Image 01 Image 03

Why Are Elite Private Schools in New York City Teaching Students to Hate America?

Why Are Elite Private Schools in New York City Teaching Students to Hate America?

“the system is broken, unable to be reformed, rotten to the core, and deserving of demolition”

Perhaps a more important question is, why are parents paying tons of money to send their kids to these schools?

The New York Post reports:

Elite NYC private schools are teaching kids that American society must be destroyed

Ryan Finlay is a brave young man. A senior at the elite private Horace Mann School, Finlay last week published a pointed but measured essay describing the aggressive political bias that’s dominated his education on the Bronx campus, where generations of famous and well-connected New Yorkers, from Jack Kerouac to Eliot Spitzer, have matriculated or sent their children.

Faculty “feel obligated to open students’ eyes to the inequality that surrounds them,” Finlay explained, but that takes the form of “continuous pressure in the classroom to embrace visions of wholesale societal reform.”

The message, hammered relentlessly into students’ heads at Horace Mann, is that “the system is broken, unable to be reformed, rotten to the core, and deserving of demolition,” he wrote.

The irony of hyper-privileged New Yorkers paying nearly $60,000 a year for their children to learn they are the undeserving beneficiaries of a broken system need not be dwelled upon here. Finlay’s essay breaks the self-imposed conspiracy of silence that has largely shielded top private schools from criticism from within.

There have been rare exceptions of dissident teachers like Paul Rossi of the Grace School and “Brearley Dad” Andrew Gutmann, who blow the whistle on private-school indoctrination. But few are willing to do so publicly. The largely unquestioned proposition is that private prep schools are the gateway to elite universities and America’s leadership class, an academic arms race famously described in a New York magazine cover story 25 years ago as “Give me Harvard, or give me death.”

DONATE

Donations tax deductible
to the full extent allowed by law.

Comments

Most amazing is that this seems to have escaped the scrutiny or control of the customers, the parents who pay the tuition. I guess some parents are far lefties and are OK with it. And other parents just have to go along on the off chance it gets their kid into “Harvard”. And still other parents are clueless, although that should be very rare by now.

    randian in reply to artichoke. | June 19, 2022 at 8:22 pm

    Most amazing is that this seems to have escaped the scrutiny or control of the customers

    Did it? You may have noticed that billionaires are heading the “destroy everything” movement. If anything, the rich are notably more progressive than everybody else, so why wouldn’t they want their children on board too?

    Dimsdale in reply to artichoke. | June 20, 2022 at 11:40 am

    Methinks the Zoom classes necessitated by the hysterical COVID *read it: Wuhan flu) pandemic opened many eyes. Or at least allowed those eyes to see what was going on.

    Socialism is always build on the ashes of successful free market societies like this.

      artichoke in reply to Dimsdale. | June 20, 2022 at 1:44 pm

      I’d agree if you call it “UNC-Chapel Hill Wuhan Flu” and maybe add in some biolabs in Ft. Detrick, Ukraine, or elsewhere.

      As for the time in the cycle, it may be time to check out and take winnings off the table here before the socialists help themselves to them. It’s still allowed, it may not always be.

Poor kid.