Ken Blackwell
President Obamas recent trip to the G-8 Summit in Belfast Northern Ireland included an address at the Waterfront hall. There he criticized Catholic and Protestant schools and compared them to segregated schools in the U.S. when he was a boy. His remarks were hailed by
British atheists. They took his speech for what it was: an attack on faith-based education everywhere.
Mr. Obama told an audience in Belfasts Waterfront hall:
Because issues like segregated schools and housing lack of jobs and opportunity--symbols of history that are a source of pride for some and pain for others--these are not tangential to peace; theyre essential to it said Obama. If towns remain divided--if Catholics have their schools and buildings and Protestants have theirs--if we cant see ourselves in one another if fear or resentment are allowed to harden that encourages division. It discourages cooperation.
We cannot hear him liken Catholic and Protestant schools to racial segregation in America without a sense of alarm. Clearly President Obama dismisses religious freedom as a basis for parents choosing different schools for their own children.
Mr. Obamas own grandparents exercised their choice in sending him to Honolulus prestigious school Punahou Academy. This pricey ($20000/year) prep school was founded by Congregationalist missionaries. With roots in the faith-based community it hardly qualifies as a segregation academy. Similarly the president and Mrs. Obama have chosen Washington D.C.s very tony Sidwell Friends school for their daughters. They have every right to do so but no one would credit this Quaker-founded school as part of a segregation system.
Mr. Obama has been zealous in trying to block
other parents exercise of education choice. His administration has been eager to shut down Washington D.C.s Opportunity Scholarships. This program permits low-income parents of area students to choose a private or parochial school for their kids. Most of these scholarships go to minority students and many of them choose Catholic schools where a majority of their classmates are non-Catholic.
It is a shocking thing for the President of the United States to show such open hostility to faith-based schooling. As their motto goes these are schools you can believe in." And the record of religious schools in America is a great one.
We need to see Mr. Obamas comments in the context of his
other polcies. His administration is pushing for ever more pre-K programs nationwide. Despite the documented failure of Head Start he wants to enlist more very young children in school programs that will replace church-based child care and care in the home.
This is what secularists have wanted in our country too: All children under the guise of the all-powerful state. This has always been a goal of Marxists.
We should not be surprised that President Obama who attended Marxist scholars conferences in New York City when he was a student at Columbia University in 1983
is so openly hostile to schools you can believe in.
The fact is that in Northern Ireland the religious schools have been leaders in reconciling historic antagonisms. And this is true in America too. Here for example Evangelicals Lutherans Orthodox Christians and Orthodox Jews have joined with Catholics in resisting the menacing HHS Mandate. That mandate is the gravest threat to religious freedom in this country since 1786.
Mr. Obama should re-read his Constitutional Law texts. There he would find the landmark ruling of the Supreme Court in 1925 in Pierce v. Society of Sisters. The KKK had pushed through an Oregon referendum that outlawed private and religious schools.
Unconstitutional said the high Court:
The fundamental theory of liberty upon which all governments of this Union rest excludes any general power of the State to standardize its children by forcing them to accept instruction from public teachers only.
President Obama continues his relentless drive to fundamentally transform America." He does not appreciate the historic fact that religious freedom was the foundation for civil liberty in our country. Washington Jefferson and Madison all believed this. So did Protestants Catholics and Jews of the Founding Era. Respect for the convictions of others does not breed hostility. It is the beginning of civility.
The
Pierce Court concluded with this ringing affirmation of parental rights and religious freedom:
The child is not the mere creature of the State; those who nurture him and direct his destiny have the right coupled with the high duty to recognize and prepare him for additional obligations.
Those obligations" included then and continue to include our obligations to our Creator.
Editors Note: This column was coauthored by Bob Morrison.
Ken Blackwell a contributing editor at Townhall.com is a senior fellow at the Family Research Council and the American Civil Rights Union and is on the board of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. He is the co-author of the new bestseller The Blueprint: Obamas Plan to Subvert the Constitution and Build an Imperial Presidency on sale in bookstores everywhere..