Compulsory Centralized Schooling in America (first enforced at gunpoint) was derived from four major sources …
1) Indian caste system
2) Spartan and Prussian martial systems
3) Rosicrucian alchemical system (that’s why we have 12 “grades”)
4) Anglican-Episcopalian religious systems
Forced schooling was propagated by the likes of the Rockefellers, Morgans, and Kelloggs.
Rockefeller patron John Dewey wrote (in 1897) …
“Every teacher should realize he is a social servant set apart for the maintenance of the proper social order and the securing of the right social growth. In this way the teacher is always the prophet of the true God and the usherer in of the true kingdom of heaven.”
The Kellogg brothers of Battle Creek ran the Race Betterment Foundation and the Kellogg Foundation, committed (from 1994) to “fluoridate the entire Region of the Americas.”
John Harvey Kellogg was known by his fellow eugenicists as “Mr. Racial Purity.”
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'Centralized Schooling From the Top Down' have 8 comments
July 4, 2014 @ 5:32 pm atomb
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July 4, 2014 @ 5:35 pm atomb
Centralized Schooling leads to …
“You cannot arouse any enthusiasm in me to join in a protest for the boss to provide me with a better hoe to chop his cotton with. Why must I chop cotton at all? Why fix a class of cotton-choppers? I will join in no protests for the boss to put a little more stuffing in my bunk. I don’t even want the bunk. I want the boss’s bed. It seems to me that the people who are enunciating these principles are so saturated with European ideas that they miss the whole point of America. The people who founded this country, and the immigrants who came later, came here to get away from class distinctions and to keep their unborn children from knowing about them, I am all for the idea of free vertical movement, nothing horizontal.” – Zora Neale Hurston, Dust Tracks on a Road, 1942, 1970, 1995
“Prior to the late eighteenth century, in Europe and North America, democracy often was considered synonymous with classless or one-class societies, because it was assumed that if there was universal suffrage, no people would agree to their continued economic subjugation. James Madison wrote that if British elections ‘were open to all classes of people, the property of landed proprietors would be insecure.’ Even in ancient Greece this was a central concern. In his Politics, Aristotle not only characterized democracy as ‘rule of the poor’ but also added that would always be democracy’s nature and raison d’etre even if the poor comprised a minority of the citizenry. It was also widely accepted that if a person had to work for another person, that person could never be a political equal. This was a primary justification for limiting suffrage to property owners and the middle and upper classes prior to the nineteenth century.” – Robert W. McChesney, Rich Media, Poor Democracy: Communication Politics in Dubious Times, 1999
“At one time in the United States, in the mid-nineteenth century, working for wage labor was considered not very different from chattel slavery. That was not an unusual position. That was the slogan of the Republican Party, the banner under which Northern workers fought in the Civil War. We’re against chattel slavery and wage slavery. Free people do not rent themselves to others. Maybe you’re forced to do it temporarily, but that’s only on the way to becoming a free person, or ‘free man,’ to put it in the rhetoric of the day. You become a free man when you’re not compelled to take orders from others. That’s an Enlightenment ideal.” – Noam Chomsky, Propaganda and the Public Mind: Interviews by David Barsamian, 2001
“If history goes on for another hundred years, which is dubious, I imagine that people will be looking back to practices that we accept and condone and will regard them as morally monstrous. In fact, it is not difficult to point to some of them. For example, we now regard it as a moral monstrosity for one person to enslave another, but we regard it as proper and just for people to be compelled to rent themselves to others to be able to survive – what was once called ‘wage slavery.’ Someday we may come to appreciate that this too is an infringement on fundamental human rights – as, in fact, has long been argued in the libertarian socialist tradition.” – Noam Chomsky, “Aspects of a Theory of Mind, December 1984,” Language and Politics, Expanded Second Edition, edited by C.P. Otero, 1988, 2004
“When you enter the low-wage workplace – and many of the medium-wage workplaces as well – you check your civil liberties at the door, leave America and all it supposedly stands for behind, and learn to zip your lips for the duration of the shift. The consequences of this routine surrender go beyond the issues of wages and poverty. We can hardly pride ourselves on being the world’s preeminent democracy, after all, if large numbers of citizens spend half their waking hours in what amounts, in plain terms, to a dictatorship.” – Barbara Ehrenreich, Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, 2001
“Many do not realize that the economy of modern corporations and trusts is already quite different from that of the capitalistic system based upon authentic private property, and that the rise of corporation economy signifies also a decline of contractual economy. Still fewer realize that the first mortal blow to private property and the contractual capitalistic system of the nineteenth century was dealt not by communists and socialists but by the captains of industry and finance in the second part of the century. Communists and totalitarians only finished what these began.” – Pitirim A. Sorokin, The Crisis of Our Age: The Social and Cultural Outlook, 1941
“Major corporations shopping for the cheapest labor have realized that mandatory minimum sentencing and state laws governing private industry’s use of prison laborers have created a captive, non-unionized labor pool, where benefits, vacation time, unemployment compensation, minimum wages, payroll and Social Security taxes, and even human rights and anti-sweatshop activists are non-issues.” – Bakari Kitwana, The Hip Hop Generation, 2002
July 7, 2014 @ 9:30 pm John
Hi Atom, what would be a good drink to cleanse and rebuild the eyes and at what time ?
July 10, 2014 @ 1:39 pm atomb
Cherry juice at Spleen-Pancreas Time (9:00-11:00 a.m.)
… or …
Watermelon juice at Urinary Bladder Time (3:00-5:00 p.m.)
… or …
Carrot Juice at Triple Heater Time (9:00-11:00 p.m.)
July 8, 2014 @ 10:39 pm James
What is my highest choice for surgery on a torn acl? Monday Morning or Friday Afternoon? Any good recovery foods e.g. kidney beans?
July 10, 2014 @ 1:51 pm atomb
Apologies for the delay. This info may arrive too late.
There are too many variables to pick a general surgery time.
For example, a person with a tendency to alkalinity might do better with a morning surgery.
Bleeding and pain both have circadian and seasonal rhythms.
Clarified butter is a premiere recovery food.
Ditto vitamin C foods, esp. nighttime foods for a torn ACL.
July 9, 2014 @ 4:50 am John
Hi Atom,
what does Triple Heder mean ?
ps. I just joined http://www.sunsyncnutrition.com Premium. I recommend everyone to do it, there is so much great information on it.
July 10, 2014 @ 1:59 pm atomb
Thanks for joining, John! :)
The Triple Heater Meridian includes the hypothalamus, thyroid gland, and adrenal glands.
The Triple Heater Meridian is most active at 9:00-11:00 p.m., when people are most likely to get into arguments.