There has been a lot of consternation that Common Core and new Advanced Placement United States History (APUSH) standards eviscerate the understanding of our exceptional history. Most concerning is the anti-historical emphasis on social justice, globalism, environmentalism, race, class, and gender victimhood that undermines Western ideals, the Constitution, capitalism, and American culture.
Up to this point, definitive proof the new âstandardsâ were deleterious was anecdotal. But facts now show not only intent, but a vision and mission that bring schools face to face with forces bent on instilling a false shame Americas past for the purpose of establishing a global collective.
Where did this nonsense come from, who was behind it, and how could such a destructive approach to the history of our liberty occur?
For four years beginning in1997, a conference on American History was held at New York Universityâs center in Florence Italy called the Villa LaPietra. It was organized by Dr. Thomas Bender of NYU. Primary funding came from the liberal Rockefeller, Ford, and Mellon Foundations. At these meetings, 78 historians, half who were not Americans, gathered to create a new American History. Their vision can be read in the aptly named LaPietra Report.
The report gives specific guidelines to be set in motion in order to change American History education. The following are excerpts of the LaPietra report written by Bender in September of 2000. He does not speak alone, however, as âdrafts have been discussed with and circulated to all the participants,â and âthere is a general concurrence on the general orientation of its phrasing of the issues and its recommendationsâ that ârepresent the views of the project as a whole.â
Read critically for yourself the bizarre vision being discussed and see the purposeful intent that was orchestrated among a group determined to fundamentally transform America.
The vision:
[The] âapproach builds upon comparative history, a method of historical inquiry that has been developed by Americanists.â (Specialists in the languages or cultures of the aboriginal inhabitants of America)
âThe approach of this project is closer to and extends recent work in the study of the African diaspora, the creation of the Atlantic world, diplomatic history, the history of migration, environmental history, the study of gender, and intellectual history.â
âBoundaries are increasingly understood as being relatively permeable, more like âzones of contactâ than firm lines of division.â
Create âan internationalized historyâ and âunderstand the lines of division or dimensions of otherness.â
âThe lived and experienced connections in transnational space need to be explored — both the channels that facilitate movement and the ruptures, discontinuities, and disarticulations that structure inequalities and constitute the basis for national and other forms of differentiation.â
We âoffer of the gift of cosmopolitanism.â (The ideology that all human ethnic groups belong to a single community based on a shared morality)
âWe must resist the error of making world history a mere extension of a triumphalist narrative of the American experienceâ while âavoiding simplistic assertions of American exceptionalism.â
âBesides democracy, we note such historical phenomena as Christianity and/or religious pluralism, modernization and modernity, racial hierarchy, migration, environmental change, capitalism, slavery and freedom, technology, community formation, empire and colonialism, cultural modernism, identity formation and othersâ
âThe history curriculum ⌠will all be marked by the recognition of a plurality of narrativesâ
âWe expect them [children] to understand the controversial power and presence of the United Statesâ
âPromote in students a more informed sense of and commitment to a global human commons;â
The mission:
âDevelop a genuinely international community of Americanist teachers and scholars.â
âWe hope that the history curriculum at all levels, not only in colleges and universities but also in the K-12 levels will address itself to these issues… It is essential that college and university departments–which carry the responsibility for training historians who will teach at the K-12 levels–begin this work of integration.â
âThe obligations of a professional discipline are substantial. College and university history departments are responsible for the creation and transmission of the new knowledgesâ
âAdvise state education departments and textbook publishersâ
âThis report seeks to encourage a particular orientation to these challenges and opportunities.â
âWe wish history to be more inclusive, not less. Such inclusiveness will, we think, eventually result in a substantial reframing of the basic narrative of American history. But we understand the process as incremental and ongoing, working in distinctive ways in different institutions.â
âThe point here, again, is neither the precise structure nor the distribution, but rather the way the field of history is represented. It is not nation-centered.â
In short, progressives want American history to be without borders, aboriginal, transnational, intellectualized, cosmopolitan, and written by Americanists. The focus: African immigration, peace, environmentalism, gender, inequality, pluralism, modernity, racial hierarchy, migration, slavery, community, colonialism, identity formation, and building a global commens.
Excuse me, but that is just exquisite collectivist crap. Goodbye Jefferson, hello ânew knowledges.â
The rhetoric, euphemisms, and denial from ivory tower revisionists can no longer hide the truth. A Progressive movement to change American History and undermine the nation is self-evident.
Change does not come all at once; it is systemic, often passive and unassuming. We have gone from the vision at LaPietra to the actions of ârewriting standardsâ known as Common Core and APUSH. It is time to wake up and push back against a group ideology hell bent on rewriting our past, and with it, destroying our future.
For further reading: A selection of the papers presented in Florence was published in a book edited by Thomas Bender âRethinking American History in a Global Age.â