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www.NewHeightsEducation.org<br />

Why Lessons of<br />

Liberty Are Crucial<br />

for Children<br />

By ensuring that our children begin learning<br />

these ideas at an early age, we not<br />

only impart the protection of the law,<br />

but also a sense of civility, strength, and<br />

responsibility.<br />

By Rory Margraf<br />

Tuesday, May 28, 2019<br />

In 2017, the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania released their traditional survey on American<br />

civics knowledge for Constitution Day. Out of just over one thousand respondents, 37 percent were unable to name a single<br />

right protected by the First Amendment. Nearly four hundred adults were unable to recall religion, speech, press, assembly, or<br />

petition. Out of those that were able to name specific rights protected by the First Amendment, the ability to name all five was<br />

limited.<br />

Our decline in civics knowledge does not begin when we cross the arbitrary line from childhood to adulthood, but rather in<br />

childhood itself from a general lack of education on the topic. Putting it in incredibly distressing terms in 2011, Charlies Quigley<br />

of the Center for Civics Education pointed out that,<br />

only 4 percent of all 12th graders … (are at) a level we would hope our future leaders would attain.<br />

Out of all fifty states, forty offer civics as a subject, but only 29 offer a “full curriculum,” which “includes course materials that<br />

cover ‘Explanation/Comparison of Democracy,’ ‘Constitution and Bill of Rights,’ and ‘Public Participation,’ as well as information<br />

on state and local voting laws.” As such, the responsibility of preserving liberty through the next generation falls to us.<br />

Introducing Liberty to Children<br />

In a previous article, I told a story regarding my own experience as a teenager in which I was stopped and questioned with a<br />

voluntary search. I cooperated fully. Following the incident, I was lectured by my mother on the importance of asserting my<br />

rights when confronted by the authorities.pouring into US colleges than is the case elsewhere.<br />

While opinion was split among readers as to whether or not my mother was correct in giving me such a civics lesson in the car,<br />

most readers seemed consistent in their surprise that, at sixteen, I did not know the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments. I<br />

did not know the laws that were intended to protect me from overreaching authority. I was a distressing statistic.<br />

In <strong>November</strong> of 2018, I released the first in a new children’s book series: I Know My Rights: A Children’s Guide to the Bill of<br />

Rights and Individual Liberty, to introduce kids to the Bill of Rights in the context of law, rather than just history, as well<br />

as the foundational principles of liberty, including voluntaryism and self-ownership. By ensuring that our children begin<br />

learning these ideas at an early age, we not only impart the protection of the law, but also a sense of civility, strength, and<br />

responsibility.<br />

Protection of Law<br />

Just as their parents, children are fallible and thus susceptible to the law. As such, it is paramount that children learn their<br />

rights under the law at an early age in order to protect themselves from authority in the absence of their parents or legal<br />

guardians. Many states are more than willing to try children as adults for crimes and several still impose capital punishment<br />

on minors as young as 16 years old, though their execution will take years to proceed. With implicit trust placed in authority<br />

figures by children, particularly in law enforcement and educators, the legal boundaries of those relationships must be understood<br />

and asserted.<br />

96 96 <strong>NHEG</strong> | GENiUS <strong>Magazine</strong> MAGAZINE | <strong>November</strong> | www.geniusmag.com<br />

- <strong>December</strong><br />

www.NewHeightsEducation.org<br />

With growing tension in the political atmosphere over the past several years—and even several decades—the nation’s youth<br />

have displayed a desire to have their opinions heard, for better or for worse, from both the Left and Right. This is something<br />

that must be embraced and encouraged, no matter our personal opinions. However, most children spend the majority of their<br />

time in school and their voices are occasionally stifled, particularly in public schools.<br />

While the Supreme Court has stated that schools have the ability to discipline students for disruptions, the First Amendment<br />

still applies. The ability to speak freely, share and explore different ideas, and even protest, are all critical aspects of growth<br />

and development.<br />

Civics Facilitates Civility<br />

In a recent National Review article, Alexander Khan wrote of the longstanding rivalry between Thomas Jefferson and John<br />

Adams; both patriots who differed greatly in opinion on the role of government and the powers that it should be granted.<br />

Despite this, there remained a strong friendship and a great level of respect. Khan says,<br />

Intellectual disagreement for Jefferson and Adams was not a barrier to friendship, but rather an opportunity to jointly<br />

investigate ideas and grow closer to the truth. When students learn in this way, it leads them to think together. Willingness<br />

to be challenged and openness to learning encourages bold intellectual explorations of new worlds and ideas. Above all, each<br />

student’s primary goal becomes the improvement of themselves and each other.<br />

Over the last few years, civil discourse has declined as the First Amendment has been called into question. The marketplace of<br />

ideas has faced rejection as an increase in censorship on public speakers invited by college students has brought out the worst<br />

in our young students. When censorship from college administrations has failed to come through, some students have even<br />

resorted to violence and intimidation to block controversial speakers or even to force professors to resign or be terminated.<br />

Instilling a foundation of civics and an understanding of free speech, and the necessary respect that comes with it, will eliminate<br />

future “safe spaces” and misguided calls to limit one of our most crucial freedoms.<br />

Strength through Liberty<br />

From the Constitution, we can conceive of the kind of government that our Founders envisioned and set into action nearly 250<br />

years ago. We are also able to conceive of its intended limitations, though we have failed thus far to maintain them. It is the<br />

limitations purposely applied to our relatively young government that we discover that liberty requires a necessary level of<br />

personal responsibility.<br />

Even with public welfare, government programs, subsidies, and endless spending, nothing will have such a positive effect on a<br />

young person as self-sufficiency. Perhaps not the level of self-sufficiency of Grizzly Adams or Ron Swanson, but a strong sense<br />

of personal duty to ourselves, grounded in a respect for the rights of others and a willingness to defend our own. Strong individuals<br />

who are able to provide for themselves are then able to provide for their families and communities. As Brittany Hunter<br />

pointed out earlier this year,<br />

No one is coming to help you, so you might as well stop waiting and start fixing your own life today.<br />

The strength that comes with liberty, imparted at a young age, creates young men and women who are prepared and willing to<br />

change the world, not with a sharp tweet nor at the point of a gun, but through the voluntary use of their own gifts and skills,<br />

knowing that they may improve the world through their own continued self-improvement.<br />

Liberty Survives through Education<br />

Whether it is in opposition to authority or the free choice to live one’s life as desired, liberty may only survive through education.<br />

As our understanding of civics declines, so do our freedoms with each passing generation. While we may not see its full<br />

degradation, our legacy may become one of passivity. As Thomas Jefferson said,<br />

I know no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves; and if we think them not enlightened<br />

enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their<br />

discretion by education. This is the true corrective of abuses of constitutional power.<br />

In that spirit, we must take control of the future of liberty and safeguard its survival through parental patriotism and the continued<br />

effort to educate the next generation.<br />

Source: The Foundation for Economic Education (FEE)<br />

https://fee.org/<br />

<strong>November</strong> - <strong>December</strong> 2019 | <strong>NHEG</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> 97

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