David Gelernter has an op-ed on the importance of history in today’s LA Times. Here’s a brief excerpt:
I was amazed to hear about teenagers who don’t know Fact 1 about the Vietnam War draft. But I have met college students who have never heard of Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge — the genocidal monsters who treated Cambodia in the 1970s to a Marxist nightmare unequaled in its bestiality since World War II.
And I know college students who have heard of President Kennedy but not of anything he ever did except get assassinated. They have never heard JFK’s inaugural promise: that America would “pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to ensure the survival and the success of liberty.” But President Bush remembers that speech, and it’s lucky he does.
To forget your own history is (literally) to forget your identity. By teaching ideology instead of facts, our schools are erasing the nation’s collective memory. As a result, some “expert” can go on TV and announce (20 minutes into the fighting) that Afghanistan, Iraq or wherever “is the new Vietnam” — and young people can’t tell he is talking drivel.
As Glenn might say, read the whole thing. While portions of the essay frame the issue in right-left terms, I think it transcends ideology. The loss of historical knowledge in society at large — in a sense, the collective amnesia of our age — is deeply troubling.
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