Katherine Stewart, author of the book “The Good News Club: The Christian Right’s Stealth Assault on America’s Children,” writes in the New York Times about the historical origins of attacks on democratic public schools.
When the DeVos crowd and rightwing think tanks refer to “government schools,” they are drawing their rhetoric from a dark and ugly history, tainted by racism, anti-Catholicism, and hatred of democracy itself.
Trump, DeVos, the religious right, and conservatives today promote “school choice” so children do not have to attend “government schools.” But where did this language come from?
She writes:
Before the Civil War, the South was largely free of public schools. That changed during Reconstruction, and when it did, a former Confederate Army chaplain and a leader of the Southern Presbyterian Church, Robert Lewis Dabney, was not happy about it. An avid defender of the biblical “righteousness” of slavery, Dabney railed against the new public schools. In the 1870s, he inveighed against the unrighteousness of taxing his “oppressed” white brethren to provide “pretended education to the brats of black paupers.” For Dabney, the root of the evil in “the Yankee theory of popular state education” was democratic government itself, which interfered with the liberty of the slaver South.
One of the first usages of the phrase “government schools” occurs in the work of an avid admirer of Dabney’s, the Presbyterian theologian A. A. Hodge. Less concerned with black paupers than with immigrant papist hordes, Hodge decided that the problem lay with public schools’ secular culture. In 1887, he published an influential essay painting “government schools” as “the most appalling enginery for the propagation of anti-Christian and atheistic unbelief, and of antisocial nihilistic ethics, individual, social and political, which this sin-rent world has ever seen.”
But it would be a mistake to see this strand of critique of “government schools” as a curiosity of America’s sectarian religious history. In fact, it was present at the creation of the modern conservative movement, when opponents of the New Deal welded free-market economics onto Bible-based hostility to the secular-democratic state. The key figure was an enterprising Congregationalist minister, James W. Fifield Jr., who resolved during the Depression to show that Christianity itself proved “big government” was the enemy of progress.
Drawing heavily on donations from oil, chemical and automotive tycoons, Fifield was a founder of a conservative free-market organization, Spiritual Mobilization, that brought together right-wing economists and conservative religious voices — created a template for conservative think tanks. Fifield published the work of midcentury libertarian thinkers Ludwig von Mises and his disciple Murray Rothbard and set about convincing America’s Protestant clergy that America was a Christian nation in which government must be kept from interfering with the expression of God’s will in market economics.
Someone who found great inspiration in Fifield’s work, and who contributed to his flagship publication, Faith and Freedom, was the Calvinist theologian Rousas J. Rushdoony. An admirer, too, of both Hodge and Dabney, Rushdoony began to advocate a return to “biblical” law in America, or “theonomy,” in which power would rest only on a spiritual aristocracy with a direct line to God — and a clear understanding of God’s libertarian economic vision.
Rushdoony took the attack on modern democratic government right to the schoolhouse door. His 1963 book, “The Messianic Character of American Education,” argued that the “government school” represented “primitivism” and “chaos.” Public education, he said, “basically trains women to be men” and “has leveled its guns at God and family.”
These were not merely abstract academic debates. The critique of “government schools” passed through a defining moment in the aftermath of the Brown v. Board of Education decision of 1954, when orders to desegregate schools in the South encountered heavy resistance from white Americans. Some districts shut down public schools altogether; others promoted private “segregation academies” for whites, often with religious programming, to be subsidized with tuition grants and voucher schemes. Dabney would surely have approved.
Religious fundamentalists and evangelicals today have picked up the use of the term “government schools.” DeVos funds the leading fundamentalist organizations that see the public schools as godless. Religious groups are suing in states like Indiana to allow religious activities within the public schools. Secularism is their enemy.
When these people talk about “government schools,” they want you to think of an alien force, and not an expression of democratic purpose. And when they say “freedom,” they mean freedom from democracy itself.
The advocates of “school choice” bask in this tradition. Recall that Reed Hastings, founder of Netflix, looked forward to the day when there were no more elected school boards. Advocates for private management of schools funded with public money–such as ALEC (the American Legislative Exchange Council)–hail mayoral control, state takeovers, and privatization, anything to undermine and destroy democratic control of public schools.
Remember this history. It matters.

I read Katherine Stewart’s book a few years ago and had the opportunity to hear her speak as well. It is important that we understand the attacks to public education are coming from within, through groups that are attempting to gain access to our children. The scary thing about Good News Clubs and other religious groups is that they intentionally train kids to proselytize to other children and to shame “non-nonbelievers” to their brand of Christianity. In SC, Good News Clubs are in a lot of our public schools. In fact there is one in the school where I teach. It is up to our schools to intentionally build community with children and parents to ensure parents love the school their child(red) attends. Schools need to offer a wide variety of after-school activities to ensure that these religious groups cannot dominate or attract large numbers of children.
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Very illuminating history about the term “government schools”! I mistakenly thought it was a relatively recent propaganda tool. Stewart’s last sentence, “And when they say ‘freedom,’ they mean freedom from democracy itself” is one that we should never forget. It demonstrates that the term conservative is no longer appropriate, they are radically regressive. Worth reading and re-reading in full:
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Must read. ^^
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My great grandparents were Catholic immigrants. Catholics in the 19th century were not hap[y with Protestant prayers and Bible reading in public schools and so tended to send their kids to parochial schools. The Protestant hegemony faded slowly and in 1962-63 the Supreme Court outlawed those practices — whereupon Catholic school enrollment proceeded to decline from 5.5 million to today’s 1.8 million. Meanwhile, the civil rights movement and the Court began to undo racial segregation, whereupon Protestant fundamentalists began turning to school vouchers, a device concocted by maverick atheist economist Milton Friedman. So today we have conservative Catholics and Protestants all attacking public schools and pushing for diversion of public funds to private religious schools.
As an honors grad of a leading Catholic high school and a former public school teacher, I have spent the last 50+ years working full time to defend public schools and oppose vouchers and tax credits. Most Americans, as we know from 28 state referenda from coast to coast over the last 50 years, agree with me by 2 to 1. The fight now is to stop Trump, DeVos, Pence and other reactionaries from destroying our public schools and fragmentng our student body along religious, class, ideological, ethnic and other lines. See my column “Trump, DeVos and the ‘Kuyperizing’ of Anerica in the current Free Inquiry magazine.
Edd Doerr
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Edd Doerr,
Please send the list of voucher referenda.
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Edd,
It will also be big government telling different faiths how they should worship and alter their doctrine in an attempt to homogenize all faiths into one big Evangelical worshipping conglomerate .
Beware, be warned, be ready.
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For the list of referenda on vouchers and similar devices for diverting public funds to private schools, see my article “The Great School Voucher Fraud” at arlinc.org. — Edd Doerr
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School choice/vouchers pre-date Milton Friedman. see the entry on Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_voucher
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Charles, in Maine and Vermont, vouchers are intended for towns that don’t have a high school, not for competition.
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Charles: The wikipedia entry is useful, and it identifies Friedman as the founder of the modern US voucher movement. Re the Netherlands and its school finance system, see my column, “Trump, DeVos and the ‘Kuyperizing’ of America,” in the current issue of Free Inquiry magazine. Kuyper was the Dutch politician who produced the Dutch system of school/society “pillarization” and influenced Calvin College which gave us Betsy DeVos. — Edd Doerr
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In addition to this book and history lesson, I recommend One Nation Under God: How Corporate America Invented Christian America by Kevin Kruse.
Kruse examines how corporate fears of the New Deal helped to launch one of the first national media campaigns to link “Christian values” to big business.
This advertising effort was led by the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM). NAM developed a huge advertising budget to link democracy, patriotism, family values, Christianity, and economic “freedom.” The NAM campaign was designed to undermine labor unrest, the union movement, collective action on social issues, and to position other impulses toward egalitarian values as socialist/communist, unChristian and UnAmerican. Concurrently techniques of mass media persuasion were being marketed to corporations by Edward Bernays and others.
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Diane and Edd Doerr: A great essay. Snip from Edd’s note: “The scary thing about Good News Clubs and other religious groups is that they intentionally train kids to proselytize to other children and to shame “non-nonbelievers” to their brand of Christianity.” (my emphases)
I guess that goes-over well with children from Jewish or Muslim or other religious identities of families and their communities. THREE THINGS:
FIRST, we can assume that other religious groups are as identified with their own religious traditions as are those in the Good News Clubs with their “brand of Christianity.” And we can assume that the desire to overlook the importance of, or even to destroy secular government, and to make one’s own “brand” of religion into the ruling political power, is at least latent in many religious folks and their traditions, and is the main problem now in many Middle-Eastern countries and cultures.
SECOND, while “secularism” offers many problems up for legitimate complaint, having a secular government isn’t one of those problems. Rather, it’s SECULARITY that is key to the survival of ANY religious group in a political structure. It’s a government mapped out by NOT being ordered by ONE (of any of the above) religious ideologies, but by offering separation from any one religious ideology; and by being ruled by secular law, much of which is based on the morality that we find in all mainline religious traditions–it’s just not named as coming from any one religious group.
Having a secular government frees up religious groups to do their own thing. There is of course tension at many points-of-contact between a particular religion and the secular law aimed to serve “All.” Nevertheless, such separation is the SINGULAR REASON A SECULAR DEMOCRACY CAN MAINTAIN A MODICUM OF ONGOING PEACE AND CIVILITY AMONG ALL, INCLUDING BETWEEN RELIGIOUS GROUPS. It’s everyone’s job to work out problems through active and reasonable discussion–insofar as we do, we are serving the “higher principle.” But under one “brand” or another, that all goes away, no matter how much the ruling “religious brand” in power claims it won’t. (Think Betsy.)
THIRD So: at the structural level, our hard-won secular democracy is under attack from three factions:
(1) by a secular-minded tyrant-dictator (Trump, who wants to control everything by “rule of bully” as a replacement of the rule of law and by manipulation of political and religious forces in the culture);
(2) by those who may not know it, but who concretely are fostering a return religious tribalism–to warring religious factions based on which religious ideology holds the most military (and now-nuclear) power. (That’s the “Good News” folks.)
(3) by the horribly-distorted Republican Party who is controlled not by Trump but by oligarchs and corporations . . .
Also, both (1) and (2) are presently using Trump as their power-puppet, as much as they can until they get their way.
The irony is that many countries and cultures, for instance, in the middle-east, are trying to make a secular democracy the center of their power structure, while WE and other quasi-Western cultures and countries are struggling with internal powers that would collapse that already-achieved hard-won secularity.
And BTW, the “snake under the table at the signing of the U.S. Constitution” (concessions to slavery in the Southern states and their pervasive mentality) is alive and well.
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There is a fourth group attacking public education, neoliberal billionaires. This group is particularly Machiavellian in their assault methods. This group includes hedge fund managers and several billionaires from Silicon Valley. This group is the main reason that Democrats have abandoned the working class and the poor. Through DFER, they are big donors to the Democratic party.
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retired teacher Yes you are right–so I should have said: “(3) by the horribly-distorted Republican Party AND Democratic parties insofar as they are controlled not by Trump but by oligarchs and corporations.” I have to say, however, that the Republican Party is much farther along in their metastasizing journey toward destroying democracy than the Democratic Party. In either case, staying on the same route means, one way or another, self-destruction is on the horizon.
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Not every Democrat.
Has Tim Kaine been asked about the attack on the NAACP’s desire for accountability for charters?
Has Bernie Sanders?
Has Elizabeth Warren?
Has Corey Booker?
The Senators should be forced to go on record about their opinions. Do they agree with the NAACP or not?
I’m surprised they are getting a pass.
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Cath: Good comment. There are at least 25 different brands of faith-related private schools — Christian, Jewish, Islamic, etc. They exist primarily for the purpose of sectarian indoctrination and isolation. Most discussion of vouchers avoids discussion of this, or any mention of what Madison, Jefferson et al intended with their notion of church-state separation. — Edd Doerr
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Edd Doerr I don’t often agree with Charles, but in an earlier note here today, he speaks clearly about how joining one of those after-school religious groups is commonly on a volunteer basis in public schools.
I don’t know general policy in this regard. But I think public schools are walking a fine line, but one that they must walk, to allow, but not to endorse or require, such on-site groups to exist. To follow the deeper meaning of the term “secular” (not secularism), public schools are charged with children learning ABOUT religions (their own and others’), especially where religion’s intimate relationship with HISTORY is concerned; but that schools don’t proselytize or push one ideology over another.
Unfortunately, for some, both parents and religious leaders, that’s not enough; and anything less than full, top-down, religio-ideological power is an expression of hate for “my religion.” Ironically, if secular education were doing it’s job to the fullest, that idea, along with various forms of political authoritarianism, would have lost their power a long time ago. It’s a many-threaded situation; however, as we see it today, that lessening, mis-focus, and/or omission in public education of political, historical, and religious aspects of human life (bracketing: about religion, not for any one religion) is coming back to bite us as we speak. Thanks for your reply. CBK
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CORRECTION change: ” . . . both (1) and (2) are presently using Trump as their power-puppet, as much as they can until they get their way.” to “(2) and (3).”
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Publicly-operated schools are permitted to host religiously-affiliated clubs and organizations as an extra-curricular activity, just like any other club. see
https://www.oyez.org/cases/1989/88-1597
Board of Education of Westside Community Schools v. Mergens By and Through Mergens(1990).
What is so “scary” about these types of clubs, teaching children to prosetylize other children into the Christian religion? Christianity is a missionary religion (So is Islam, and Mormonism, and many others).
If Jewish/Muslim/atheist/Wiccan children/families/communities are unhappy with these types of clubs, and their activities, they need to realize that the free exercise of religion is mandated in the US Constitution.
No student at a publicly-operated school is required to attend or participate in these types of clubs.
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How TRAGIC that the message of the “Prince of Peace” should be so twisted as to condone slavery, to steal thert land from the native Americans, slaughter each other as happened in Europe when Catholics and Protestants warred against each other, employ the Spanish Inquisition ed nauseum. Now this same kind of mentality turns its ugly sights on education.
Education eternally seeks ULTIMATE truth with the knowledge that that is elusive to say the least. Now, some believe that ONLY they are the recipients of God’s message. That many of those who believe this are at odds with others who equally believe that only THEY are the “blessed” ones seems not to undermine their own belief system.
How sad. When one has reached ultimate truth, ipso facto, no further growth is possible. These people seem to sometimes forget that not everyone who shouts “Lord, Lord” has HIS message but may in fact be ravening wolves. BUT, good luck in changing their minds. THEY alone have the “Truth”..
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Gordon Wilder: That is what a “return to tribalism” means. Religious power at the top, leading the tribe, the rest below.
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Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé and commented:
“When these people talk about ‘government schools,’ they want you to think of an alien force, and not an expression of democratic purpose. And when they say ‘freedom,’ they mean freedom from democracy itself.”
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Also a MUST READ–Democracy in Chains: the Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America by Nancy MacLean. In the introduction, she begins by discussing Brown vs Board of Education, & segues into this: Alas, it wasn’t until the early 2010s that the rest of us began to sense that something extraordinarily troubling had somehow entered American politics.
She then talks about Wisconsin’s Walker’s 2011 attack on public employees, Chris Christie’s ‘attacking teachers in startlingly vitriolic terms, one headline captured the same sense of bewilderment among those targeted: “Teachers Wonder, Why the Heapings of Scorn?” Why indeed?’ Equally mysterious were the moves by several GOP-controlled state legislatures to inflict flesh-wounding cuts in public education, while rushing through laws to enable unregulated charter schools and provide tax subsidies for private education.’
She dedicates her book “For my teachers.” MUST READ.
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The ultimate goal of those using the term “government schools” is to promote the commodification and privatization of public education. Both the neoliberals and conservatives are seeking this outcome because their donors want to see this occur: the tech-based donors and edu-preneur donors because they see the possibility of profits and the corporate donors because they want to pay lower taxes and thus reduce their costs and increase their profits. In both cases the children raised in poverty will suffer and the opportunities for economic advancement will be limited… and in both cases local governance will be undercut and democracy will suffer.
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Great post Wayne!
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