Just in time for Presidents Day comes the announcement from the school board of San Francisco that it is renaming 44 of its public schools (about one-third of the total) to conform to today’s politically correct standards.
Among the names on the way out are George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln. The reputation of these former heroes is being sullied.
But the revolution always consumes its own. So even the school named after left-wing Sen. Diane Feinstein, who is still living, will be removed. Apparently, this is a punishment for something she did before she even served in the U.S. Senate.
You would think by the left’s standards of right and wrong that only the statues and legacies of perfect people should remain intact. But during America’s cultural purge of 2020, even statues of Jesus — the only perfect person who ever lived — were desecrated.
Consider the case of the three former presidents who will now be unceremoniously dumped by the nation’s seventh largest school district: Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln.
Why did previous generations look up to our first president? Without the active participation and personal sacrifice of George Washington, we would not have America, at least not as founded.
Before Washington became our first president, he presided over the Constitutional Convention. Before that, he was the nation’s commander-in-chief, helping an army of ill-equipped farmers and merchants defeat the world’s largest army and navy at the time. Washington gave God the credit for the victory.
Washington was born into a society in which slaves had been owned for four generations. By the time he died, Washington did the best he could to cut ties with that awful tradition. He freed the slaves he had inherited at birth and from his marriage.
Like Thomas Jefferson, Washington helped pass the “Fairfax Resolves.” This 1774 measure was a move of the Virginia House of Burgesses to cut off the slave trade to the state. It could have been a first major step to ending slavery in that colony. But it never went into effect, because King George III stopped it.
This was before the successful crusade against slavery (first the slave trade, then slavery itself) in the British Empire led by Parliament Member William Wilberforce. It was his Christian faith that motivated him, and it took him about half a century.
Our third president, Thomas Jefferson, also was a slave owner. I think it would be fair to say that Jefferson knew slavery was wrong and needed to be uprooted but found that unrealistic to achieve in his lifetime. Nonetheless, the framework he helped create — stating that all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with rights that government should not take away — would one day allow for the removal of slavery.
Abraham Lincoln played a pivotal role in freeing the slaves. But today’s elites want his name removed because at one point the 16th president called for the execution of some violent Indian chiefs (The authorities wanted 300 of the Indian leaders hanged; Lincoln whittled that down to 38).
To today’s woke crowd, America is so hopelessly flawed that we need to purge the past to forge a progressive future.
I spoke recently with Bob Woodson, a veteran of the civil rights movement. He has organized 1776 Unites, a group of historians to counter the misleading 1619 Project of the New York Times, which postulates that America’s real birth was the year African slaves were first imported to British North America.
Woodson told me: “They’re really attacking anybody that has a foundation of Judeo-Christian values. It’s really a war against faith, that’s what it is.”
He added: “I would not be surprised if they went after Dr. [Martin Luther] King because of his Christian faith. You have got to understand this has nothing to do with race. It has everything to do with using race as a bludgeon to try to destroy civic institutions in America.”
In short, notes Woodson, “They are trying to define America by its birth defect of slavery and Jim Crow, and our counter is that no individual or nation should be judged by the worst of what they used to be.”
In times past (and even in the present for tens of millions of Americans), Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln were regarded as great, if imperfect, heroes. They sacrificed much for the good of the country, and we enjoy much liberty because of their commitment. They are yesterday’s heroes but today’s villains –at least among the Marxist ruling class. Hopefully, more Americans will see through this politically correct revisionism and pass on to posterity an appreciation of our national heritage.
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