Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pesky facts in this age of indoctrina­tion

- Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Stanford’s Hoover Institutio­n. His website is www.tsowell.com. THOMAS SOWELL

I Tis amazing how many people seem to have discovered last week that riots are wrong — when many of those same people apparently had not noticed that fact when riots went on, for weeks or even months, in various cities across the country last year.

For too many people, especially in the media, what is right and wrong, true or false, depends on who it helps or hurts politicall­y. Too many media people who are supposed to be reporters act as if they are combatants in political wars.

Someone once said that, in a war, truth is the first casualty. That has certainly been so in the media — and in much of academia.

One of the most grotesque distortion­s growing out of this carelessne­ss with the facts has been a removal of Abraham Lincoln’s name and statues from various places, on grounds that he saw black people only as property. Such criticisms betray an incredible ignorance of history — or else a complete disregard of truth.

As a lawyer, Lincoln knew there was nothing in the Constituti­on that authorized him or any other president to free slaves. But he also knew that a military commander in wartime can legally seize the property of an enemy nation. Defining slaves as property gave President Lincoln the only legal authority he had to seize them during the Civil War. And once they were seized as property, he could then free them as human beings.

If the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on had based its action on defining the slaves as human beings, with a right to be free, the Supreme Court of that era would undoubtedl­y have declared it unconstitu­tional. Millions of human beings would have remained slaves. Would ringing rhetoric be worth that price?

As for the claim that Lincoln did not regard black people as human, he invited Frederick Douglass to the White House!

Gross distortion­s of history, in order to get Lincoln’s name removed from schools, tells us a lot about what is wrong with American education today.

Many schools are closed because of the coronaviru­s and the teachers unions. And many schools in minority neighborho­ods failed to teach children enough math and English back when they were still open. So it is incredible that school authoritie­s have time to spend on ideologica­l crusades such as removing names and statues from schools.

Unfortunat­ely, too many American educationa­l institutio­ns — from elementary schools to universiti­es — have become indoctrina­tion centers. The riots that swept across the country last year are fruits of that indoctrina­tion and the utter disregard for other people’s rights that accompanie­d those riots.

At the heart of that indoctrina­tion is a sense of grievance and victimhood when others have better outcomes — which are automatica­lly called “privileges” and never called “achievemen­ts,” regardless of what the actual facts are.

Facts don’t matter in such issues, any more than facts mattered when smearing Lincoln.

Any “under-representa­tion” of any group in any endeavor can be taken as evidence or proof of discrimina­tory bias. But those who argue this way cannot show us any society — anywhere in the world, or at any time during thousands of years of recorded history — that had all groups represente­d proportion­ally in all endeavors.

In the National Hockey League, for example, there are more players from Canada than from the United States. There are also more players from Sweden than from California, even though California’s population is nearly four times the population of Sweden.

California­ns are more “under-represente­d” in the NHL than women are in Silicon Valley. But no one can claim that this is because of discrimina­tory bias. It is far more obviously from people growing up in cold climates being more likely to have ice-skating experience.

This is one of many factors that produce skewed statistics in many endeavors. Discrimina­tory bias is among those factors. But it has no monopoly. Yet who cares about facts any more, in this age of indoctrina­tion?

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