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Teachers insist: Being 'gay' good
A nationally distributed training video
produced by a "gay" advocacy group – which claims it's been shown on more than
100 public television stations – advises teachers to promote homosexuality as
normal and healthy to children as young as kindergarten age, regardless of what
values the child has been taught at home.
Source: WorldNetDaily, April 29, 2007
Islam and
the Textbooks
Since 2003, several
reports have documented bias and evasions in world history textbooks. Textbooks
misrepresent Islam past and present, critics agree. They contain fallacies and
untruths about jihad, sharia, slavery, status of Muslim women, terrorism, and
international security.
Source: American Textbook Council,
"Islam and the Textbooks"
Report: Islam and the Textbooks
Starting in the summer of 2001, the American Textbook Council
undertook a comprehensive textbook review in world history. World history is a
controversial social studies mandate that is rapidly expanding at the state
level. Islam and the Textbooks
grows out of this larger work still in
progress surveying many aspects of world history textbook content. How widely
adopted world history textbooks cover Islam and the history of the Middle East
is a timely and important subject for students to learn about.
Source: American Textbook Council, February 2003
In
'docu-ganda' films, balance is not the objective
The days when "documentary" reliably meant
"inform the audience" - rather than "influence the audience" - are no more. The
makers of such films today see their cinematic contributions as an antidote to
media consolidation that, they say, restricts topics and voices to the bland and
the commercial. As such, they feel little or no obligation to heed
documentary-film traditions like point-by-point rebuttal or formal reality
checks.
Source: Christian Science Monitor (online),
June 2, 2006
Law Requires Lessons on Constitution
It's not often that first-graders, CIA agents, agriculture inspectors and
airport security workers from coast to coast all receive a lesson on the
same topic -- and on the same day -- but that is what's in store this
September.
The subject is the U.S. Constitution, thanks to a new law fathered by
Sen. Robert C. Byrd (D-W.Va.), who is worried that so many people don't know
the first thing about the country's governing document that he decided to
try to make sure they do.
Source: Washington Post (online), July 19, 2005
CIA: U.S. Lied to Explain 'UFO
sightings'
U.S. national security officials systematically lied to explain
reports of UFOs at the height of the Cold War, a study released by the
CIA says.
In what amounts to the first admission of federal deception on the
issue, the survey said most reports of unidentified flying objects in
the 1950s and 1960s stemmed from glimpses of supersecret U.S. spy
planes, the U-2 and the SR-71 Blackbird.
Rather than disclose the existence of these aircraft, developed to
photograph enemy targets from high altitudes, the military put out false
stories, the survey said.
Source: Yahoo News August 5 [no year given]
Smithsonian Goes PC
The
Smithsonian Museum, according to an article
in The
Washington Times National Weekly Edition for July 29,
1997, is installing signs on its exhibits to warn
visitors that some of the exhibits are contaminated with
social ideologies considered undesirable by the
government. The examples given in the article include the
following.
- "Female animals are being portrayed in ways
that make them appear deviant or substandard to
male animals".
- "A beloved family of lions at a watering
hole is also branded for sexism because the
standing male and reclining female suggested to
the museum's gender police a pre-feminist
division of labor".
- "A leaping Bengalese tiger is dismissed as
too predatory".
- "Next door at the National Museum of
American History, visitors encounter an America
characterized by rigid class barriers,
ever-growing economic inequality, predatory
capitalists and oppressed minorities."
- "Several blocks away, curators at the
Smithsonian's American Art Museum are busy
exposing art as just another 'social text'
masking illegitimate power relations."
Source: The
Washington Times (online), July 29, 1997
Air Force Says Dummies Used in Parachute Tests Were Mistaken
for Aliens
The Air Force on Tuesday offered what it hopes is the final word on
claims by UFO buffs that alien bodies were recovered at a crash site in New
Mexico in 1947: The ``bodies'' were not aliens but dummies used in parachute
tests.
Source: The New York Times (online), June 24, 1997
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