On September
12, Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT),
ripped Americans who are in favor of school choice and parental rights,
comparing them to segregationists. Even worse, she lashed out at Christians who
support these initiatives. She made her remarks to Seth D. Harris, a senior
fellow at the Burnes Center for Social Change at Northeastern University.
Weingarten
said she got the idea that there is little difference between the
segregationists of old and today’s promoters of school choice and parental
rights from the Southern Poverty Law Center, the seriously disgraced far
left-wing organization. She concluded that these Americans want to “divide
parents versus teachers.”
Now it is
well known that Catholics have long been the mainstay of the school choice
movement; they are also among the most vociferous supporters of parental
rights. Let’s be clear: this does not mean that anyone who opposes both of
these causes is necessarily a bigot. But in Weingarten’s case, she took the
next step: she engaged in Christian bashing.
After
speaking at length, with utter contempt and derision, about those who are
pro-school choice and pro-parental rights, Weingarten let her guard down and
went right for the jugular. “They want to have, basically, a Christian
ideology, their particular Christian ideology to dominate the country as
opposed to those that was born on the freedom of the exercise of religion.”
The subject
under discussion had nothing to do with religion, so it tells us volumes about
Weingarten that she would indict Christians, without cause.
What
she said just prior to her bigoted remark puts her animus against Christians in
perspective. She had just commented that some parents want school choice
because they want universal vouchers, and “others want it because they hate
knowledge.”
So who is it
that “hates knowledge?” Those Americans who are bent on shoving their
“Christian ideology” down our throats. The context says it all.
In other
words, taxpaying parents who believe that they should have the right to send
their child to the school of their choice—which includes most African
Americans—and insist that their rights as parents be respected by the state,
are somehow seeking to impose a Christian ideology on the nation. To top it
off, these same religious zealots “hate knowledge.”
Weingarten
should resign. The hatred that she has for millions of school choice and
parental rights advocates—especially those who are Christian—disqualifies her
from serving in any public role.
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