Hamilton Journal News

Virginia can give America a new birth of freedom

- Star Parker Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

The joke goes that a slip of the tongue for a politician means that they accidental­ly said what they actually believe.

Now Democrats are trying to clean up the mess created by Virginia Democratic candidate for governor, Terry McAuliffe, when he said in a debate on Sept. 28, “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.”

McAuliffe’s 5-point lead over Republican Glenn Youngkin, who has made parental control in education a central issue, has disappeare­d.

Big-name Democrats, including former President Barack Obama, are now showing up in Virginia with a mop and pail. Vice President Kamala Harris sent a video to over

300 Black churches statewide, urging support for McAuliffe. According to some opinions, Harris’ politickin­g for McAuliffe in churches violates either or both the Johnson Amendment, which prohibits tax-exempt entities such as churches from electionee­ring, and the Hatch Act, which prohibits federal officials from using their position to influence the outcome of an election.

Former Democratic Virginia Gov. Douglas Wilder, Virginia’s first Black governor, believes churches will jeopardize their tax-exempt status if they show Harris’ video.

McAuliffe followed up with an ad claiming what he said is being misconstru­ed and that he really meant the opposite.

Comedian Groucho

Marx once quipped “Who are you going to believe — me or your own eyes?”

Panic among Democrats is well-founded in that Blacks constitute approximat­ely 20% of voters in Virginia and can make all the difference in the outcome. And Blacks poll strongly in favor of parental choice in education.

In 2018, Republican candidate Ron DeSantis defeated Black Democratic candidate Andrew Gillum by less than 40,000 votes in the Florida gubernator­ial election. One reason was DeSantis got 18% of the vote of Black women. This was most likely Black mothers expressing appreciati­on for 100,000 low-income children attending private schools through tax-credit funded scholarshi­ps.

If anything positive has come out of COVID-19, it has driven home to many parents the implicatio­ns of government and politicall­y controlled schools.

Given the central importance of education to a child’s future, more parents are becoming aware of grave implicatio­ns of losing control of when and where their children are taught, how and what they are taught.

More Black parents are sensitive to the crisis in the Black family. Do they really want progressiv­e politician­s defining sexuality for their children? But this is what is happening.

Thirty states and the District of Columbia mandate sex education in public schools. The major teachers unions — National Education Associatio­n and American Federation of Teachers — Both include the commitment to LGBTQ values on their websites.

What about Black parents, or parents of any ethnicity, that reject this worldview? What about Black parents, or parents of any ethnicity, who want their child’s education about sexuality to be defined by traditiona­l biblical views of love and marriage?

In a recent Pew Research survey, 59% said Americans disagree on “basic facts.” In a country where there’s not even consensus about what reality is, how can we possibly have a government-controlled education system? How can parents let bureaucrat­s to determine the worldview for their children?

A wake-up call, a new birth of freedom, is long overdue in America.

Virginia is a good place to start.

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