The one type of school where you are sure to encounter indoctrination is a religious school. That is their purpose, their mission. Religious groups open schools to indoctrinate the young into the precepts of their religion.
Public schools do not indoctrinate. They enroll children of many religions, from many different ethnic heritages. They teach students the basics of democracy and citizenship. They teach them about the importance of voting. They teach them about the justice system.
Justin Parmenter, award-winning high school teacher in North Carolina, wrote on his blog that his state is funding schools that indoctrinate their students into the bigotry and ideology of white Christian nationalism.
He writes:

Shortly after he took over as North Carolina’s Lieutenant Governor in 2021, current Republican candidate for governor Mark Robinson launched a task force to root out indoctrination in our public schools.
Robinson claimed indoctrination was a widespread problem and set up an online portal to solicit complaints about educators from the public. The majority of the submissions Robinson received were from people who took issue with his politically-motivated witch hunt and saw an opportunity to roast him over it.
As for the actual complaints about educators, Robinson published those online without substantiating a single one and didn’t bother to redact names of educators or worksites. Those complaints were dominated by white racial resentment (remember, this was at the height of the fake outrage over critical race theory) and included suggestions such as canceling Black History Month and not talking so much about slavery because it’s “getting old.”
In terms of actual indoctrination unearthed, Robinson’s witch hunt was a complete nothing burger.
Fast forward a couple of years to North Carolina’s Republican-controlled General Assembly flipping a legislator, stealing a supermajority, then tripling funding for school vouchers.
With billions of dollars now on tap for North Carolina’s private schools, and 88.2% of those dollars going to religious schools, scrutiny is rising over exactly what our taxes are supporting.
Private schools are legally able to discriminate against children, and many of North Carolina’s Christian schools deny admissions to students based on religious beliefs, sexual orientation, or learning disabilities.
For example, Fayetteville Christian School, which pocketed nearly $2 million in voucher dollars this school year, expressly bans students who practice specific religions like Islam and Buddhism, and they also bar LGBTQ+ students–whom they brand “perverted”–from attending.

North Raleigh Christian Academy won’t accept children with IQs below 90 and will not serve students who require IEPs (a document which outlines how a school will provide support to children with disabilities).

If this public funding of widespread discriminatory school practices rubs you the wrong way, I have bad news for you.
It gets worse.
That harmful indoctrination Mark Robinson was howling about a couple years ago in his disingenuous attempt to generate political momentum? Turns out it’s real. It just isn’t happening in the traditional public schools Robinson was targeting.
The Daniel Christian Academy is a private school in Concord, NC. This school has received public dollars through school vouchers every year since Republicans launched the controversial Opportunity Scholarship voucher program in 2014-15 for a grand total of $585,776.
Daniel Academy’s mission is to “raise the next generation of leaders who will transform the heart of our nation” by equipping students “to enter the Seven Mountains of Influence.”
The Seven Mountains of Influence (also referred to as the Seven Mountains of Dominion or the Seven Mountains Mandate) refers to seven areas of society: religion, family, education, government, media, arts & entertainment, and business. Dominionists who follow this doctrine believe that they are mandated by God to control all seven of society’s “mountains,” and that doing so will trigger the end times.

The Seven Mountains philosophy has been around since the 70s, but it came to prominence about ten years ago with the publication of Lance Wallnau’s book Invading Babylon: The Seven Mountains Mandate. Wallnau touts himself as a consultant who “inspires visions of tomorrow with the clarity of today—connecting ideas to action,” and his book teaches that dominionists must “understand [their] role in society” and “release God’s will in [their] sphere of influence.”
Wallnau does caution his followers that messaging about taking control over all seven areas of society on behalf of God might freak out non dominionists, saying in 2011 that “If you’re talking to a secular audience, you don’t talk about having dominion over them. This … language of takeover, it doesn’t actually help.”
Daniel Academy doesn’t use that kind of inflammatory rhetoric about dominionism in public, although it’s clear the Seven Mountains are behind their stated goal of raising “the next generation of leaders who will transform the heart of our nation.”
Nicole Barnes, Daniel Academy’s Dean of Administration & Spiritual Development, confirmed by email that Wallnau’s doctrine is at the center of its approach to the Seven Mountains, telling me “As a school we have taken the 7 Mountains of Influence, teaching by Lance Wallnau, and have broken it down for the students to comprehend.”

So why should North Carolinians care that their tax dollars are subsidizing this sort of indoctrination of children through private school vouchers?
I posed that question to Frederick Clarkson, a research analyst who has studied the confluence of politics and religion for more than three decades and lately has been focusing on the violent underbelly of Christian nationalists who want to achieve Christian dominion of the United States at all costs. Here’s what Clarkson said:
North Carolina taxpayers should be concerned that they are helping to underwrite an academy for training children to become warriors against not only the rights of others, but against democracy and its institutions. The idea of the Seven Mountain Mandate is for Christians of the right sort to take dominion — which is to say power and influence — over the most important sectors of society. It is theocratic in orientation and its vision is forever.
This is not something that is about liberals and conservatives . Most Christians including most evangelicals, Catholics, and mainline Protestants are deemed not just insufficiently Christian, but may be viewed as infested with demons, and standing in the way of the advancement of the Kingdom of God on Earth. And they will need to be dealt with.
Back in 2021, when Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson released his nothing burger of a report on indoctrination in public schools, he said it was his “attempt to stop the abuse of the teaching profession by a few who are using that profession to put undue pressure on young minds,” adding that students don’t come to school to be indoctrinated and “this is about ending that.”
Robinson recently won his primary race for governor and stands a decent chance of taking over North Carolina’s office next year. Since North Carolina voters deserve a clear understanding of what our candidates stand for, now would be a great time for Robinson to reiterate that he believes the use of public dollars to support indoctrination is wrong, and that if schools want to influence students to be warriors for God fighting to control every facet of society–possibly taking out some demon-infested folks along the way–they need to do so on their own dime.
We’re waiting, Lieutenant Governor Robinson.

I never thought we’d ever have a euphemism for the Ku Klux Klan, now known as “White Christian Nationalism.”
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yup
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Here’s the amusing thing. Repugnican “leaders” around the country have discovered that young people–middle schoolers and high schoolers and college kids–don’t believe what they believe. They want universal healthcare and prenatal care and family leave, they want legalization of marijuana for recreational use, they hate racial bigotry and sexism and homophobia and transphobia, they aren’t very religious, and they view jingoistic nationalism with scorn.
So, these clueless Repugnican morons have decided that the schools must be indoctrinating kids. That’s why the kids have changed.
And, of course, they are absolutely wrong about this. Just have a look and listen to our popular media–to popular music and film and television and social media channels. What has happened is a GENERAL CULTURAL SHIFT. The attitudes of young people are a result of the cultural at large having moved far, far, far beyond where Podunk, backwater Repugnicans are. These people have been left far, far, far behind, and they have no clue what has happened. They think it’s about Marxist teachers. ROFL. It’s not.
So, this attack on public schools and these attempts to get unconstitutional public funding for religious indoctrination mills is the dying gasp of a way of thinking that is soon to go the way of the Know Nothings.
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.I am not sure that Republicans see children this way. I think they see children as they see the consumer, fundamentally malleable. Perhaps they are right. Consumers do not have a good track record of choosing things that are good. But we can always hope. Polls suggest the younger people are more inclusive and accepting of others than their parents.
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If you look at the Pew polls, young people are on the opposite side from the Repugnicans ON EVERY ISSUE. But yeah, these morons are like Ross Perot–remember that guy?–who said that young people are little vessels into which we pour our teaching. Clueless. It isn’t teachers giving kids instruction on gender identity. ROFL. It’s HBO’s Euphoria. It’s every other TikTok. It’s every other popular music song.
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According to the latest in POLITICO, Trump has an advantage among the young voters (under 30), while Biden leads among older voters.
I find this hard to believe, since young people care about gun control, the environment, and bigotry.
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That was a poll in February. The same poll in March found Trump with only 35% of the Gen Z vote. Here’s the problem though: HALF OF Gen Z Americans say that they aren’t going to bother to vote. They don’t like Trump, but they aren’t excited about Biden either, which suggests that they aren’t paying any attention.
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“. . . where Podunk, backwater Repugnicans are.”
The tRump cultista types, i.e., Repugnicans, are not just “podunk backwater” types. I know many that are urban/suburban dwellers. I also know many “podunk backwater” types who are more liberal than many of the posters on this blog.
Your characterizing of us rural living folk as “podunk backwater” types is off base.
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Sure, rural America is so progressive. LOL.
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Here’s a list of the states that Trump won in 2020. Notice any similarity?
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I just posted here a list of the states that Trump won in 2020. All rural. Every last one.
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That post is in moderation.
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“Wallnau does caution his followers that messaging about taking control over all seven areas of society on behalf of God might freak out non dominionists, saying in 2011 that “If you’re talking to a secular audience, you don’t talk about having dominion over them. This … language of takeover, it doesn’t actually help.”“
In other words, what we have is a sort of admitted Bolshevism within a conservatism that has stolen that word too. Recall that Lenin co-opted the word “Bolshevik” to imply that he was supported by a majority of Russians and attached “Menshevik” to his marxist opponents, who were actually espousing ideas that had more general support within the revolutionary population at the time. Privately, Lenin was assembling a small coterie of very loyal people who would be willing to guide the revolution in the direction he wanted it to go. The Seven Mountain people are modern Bolsheviks, and the quote above demonstrates that they are reactionary revolutionaries, not conservatives.
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“In other words, what we have is a sort of admitted Bolshevism within a conservatism that has stolen that word too.”
The seven mountain dominionists are not conservative. They are aggressively dangerous reactionaries who seek to take Amurikkka back to a time and place that has never existed in this country nor will it ever.
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Indoctrinate: Verb, teach (a person or group) to accept a set of beliefs uncritically.
Indoctrinate: teaching someone to accept the ideas, opinions, and beliefs of a particular group.
“The ordinary method is to imprint ideas and opinions, in the strict sense of the word, prejudices, on the mind of the child, before it has had any but a very few particular observations. It is thus that he afterwards comes to view the world and gather experience through the medium of those ready-made ideas, rather than to let his ideas be formed for him out of his own experience of life, as they ought to be.”
Dividing the PREJUDICES into indoctrination or education, quacks like a ritual of self-absolution.
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The American Taliban will settle for nothing less than a theocratic state. They are clear on this point.
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Public school teachers often have to be cautious about expressing an opinion to their students about anything, even a teacher’s fact based opinion on a healthy lifestyle, let alone politics or religion.
All it takes is one student to go home and complain to their parent/s and teachers may be called in to the principal or VP’s office to be lectured and even have their employment threatened if they do it again.
I taught for thirty years 1975 – 2005, and that happened to me once over my answer to a student’s question about cow’s milk being healthy.
Cow’s milk is not meant for humans. And that is a fact, not an alternative fact. But this former teacher was ordered to never mention what I thought about cow’s milk again or they’d fire me, regardless of the facts.
And that’s tame compared to the toxic world of public education today.
https://www.peta.org/living/food/reasons-stop-drinking-milk/
K-12 public school teachers do not have the luxury private schools of any kind have to indoctrinate, program, and brainwash students.
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