LEGO used to promote communism

by Scully 12 Replies latest members politics

  • Scully
    Scully
    "Some Seattle school children are being told to be skeptical of private property rights. This lesson is being taught by banning Legos.

    A ban was initiated at the Hilltop Children's Center in Seattle. According to an article in the winter 2006-07 issue of "Rethinking Schools" magazine, the teachers at the private school wanted their students to learn that private property ownership is evil.

    According to the article, the students had been building an elaborate "Legotown," but it was accidentally demolished. The teachers decided its destruction was an opportunity to explore "the inequities of private ownership." According to the teachers, "Our intention was to promote a contrasting set of values: collectivity, collaboration, resource-sharing, and full democratic participation."

    The children were allegedly incorporating into Legotown "their assumptions about ownership and the social power it conveys." These assumptions "mirrored those of a class-based, capitalist society -- a society that we teachers believe to be unjust and oppressive."

    They claimed as their role shaping the children's "social and political understandings of ownership and economic equity ... from a perspective of social justice."

    So they first explored with the children the issue of ownership. Not all of the students shared the teachers' anathema to private property ownership. "If I buy it, I own it," one child is quoted saying. The teachers then explored with the students concepts of fairness, equity, power, and other issues over a period of several months.

    At the end of that time, Legos returned to the classroom after the children agreed to several guiding principles framed by the teachers, including that "All structures are public structures" and "All structures will be standard sizes." The teachers quote the children:

    "A house is good because it is a community house."

    "We should have equal houses. They should be standard sizes."

    "It's important to have the same amount of power as other people over your building."

    Given some recent history in Washington state with respect to private property protections, perhaps this should not come as a surprise. Municipal officials in Washington have long known how to condemn one person's private property and sell it to another for the "public use" of private economic development. Even prior to the U.S. Supreme Court's 2005 ruling in Kelo v. City of New London, Connecticut, which sanctioned such a use of eminent domain, Washington state officials acting under their state constitution were already proceeding full speed ahead with such transactions.

    Officials in Bremerton, for example, condemned a house where a widow had lived for 55 years so her property could be used for a car lot, according to the Institute for Justice. And Seattle successfully condemned nine properties and turned them over to a private developer for retail shops and hotel parking, IJ reports. Attempts to do the same thing in Vancouver (for mixed use development) and Lakewood (for an amusement park) failed for reasons unrelated to property confiscation issues.

    The court's ruling in Kelo, however, whetted municipal condemnation appetites even further. The Institute for Justice reports 272 takings for private use are pending or threatened in the state as of last summer. It's unclear if Legos will be targeted. But given what's being taught in some schools, perhaps it's just a matter of time.

    Maureen Martin ([email protected]), an attorney, is senior fellow for legal affairs at The Heartland Institute, a nonprofit organization based in Chicago that promotes free-market solutions to social and economic problems." http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=022107C

    I wonder how the teachers feel about "private property rights" when their cars get stolen? Or do they stand by their beliefs of "community property"? What if someone took the teacher's money out of the teacher's wallet?... would they show understanding and say something like "Well, just because I worked my ass off for it, doesn't mean it's mine"? Somehow I doubt it.

  • misanthropic
    misanthropic

    That's definitely not a private school I'd want to pay money to for my childrens education.

    I wonder how the teachers feel about "private property rights" when their cars get stolen? Or do they stand by their beliefs of "community property"? What if someone took the teacher's money out of the teacher's wallet?... would they show understanding and say something like "Well, just because I worked my ass off for it, doesn't mean it's mine"? Somehow I doubt it.


    Exactly

  • Narkissos
    Narkissos

    Political propaganda disguised as journalism is more effective than I would have thought. At least in the US where the communist bogeyman will still work long after the last communist has disappeared.

    Before you take that story seriously you should check the sources to see what the experience (if not completely made up) was really about.

  • Darth Yhwh
    Darth Yhwh

    Political propaganda disguised as journalism is more effective than I would have thought. At least in the US where the communist bogeyman will still work long after the last communist has disappeared.

    Before you take that story seriously you should check the sources to see what the experience (if not completely made up) was really about.

    There was nothing in that article that suprised me other than the fact that this was a "private" school. Everything else in that story is exactly what I would expect from a publicly funded school system here in the USA.

    That is not the first time I have read about this event.

  • OUTLAW
    OUTLAW

    ..Wonderfull..A lesson in dumbing down..Don`t excell..Don`t acheave..You have more lego`s than me,I`m calling the "Idiot Police!"..LOL!!..What a retarted thing to teach kids!..Is communism a cult?..It seems to have a cult mentality...OUTLAW

  • Euphemism
    Euphemism

    This is a true story. The description above is obviously a bit caricatured, but not as far from the truth as you might think. The teachers tell their own story at http://www.rethinkingschools.org/archive/21_02/lego212.shtml

  • asleif_dufansdottir
    asleif_dufansdottir

    From what I read in the link *by the teachers*, it reminded me of my parents saying, "If you can't learn to share I'll just put the toys away." Just put into educator-ese.

    Edited to add: for my comments its important to remember that these legos were *classroom* (ie-community) property, not the private property of the kid or kids who were monopolizing them.

    Stuff like Legos do not make good "community property". It's hard for teachers/caregivers (it was an afterschool program) to regulate fair distribution of this type of toys...for one or two or three kids things like Legos work great as a "group building/sharing" activity but for a whole classroom? Especially when there relatively few "cool" pieces. And especially when *all* the Legos are being monopolized over many, many days by just a few kids. From the sounds of it, the teachers allowed it to continue as sort of a social experiment.

    Kids are gonna argue over toys. This is not rocket science.

  • 5go
    5go
    Political propaganda disguised as journalism is more effective than I would have thought. At least in the US where the communist bogeyman will still work long after the last communist has disappeared.

    You should point out the soviets are gone us communist are still around and by the way most communist I know never condoned the soviet totalitarian single party system they had. Nor do we condone just the two party control of the US.

    The two party system we (usa) have is not that much diffrent than their single party one. The will of the people is still suppressed by the elite.

  • 5go
    5go

    by the way if your teaching your kids to be good followers of the teachings of jesus than your doing us communist a huge favor so keep doing and thank you.

    JC is a Communist?

    Then again, Jesus advises the rich to dispose of their wealth.

    "If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that which thou hast, and give to the poor." – Matthew 19.21
    "Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal." – Matthew 6:19

    Not exactly the Capitalist way.

    And what about those beautifully rich churches? Sounds a bit like Commie stuff to me

    http://www.jesusneverexisted.com/neighbour.html

  • Narkissos
    Narkissos

    Thanks a lot Euphemism. A very interesting story to me, if you can stand the intrinsic overseriousness of "Educator-ese" (as asleif_duffansdottir put it). The issues involved are quite similar to those I tried to express at http://www.jehovahs-witness.com/6/122312/1.ashx

    Incidentally, it shows the importance of "disasters" in questioning the rules (in that case, the partial destruction of Legotown by a third party -- neither the children in the program nor the teachers/caregivers).

    Edit: if you come back from there to the initial article, the misrepresentation is manifest.

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