Anonymous ID: a40210 June 8, 2026, 10:18 a.m. No.24693471   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3774 >>3966 >>4075 >>4084 >>4305

https://spectator.org/why-young-people-need-a-patriotic-education/

 

In classrooms across America today, too many young people are being taught to view their country not as a force for good, but as a source of injustice. The heroes of history are recast as villains. National pride is replaced by shame. The result is not a generation prepared to lead a free people, but one too often uncertain whether America is a nation worth defending at all.

 

That uncertainty would have deeply troubled George Washington. In his farewell address, he urged the American people to “guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism” and warned that narrow interests and factionalism could erode the unity essential to the survival of the Republic. Washington understood that the success of this great experiment in liberty would depend not only on our institutions, but on the character and convictions of the American people.

 

In the twentieth century, the United States helped liberate Europe from Nazi tyranny and Asia from imperial domination. We defeated the menace of global communism in a long and bitter Cold War. These were not the actions of a perfect nation. They were the actions of a good nation, full of decent and kind people, who chose to use their strength to expand the reach of liberty in the world.

 

We must also teach, with honesty and humility, the chapters of our history that fall short of our ideals. But the defining feature of our nation is not simply that we tolerated injustices for a time, but that Americans fought — often at great cost — to overcome them. We are a nation that waged a war against itself to vindicate the truth that all men are created equal, and then labored for generations more to ensure that promise would be fulfilled.

 

As a visiting professor at both George Mason University and Grove City College, I have seen firsthand both the challenges and the promise of the next generation. I have met students who arrive with only a faint understanding of the Constitution. But I have also seen something deeply encouraging: when young Americans are introduced to the story of our nation in its fullness, they respond with genuine admiration, gratitude, and even a renewed sense of purpose.

 

They want to believe in their country. They want to be part of something greater than themselves. And when we give them an education that is honest, rigorous, and rooted in the truth, they are more than ready to rise to that calling.

 

The stakes of this effort could not be higher. We are living in a time of renewed global competition, as authoritarian powers like China seek to expand their influence and offer the world an alternative vision to the principles of freedom and self-government. In such a world, a people who lose confidence in their own ideals will struggle to defend them abroad. A nation that forgets why it is free will not remain free for long.

 

Patriotic education, rightly understood, is therefore not only a domestic imperative — it is a national security necessity. It forms citizens who understand what is at stake, who appreciate the blessings of liberty, and who are prepared to defend them for future generations.

 

Encouragingly, there are signs of renewal. Across the country, families, educators, and some local schools are working to restore robust civic education to the American classroom. Homeschooling communities, classical Christian schools, and institutions like Hillsdale College are leading the way, developing a K–12 curriculum that emphasizes the principles and history that have made America a beacon of hope to the world. Quietly and faithfully, many individual teachers in classrooms across the nation are doing the same.

 

These efforts remind us that the future of American education, like the fate of our nation itself, is not fixed. It will be determined by the choices we make today.

 

The Bible tells us that a house built on sand will not stand, but a house built on the rock will endure. The same is true of a nation. A civic education that teaches young people to reject their own country rests on the most fragile of foundations. But an education that instills a well-ordered love of country is a house built on a rock.

 

As G. K. Chesterton wrote, “Men did not love Rome because she was great. She was great because they had loved her.”

 

If we would preserve the blessings of liberty for ourselves and our posterity, we must begin by teaching the next generation to love this land we call home.

 

Mike Pence served as the 48th vice president of the United States from 2017 to 2021.