Boston Herald

Joe Biden says children belong to their teachers

- By Betsy McCaughey Betsy McCaughey is a former lieutenant governor of New York.

Schools are becoming indoctrina­tion factories, trying to turn children against their country and their own parents’ values. It’s what the teachers unions intend.

Amazingly, that’s just fine with President Joe Biden, who told a gathering of teachers and union bigwigs on April 27 that the kids are “yours when they’re in the classroom.” That wasn’t just a Biden stumble. He repeated it for emphasis: “They are all our children. … They are not somebody else’s children.”

Sorry, Joe. But parents have a right to know what their children are being taught, and to set limits. State legislator­s in at least 12 states have introduced bills requiring teachers to post teaching materials, including books and videos, on a website for parents to inspect before their kids see them.

Good teachers will have no problem with that. But ideologica­lly driven teachers, as well as the unions, are fighting back. That includes Randi Weingarten, head of the American Federation of Teachers. As she launched Teacher Appreciati­on Week — and most teachers do deserve our appreciati­on — Weingarten smeared classroom transparen­cy requests as the work of political “extremists.”

Concerned parents are not political extremists, but Biden is joining the attack against transparen­cy, parroting the unions. He and most Democrats in Congress are teachers union flunkies. Democrats delivered hundreds of billions in COVID relief to school districts.

Biden also kowtowed to the unions to prolong school closings and masking, and then allowed the unions to dictate what the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would require to reopen schools.

As a candidate, Biden vowed to end federal support for charter schools, and his new regulation­s have that obvious intent — another obsequious gesture to the unions.

Weingarten and National Education Associatio­n President Rebecca Pringle probably have more power in the Biden administra­tion than any senator or cabinet member. That would be fine if they were wielding their clout to ensure children acquire strong reading and math skills. But that’s not their agenda.

The American Federation of Teachers website shows the union is more committed to political activism than reading and STEM instructio­n. The site urges visitors to “take action” on student debt, voting rights and passing the Equality Act. But it never mentions that fewer than half of New York City’s third- to eighth-graders can read at grade level. Or that, overall, students in the U.S. rank behind many other countries in math. No call to action there.

The AFT website also declares that the U.S. is facing health, economic and racial challenges “all made worse because of Donald Trump.” How can the 74 million people who voted for Trump in 2020 entrust their children’s education to an organizati­on so politicall­y biased?

Joining the unions to fight a parent’s right to know is none other than the Democratic Party. No surprise. The unions give 94% of their money to Democratic candidates and parties, according to datatracki­ng nonprofit Open Secrets.

Tit for tat. Democrats are demonizing Republican­s who support curriculum transparen­cy. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., calls them “mean, hateful and spiteful.” Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne Jr. says Republican­s will be forced “to own the meanness.” Meanness for what? Keeping discussion­s of sex out of elementary school classrooms?

Murphy lamely predicts

Republican­s backing curriculum transparen­cy will lose because “it’s just not true that it’s popular to pick on gay kids.” That’s a willful distortion.

Truth is, no one advocates bullying gay kids. All children deserve kindness. But that doesn’t mean kindergart­eners should be instructed in how boys can transition to become girls, or vice versa. Nearly half of teachers agree these issues don’t belong in the classroom, according to an Education Week poll.

Parents care more than anyone else about their own children. They should decide what schools teach, not the far-left ideologues running the teachers unions.

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