture as far as possible in a go-along-with-the-crowd 
response to danger. 

One of the hardest things for any present-day reader to grasp about this era was the 
brazenness of the regimentation. Scientific management was in its most enthusiastic 
public phase then, monumentally zealous, maddingly smug. The state lay under effective 
control of a relatively small number of powerful families freed by the Darwinian religion 
from ethical obligation to a democratic national agenda, or even to its familiar 
republican/libertarian antithesis. Yet those antagonists comprised the bedrock antinomies 
of our once revolutionary public order, and without the eternal argument they provoked, 
there was no recognizable America. 

Eugenics Arrives 

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