Revising History for Our Destruction

Washington_as_Statesman_at_the_Constitutional_Convention_by_Junius_Brutus_StearnsIt’s been said that the victors write the textbooks. I supposed this is the way it should be. As a nation, if we want to know who has won the ideological war in America, take a look at the our textbooks and popular writing on historical subjects. Dr. Gary North writes:

When children are required by law to attend tax-funded schools and read state-approved textbooks, these textbooks establish the terms of discussion. History textbooks have long served as the State’s primary means of establishing public opinion. This was true in Prussia before it was true in the United States. The Prussian educational model, for kindergarten through graduate school, became the model for the American public schools, beginning as early as the 1840s. (The best study of the history of America’s public school philosophy is R. J. Rushdoony’s 1963 book, The Messianic Character of American Education.)

In addition to what is found in textbooks, certain historical revisionist claims worm their way through popular writing. You’ll find a snippet of historical revisionism here and a fragment there. In time, the new “truth” embeds itself in popular discussions.

For example, how many times have you heard the canard that for centuries prior to 1492 the majority of the religious world believed that the earth was flat until the intrepid Christopher Columbus put his reputation, career, and fortune on line to prove, contrary to what the religious leaders of his day believed, that the earth was round and not flat? This myth has been repeated so often in too many contexts to list here that it has become fact for millions of middle school students. The myth is continually used as a club to beat up on Christians who question the dogmatism of certain scientific theories – everything from spontaneous generation to man-made global warming. Here’s an example from the strident evolutionist Daniel C. Dennett:

If you insist on teaching your children falsehoods — that the Earth is flat, that “Man” is not a product of evolution by natural selection — then you must expect, at the very least, that those of us who have freedom of speech will feel free to describe your teachings as the spreading of falsehoods, and will attempt to demonstrate this to your children at our earliest opportunity. Our future well-being — the well-being of all of us on the planet — depends on the education of our descendants.[1]

For the longest tome, even the Encyclopedia Britannica perpetuated the myth: “Before Columbus proved the world was round, people thought the horizon marked its edge. Today we know better.” The people knew better in Columbus’s day. A 1983 textbook for fifth-graders reported that Columbus “felt he would eventually reach the Indies in the East. Many Europeans still believed that the world was flat. Columbus, they thought, would fall off the earth.”[2] A 1982 text for eighth-graders said that Europeans “believed . . . that a ship could sail out to sea just so far before it fell off the edge of the sea. . . . The people of Europe a thousand years ago knew little about the world.”[3] If a big enough lie is told, and if it is repeated often, people will eventually come to believe it.

Like the flat earth myth, there are certain other myths that are making their way through our educational system and popular culture. The purpose of rewriting history is to separate us from the past. If the revisionists can sow seeds of doubt into the way Americans view their founding, then everything is up for grabs.

It’s been claimed that credit should be given to the Iroquois for our Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and other vital instruments of liberty. The ideas expressed in these documents of liberty and representative government, so the argument goes, were not derived from Western Christianity and enlightenment sources but rather borrowed from Native American minority groups without given their due credit. For example, “Anthropologist Thomas Riley asserts that the League of the Iroquois served ‘as a model for the confederation that would make up the United States.’ Alvin Josephy credits the Iroquois with being ‘particularly influential’ on the thinking of the framers in Philadelphia.’ Jack Weatherford observes that the Iroquois provided a blueprint’ by which the settler might be able to fashion a new government.’”[4] What is the evidence for such claims? A letter written by Benjamin Franklin to James Parker in 1750:

A voluntary Union entered into by the Colonies themselves, I think, would be preferable to one impos’d by Parliament; for it would be perhaps not much more difficult to procure, and more easy to alter and improve, as Circumstances should require, and Experience direct. It would be a very strange Thing, if six Nations of ignorant Savages should be capable of forming a Scheme for such an Union, and be able to execute it in such a Manner, as that it has subsisted Ages, and appears indissoluble; and yet that a like Union should be impracticable for ten or a Dozen English Colonies, to whom it is more necessary, and must be more advantageous; and who cannot be supposed to want an equal Understanding of their Interests.[5]

Franklin was making a comparison, not arguing for the source of our liberties: If these “ignorant savages” can work out their problems, surely we civilized men can agree on a union of colonial governments that have a long history of common lawmaking principles.

Elisabeth Tooker’s study of the Iroquois origin thesis shows the profound differences between the “six nations” and the American Union. “Tooker concluded that the Iroquois claim to be the secret force behind the American Constitution is a myth, sustained by ideology.”[6] She writes:

Research over the past several decades has revealed that the sources of thought embodied in the Constitution are more varied and its history more complex than had previously been suspected, and there has been something of a revolution in this regard. But of all the influences that have been uncovered and assessed in recent years, none points to an Indian one.[7]

The goal in all of this is to strip America’s founding from its English Christian roots. When this is done, the shell of the Constitution will be filled with whatever ideology is presently in fashion and forced on us by an entrenched bureaucratic elite. When this happens, it will be almost impossible to extricate ourselves from it.

email
Print Friendly
Notes:
  1. Daniel C. Dennett, Darwin’s Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meaning of Life (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1995), 519. []
  2. America Past and Present (Scott Foresman, 1983), 98. Quoted in Russell, Inventing the Flat Earth, 3. []
  3. We the People (Heath, 1982), 28–29. Quoted in Jeffrey Burton Russell, Inventing the Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians (New York: Praeger, 1991), 3. []
  4. Dinesh D’Souza, The End of Racism: Principles for a Multiracial Society (New York: The Free Press, 1995), 356. []
  5. Franklin said the following at the Constitutional Convention with no mention of the Iroquois: “I have lived, Sir [addressing George Washington], a long time, and the longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth that God Governs in the affairs of men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without his notice [Matt. 10:29], is it probable that an empire can rise without his aid? We have been assured, Sir, in the sacred writings, that ‘except the Lord build the House they labour in vain that build it’ [Ps. 127:1]. I firmly believe this; and I also believe that without his concurring aid we shall succeed in this political building no better, than the Builders of Babel: We shall be divided by our little partial local interests; our projects will be confounded, and we ourselves shall become a reproach and bye word down to future ages. And what is worse, mankind may hereafter from this unfortunate instance, despair of establishing Governments by Human wisdom and leave it to chance, war and conquest.” []
  6. D’Souza, The End of Racism, 356. []
  7. Elizabeth Tooker, “The United States Constitution and the Iroquois League,” in James A. Clifton, Invented Indian: Cultural Fictions and Government Policies (Edison, NJ: Transaction Books, 1990), 108. []

  • schnitzelschitzen

    There will always be those who will inflate truth with myth and old wives tales and even use our education system to inject these exaggerations so they can advance their cause either to show religion as folly or to dismiss the intent of Our Great Nations Founding Fathers. Gods' truth is truth no matter how many ribbons and foil they may try to wrap or bundle His word.
    The truth of our Founding Fathers is our very existance today along with those who have the freedoms to distort these truths. In a perfect world truth would be our guide, but we are a work in progress and we are not there yet.

  • Lois MacLaren

    I once read that Christopher Columbus used the following BIBLE verse to convince Queen Isabella of Spain that the earth WAS round. The "religious leaders" who are often "convicted" (in the court of public opinion) of being responsible for promoting the "flat earth" theory only had to read the Bible to begin to notice that even ancient scholars believed that the earth was "a circle."

    Isaiah 40:22
    It is he that sitteth upon the circle of the earth, and the inhabitants thereof are as grasshoppers; that stretcheth out the heavens as a curtain, and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in

    I also read somewhere that Christopher Columbus and his family were actually Jewish. If that is the case, then it seems to me that, somewhere and somehow, at least ONE person in the media OUGHT to raise the question as to whether or not all of those people who raise annual protests about the observation of "Columbus Day" are just exercising an unacknowledged form of anti-Semitism!

    • MichaelH

      For what it's worth, Lois, even ancients knew the Earth was "round", rather than flat. All a seafaring man has to do is sit in a dinghy on even a large lake and LOOK around himself. The horizon reveals the truth.

  • victorbarney

    "Revising History for Our Destruction" Interesting topic and the irony is just how good Lucifer, still the Arch-Angel over this world, "unless you are called out of it" has indeed deceived the whole world! Case in point, The "Bible"(All translations) indicate that HEBREW IS THE "ONLY" INSPIRED LANGUAGE OF OUR CREATOR(Zeph. 3:9, Acts 26:14, 1 Cor. 4:6). That being true, how do we end up with word's like 'God"(Gawd) the Babylonian Deity of Good luck or in 1520AD the Greek name "Jesus" to represent our Hebrew Savior, which history says was done to honor the Greeks whom Rome had defeated in war? That's even against the commandments! But then we also did away with the 7th Day and Annual Sabbaths, didn't we and they were the ONLY identifying 'Signs" as to who we really were. In Hebrew our Spiritual Father would be YAHWEH and our Savior's Name would be YAHSHUA, meaning "Yahweh means salvation" in Hebrew. That must be how that whole world gets deceived! What do you think?

  • Shane

    The teachings in U.S. textbooks about Islam and Muhammad generally whitewash the violence behind the beginning of Islam. Muhammad was not a man of peace, nor is Islam a religion of peace. Our children need to learn the truth about Muhammad, Islam, and Jihad (holy war).

  • julian

    A very old proven statement is 'he who forgets the past is condemned to repeat it'. Remembering in a way that just isn't so brings the same result. I was amazed when I went to college and started having to do independant research at how much of what I had been taught in public schools was not based on fact, so much so that I developed a thirst for the facts in many other areas.

  • Craig Stock

    The past has never been so wicked as now, we are traversing new ground with an illegal Muslim President and a congress unwilling to act against him. We must act, if it's not already too late.
    ──────────────────╔═══╦═══╗╔╗╔═══╗
    ╔╦╦═╦═╦╗╔═╦═╗╔╦╦╗─║╔═╗║╔═╗╠╝║║╔═╗║
    ║╔╣╬║║║║║╬║╬╚╣║║╚╗╚╝╔╝║║║║╠╗║╚╝╔╝║
    ╚╝╚═╩╩═╝║╔╩══╩═╩═╝╔═╝╔╣║║║║║║╔═╝╔╝
    ────────╚╝────────║║╚═╣╚═╝╠╝╚╣║╚═╗

  • samtman

    First of all, Pubilc text books are the domain of each state, the Sttate Government does not print the text books, text books are pinted and compiled by professors who are deemed to experts in their fields of science, history , math and may other subjects. The Chatolic church at the time of Columbus still believed that the earth was the center of the universe, because believing against it was going against the Bible, At the same time the officlial word from the Vatican was that the earth was flat. One hundred yaers later Italian astromoner Galileo was imprisoned by the Pope for proclaimin that the earth was not the center of the universe and that is was round. Not antil the 17th century did the Christlian world admit that the sun was the center of our universe and that the earth was round. We must keep religion and science separate to save science.

  • Patriot

    The Article is RIGHT ON! Our children are being brainwashed every day by our public schools. This is the price we pay for accepting federal dollars for our education system. Our values and beliefs at one time were passed down by trusted and respected family members from generation to generation who actually lived the American Dream, and believed that our Constitutional Republican form of government was based on Judean-Christian beliefs. The family structure has been destroyed by the left wing extremest, and now our children are getting our history from BIG BROTHER government. With our current Socialist, ANTI-CHRISTIAN regime the pace has, and will continue to increase at a more rapid rate than it every has in the past. WAKE UP AMERICA!

  • Peter

    If you want to know what the government wants you to know by all means go to their schools. If you want to think for yourself you will need to go somewhere else. If you want your children to be free, educate them yourself.