Blair:

All right, ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the latest episode of the Secular

Blair:

Foxhole podcast.

Blair:

Our guest today is Neil Aryan, currently an

Blair:

engineer in the aircraft industry, but once served as a teacher in the public school

Blair:

system.

Blair:

He has a serious warning for parents about our

Blair:

public, and he does have a serious warning that he's going to talk about today about our

Blair:

public school system.

Blair:

Neil, your article published in Capitalism

Blair:

magazine in April of this year is quite provocative, but if I may say, sadly true.

Blair:

You, you've issued a public service announcement.

Blair:

Go ahead and tell our audience what it is.

Neil:

Well, thank you for having me, Blair.

Neil:

I appreciate it.

Neil:

And Martin, I appreciate you being, being on your podcast.

Neil:

Basically, I call it a product safety alert.

Neil:

And basically the idea is that that's a term

Neil:

that comes from industry and I currently work in industry.

Neil:

And we issue these alerts if and when some, you know, our products become unsafe and we

Neil:

need to alert the public about them.

Neil:

So that's, and in this case, this alert is

Neil:

about education in the schools because I found that there's a link between educational

Neil:

practices and these school shootings that have been occurring.

Neil:

And I've written about that in my article.

Neil:

That's the, that's the subject matter of my

Neil:

article.

Blair:

I see.

Blair:

What is your educational background?

Neil:

Well, I am a Certified Teacher, grade 6 through 12 in Connecticut, as you mentioned,

Neil:

in math.

Neil:

And I did my teacher certification training at

Neil:

Fairfield University in Fairfield, Connecticut.

Neil:

And so I've taken all of the, the state required training courses to become a teacher

Neil:

in Connecticut and done my student teaching.

Neil:

And so I'm very intimately aware of what is

Neil:

going on in the schools.

Neil:

And really the classes that I took at

Neil:

Fairfield University really introduced me to the horror of progressive education.

Neil:

So this is something that's been on my mind for quite a while.

Neil:

I hadn't at the time made the connection between progressive education and school

Neil:

shootings, though.

Neil:

I, I, soon after I'd started to become

Neil:

suspicious about it because I was aware of school shooting Since Columbine, since 1999 on

Neil:

the Columbine attack in Colorado.

Neil:

But you know, this is really my, my background

Neil:

in as a certified teacher and just being introduced, like I said, to the horror of

Neil:

progressive education at Fairfield University really just was the impetus to, to trying to

Neil:

better understand this issue.

Blair:

In your article, I was again, I was shocked to see that there have been more than

Blair:

40 school shootings since Columbine.

Blair:

And I think there was prior one prior to that

Blair:

in Mississippi, I believe, also.

Blair:

Yes, that's a staggering number.

Neil:

Yes, I, I get that number from an online Database of school shooters.

Neil:

That is, that's been created by a psychologist named Peter Langman who has been researching

Neil:

and writing on this issue for decades.

Neil:

And we can certainly talk more about him.

Neil:

But he created an online database of school shootings.

Neil:

It's called school shooters.info and he basically the database for each school

Neil:

shooting that occurs.

Neil:

He's gathered all the relevant legal and

Neil:

personal documentation associated with the school shooting and his explicit purpose is to

Neil:

allow investigators from other fields to research into this issue.

Neil:

And so I have basically been using this database for years now.

Neil:

And this is where I, I get my numbers.

Neil:

And 40 is really, that's 40 random school

Neil:

shootings.

Neil:

That doesn't include the targeted schools, the

Neil:

targeted attacks.

Neil:

And there's actually, so there's actually more

Neil:

than 40.

Neil:

His database has I think over 150 school

Neil:

shootings in them and most of them have occurred since the late 1980s.

Blair:

Oh my goodness.

Blair:

Yes, yes.

Blair:

I've always thought I've held three men in our history up, up as destroyers if you will, of

Blair:

education.

Blair:

That's John Dewey, Horace Mann, and more

Blair:

recently Howard Zinn.

Blair:

I think all of these men can be considered

Blair:

progressive to the extreme.

Blair:

What do you think about those three?

Neil:

Well, I, I can speak mostly to John Dewey because I have studied him a little bit

Neil:

in school.

Neil:

I wouldn't say I'm an expert on him, but I did

Neil:

learn some interesting things specifically about him in doing my research regarding this

Neil:

issue.

Neil:

You know, as, as I say in my article that it's

Neil:

the progressives introduction of this learner centered education philosophy in the schools

Neil:

that I'm, I'm basically blaming for these, for these school shootings.

Neil:

And what's interesting is that the, these learner centered advocates, they basically

Neil:

praise John Dewey as an influence on them, but they do, they don't consider themselves

Neil:

strictly speaking Deweyites.

Neil:

And not only that, but they were around during

Neil:

the time of John Dewey and he repudiated them.

Neil:

He basically held that they did not understand

Neil:

his educational philosophy and he wanted to distance himself from them.

Neil:

And really they're much worse than John Dewey.

Neil:

John Dewey was not anti knowledge.

Neil:

He was pro knowledge.

Neil:

That what he was opposed to was the idea that

Neil:

learning should be an individual affair, that it should be that we're individuals and each

Neil:

going to learn on our own and acquire knowledge the traditional way that we

Neil:

typically do in school.

Neil:

But these so called learner centered

Neil:

advocates, they are anti knowledge.

Neil:

They are, they are complete subjectivists and

Neil:

they basically hold that, that there is no objective reality, that that knowledge is

Neil:

basically formed from one's own personal perspective, not from a grasp of objective

Neil:

facts.

Neil:

And Dewey basically rejected this.

Neil:

Not that he was an advocate of objective knowledge in the same in the way that we

Neil:

advocated in Objectivism, but he definitely was not anti knowledge.

Neil:

He just thought that the school serves a social purpose.

Neil:

And then knowledge is really formed in the context of social groups and learning

Neil:

communities, that kind, that kind of thing.

Neil:

And that's why we have this kind of thing in

Neil:

school where they're trying to promote group work and social cohesion, that kind of thing.

Neil:

But the learner centered advocates are not, strictly speaking, Deweyites, they're much

Neil:

worse.

Neil:

And Dewey repudiated them.

Blair:

All right, well, all right.

Neil:

But I would say one more thing that.

Blair:

Go ahead.

Neil:

That we shouldn't praise Dewey for repudiating them because his all embracing

Neil:

attack on traditional education and traditional instruction is what made these

Neil:

learner centered advocates possible and their influence in the first place.

Neil:

So it's, it's, it's great that Dewey, you rejected them, but it's kind of hard to reject

Neil:

something on principle for which you were the cause.

Neil:

So I want to be, I want to be careful here and not, you know, make it sound like Dewey's this

Neil:

great guy, you know, who did us all a great favor and tried to mitigate the learner

Neil:

centered types.

Blair:

Very good, very good then.

Blair:

But, and you also touched on, I guess, the,

Blair:

the difference between a teacher based instruction and learner based instruction.

Blair:

So the teacher based was the traditional way, is that correct?

Neil:

Yes, and it's, it's, it's based on the idea that there is a fixed body of knowledge

Neil:

to learn and that there are individuals who have mastered this knowledge in certain

Neil:

subjects, whether it's math or history or English art, and they have become master

Neil:

communicators of their subject.

Neil:

And they will then instruct students who are

Neil:

basically ignorant of these subjects and teach them in a classroom type, formal instruction

Neil:

environment.

Neil:

So it rejects this whole approach.

Neil:

This has been sort of the traditional approach, generally speaking, to education for

Neil:

centuries and it rejects this completely.

Neil:

And the learner centered education is not

Neil:

really a positive viewpoint.

Neil:

It doesn't offer really a positive program or

Neil:

curriculum of its own.

Neil:

It's more of an attack on the traditional

Neil:

school.

Neil:

And as I say in my article, it's basically

Neil:

rooted in the idea of subjectivism, that there, you know, there is no objective

Neil:

knowledge.

Neil:

There isn't any object out there about which

Neil:

to become educated.

Neil:

Knowledge is really just something that is

Neil:

based on my own personal perspective, not a grasp of facts and something that I learn

Neil:

Outside of me.

Blair:

I see.

Neil:

And then the question becomes how did this lead to school shootings?

Neil:

And the basic issue here is that this all embracing attack on traditional instruction

Neil:

has caused in my judgment, the intellectual and moral collapse of our schools.

Neil:

And our schools have basically lost all of their intellectual and moral authority.

Neil:

And this conflict between these two approaches to education is ongoing in the hallways of the

Neil:

public schools and classrooms today.

Neil:

And some of these kids are absorbing this

Neil:

conflict.

Neil:

They're absorbing the idea that there is that

Neil:

knowledge is subjective and that they're being imposed upon by these teachers and by their

Neil:

schools to learn knowledge that is biased and false.

Neil:

And in my article I basically say that these, that these school shooters are complaining

Neil:

that they're having to, you know, acquire knowledge or be in these schools that are

Neil:

imposing false knowledge on them and they're becoming radicalized against the schools.

Neil:

So what this learner centered philosophy is essentially doing is that it's turning

Neil:

students against their own schools.

Neil:

And some of these students have decided to

Neil:

attack the schools.

Martin:

Neely, is that like a cruel nihilism in action then, but really be forced to go out

Martin:

and shooting on your fellow students and teachers and others like a effect on that or

Martin:

result of this nihilistic ideas and education?

Neil:

It's definitely a nihilistic because if you reject knowledge that there's such a thing

Neil:

as objective knowledge and that means there aren't going to be any objective morals or

Neil:

values to pursue.

Neil:

And, and when you read some of the, the

Neil:

personal writings of these shooters, they just, they, they sound very nihilistic.

Neil:

They, they reject they.

Neil:

The institutions and knowledge of the world.

Neil:

This is particularly true of Eric Harris.

Neil:

I mean he's really the leading school shooter

Neil:

here and he is the one shooter that has been most influential on later shooters.

Neil:

You know, he, his, his influence and it's.

Neil:

And it, and it still goes on, you know, 25

Neil:

years after he attacked Columbine High School.

Blair:

Can you even.

Blair:

It may be distasteful, but could you read your

Blair:

excerpt from what Harris wrote? Would you read, consider reading that if you

Blair:

have it in front of you.

Neil:

Or I don't have in front of me, but I can pull it up if you just.

Neil:

I can.

Neil:

Let me just pull that up.

Martin:

As long as you.

Martin:

We don't have any so called explicit wordings

Martin:

because then we have to put the episode explicit.

Martin:

And then listeners in India, for example, can't listen to us.

Martin:

So.

Blair:

Oh yeah, we have to.

Blair:

You'll have to bleep out the swear words.

Neil:

Oh, I can, I can do that.

Neil:

That's that's not a problem.

Neil:

Let me just get to it here.

Neil:

I can just get to it under education.

Neil:

It's usually pretty easy to get to.

Neil:

Yeah, here it is.

Neil:

So you know, Harris actually has said a lot of interesting things that support my, my thesis.

Neil:

But the most interesting and the most direct is the quote that I have in my article.

Neil:

And, and here's what he says.

Neil:

So this is a quote from Harris.

Neil:

He goes.

Neil:

Ever wonder why we go to school besides

Neil:

getting a so called education? It's not too obvious to most of you, but for

Neil:

those who think a little more and deeper, you should realize it.

Neil:

It's society's way of turning all the young people into good little robots and factory

Neil:

workers.

Neil:

That's why we sit in desks in rows and go by

Neil:

bell schedules to get prepared for the real world.

Neil:

Because that's what it's like.

Neil:

Well, no it isn't.

Neil:

One thing that separates us from other animals is the fact that we can carry actual thoughts.

Neil:

So why don't we people go on day by day routine stuff.

Neil:

Why can't we learn in school how we want to? Why can't we sit on desks and on shelves and

Neil:

put our feet up and relax while we learn? Because that's not what the real world is

Neil:

like.

Neil:

Well, hey, there is no such thing as an actual

Neil:

real world.

Neil:

And that's the end of the quote.

Neil:

And you know the Eric Harris.

Neil:

Let me put it this way.

Neil:

Eric Harris could have taught my education classes at Fairfield University.

Neil:

Understands the, the progressive argument against traditional instruction as good or

Neil:

better than my own teachers.

Neil:

So you know, he, he had absorbed this idea and

Neil:

you know, this is a high school kid, he was very bright.

Neil:

But I highly doubt that he, he learned this on his own.

Neil:

I think what is happening in these schools is that there's this conflict between these two

Neil:

philosophies and these kids are at the center of this conflict.

Neil:

And some of them are absorbing the conflict that is going on in the schools today,

Neil:

including Harris here.

Martin:

Wow.

Blair:

Wow. Right after your quote there.

Blair:

You also mentioned.

Blair:

Let me just read this quick.

Blair:

Why would these students who demanded to learn

Blair:

on their own in their own way attack their schools rather than protest peacefully, drop

Blair:

out or enroll in private school? Why wouldn't they?

Neil:

Yeah, exactly.

Neil:

If you are opposed to your school that you

Neil:

would think that the most obvious and simplest thing to do would be to drop out or to demand

Neil:

that your parents put you in another school or to just get an education on your own and in.

Neil:

Traditionally this is what happened.

Neil:

Right.

Neil:

And it still happens.

Neil:

There's a huge dropout rate.

Neil:

Right.

Neil:

And that's probably a good thing.

Neil:

Why should students who do not feel that they are getting the value that they need from an

Neil:

education have to be for forced to sit through it for, you know, maybe they had to, they went

Neil:

to early grade school, dropped out by seventh or eighth grade.

Neil:

Why should they have to spend another four or five years at the end of middle school and

Neil:

high school and, and instead just go out into the world and get a job and learn on their

Neil:

own? And it's the most important question because,

Neil:

you know, this is the most obvious thing that you should do.

Neil:

But it's an interesting thing that this learner centered education, part of the

Neil:

impetus for this educational philosophy was to try to stem the dropout rate, to try to make

Neil:

schools and the curriculum more relevant to individual learners.

Neil:

That was, that was the ostensive purpose of this.

Neil:

We want to keep kids in school.

Neil:

And unfortunately what it did do is it didn't

Neil:

offer any positive approach to learning.

Neil:

All it is is this critique of the traditional

Neil:

school and it's a negative critique.

Neil:

And what you have is, it's the strangest

Neil:

thing.

Neil:

You've got these kids in these schools or this

Neil:

subset of the kids who might have dropped out, who instead linger about in schools.

Neil:

They reject the curriculum, they reject their teachings, but they're being promised that

Neil:

they can still get an education somehow and get this individualized learning.

Neil:

But the problem is our schools weren't designed for this.

Neil:

You know, we have a very, a very inflexible public school system.

Neil:

And teachers who have been trained to teach in a certain way, they've been trained for direct

Neil:

instruction.

Neil:

And the public school system that we have in

Neil:

this country was never designed to, to be able to cope with a new and radical model of

Neil:

education just suddenly introduced into it.

Neil:

And it's certainly not able to cope with a

Neil:

model of education that is based on subjectivism.

Neil:

I mean, teachers typically are trying to impart some sort of knowledge to their, to

Neil:

their kids.

Neil:

And now what they're being told is that they

Neil:

got to step back and let these kids somehow learn on their own.

Neil:

And you know, the teacher no longer has authority over their classrooms or even in the

Neil:

schools.

Neil:

And, and this is what has led to the moral

Neil:

collapse that I talk about, right?

Blair:

I think in America, America's history, originally and initially schools were private.

Blair:

I mean, you had the one room schoolhouse on the prairie and they taught from like

Blair:

kindergarten to sixth or seventh grade.

Blair:

But I guess the progressive era changed all

Blair:

that because again, even though the Founders, I also believe they advocated for or certainly

Blair:

were in favor of government education.

Blair:

It was because they were living in the fated

Blair:

emperors of the Enlightenment era and they wanted that to be spread.

Blair:

But I think that was a mistake.

Blair:

What do you think?

Neil:

Well, it was definitely, I think, a mistake to have this kind of mass produced

Neil:

public school system that doesn't do a very good job at educating kids.

Neil:

I mean, I went through the school system, I did all right.

Neil:

I got a decent math education.

Neil:

So I'm not, I'm not here to bash my teachers

Neil:

or really any teachers today even.

Blair:

Right.

Neil:

But this, this kind of, you know, one size in one curriculum fits all type approach

Neil:

to education.

Neil:

I don't think that's the, the optimum way to

Neil:

educate kids.

Neil:

But then again, it didn't, it never produced

Neil:

school shooters up until before the late 1980s, so at least it didn't do that.

Neil:

And, and my focus has basically been on what is it that changed in the schools that led to

Neil:

the emergence of this horror.

Neil:

And that's really been my focus before that.

Neil:

Yes, I mean, I think it was all kinds of reasons why you might educate your kid in some

Neil:

other way, homeschooling or a private school, any number of ways.

Neil:

So there are definitely problems with the school system.

Neil:

But I would say the solution to school shootings is not, you know, obviously you

Neil:

might consider taking your kids out of these schools, but you probably should have

Neil:

considered doing that even before the school shooting starts.

Neil:

So they were not, they weren't all that good before the school shootings.

Neil:

And now, and now you got to contend with this issue.

Blair:

So I hear you, I hear you.

Blair:

You mentioned a gentleman by the name of Dr.

Blair:

John Simmons.

Blair:

Can you elaborate what he initiated?

Neil:

Yeah, so I've done a great deal of research over the years on this.

Neil:

And John Simmons, it was a professor of English education at Florida State University.

Neil:

And I came across him very early in my research and I'd always, you know, he wrote an

Neil:

article in response to the Virginia tech attack in 2007 by the English student Sun Wei

Neil:

Joe.

Neil:

And his article is a direct response to that

Neil:

attack.

Neil:

And, and he's really, he's just a well

Neil:

regarded professor of English education.

Neil:

And I regard him as a hero and a wise man.

Neil:

I mean, first of all, he's a, he's a hero.

Neil:

He, he was, he did, he served in the military

Neil:

in the Korean War, but he also is a hero for writing the article that he did and basically

Neil:

coming out publicly saying that there is a problem with our educational practice because

Neil:

it, it's it's actually linked to this school shooting that that happened.

Neil:

And he's basically writing this article to warn his fellow practitioners.

Neil:

And the title of the article is Dealing with Troubled Writers, A Literacy Teacher's

Neil:

Dilemma.

Neil:

And it's not a very long article.

Neil:

It's only about four pages and you can read it in about half an hour.

Neil:

It's written in plain English, but in it, Professor Simmons reveals probably the most

Neil:

important fact about school shootings.

Neil:

And, and it's, it's kind of interesting.

Neil:

I, I haven't seen anyone in news reporting discuss this, but tells us the origin of these

Neil:

personal journals that are often found in the possession of these school shooters that

Neil:

they've been writing in.

Neil:

And he explains that the origin of the

Neil:

personal journals and of personal journal writing is in the English curriculum that

Neil:

began in the 1970s and was implemented in the public schools.

Neil:

And I know about these personal journals firsthand because I wrote in one in the 1980s

Neil:

in my American Literature class.

Neil:

We had these personal journals and they were

Neil:

the exact.

Neil:

It was part of this program where you would

Neil:

spend the first few minutes of class just writing down your personal thoughts in the

Neil:

journal and then the journals will go away and the teacher would then would start teaching

Neil:

the content of what they, what it is for the day.

Neil:

And for me it was American Literature class.

Neil:

So I have, you know, when I first started

Neil:

seeing or observing that, that these kids were, who were attacking the schools, that

Neil:

many of them, it's not all of them, but, but a good number enough for there to be a pattern

Neil:

that they were writing these disturbing thoughts in personal journals.

Neil:

I knew immediately where that came from because I experienced that in, in 11th grade.

Neil:

And, and, and this is like the most shocking fact that is re.

Neil:

That Professor Simmons reveals in his article.

Neil:

And it's, it's not really even the central

Neil:

focus of the article, but, but he reveals it and, and it's not by accident.

Neil:

It's, it's, it's the most important thing to understand about, about these attacks.

Neil:

We need, we need to understand where these personal journals come from, from educational

Neil:

practice.

Martin:

Okay, Neil, I will be the devil's advocate here.

Martin:

We talked in the green room about journaling and I think as an adult it's a positive thing

Martin:

if you do reflection, introspection, and learn from what you have gone through and reflect,

Martin:

for example, on what you're studying and so on.

Martin:

But is this more like so called random outbursts and anger and this hatred like some

Martin:

psychoanalysis in a way.

Martin:

And didn't they talk about this Journaling,

Martin:

why they did it and how did that come up?

Neil:

Yes, I agree with you.

Neil:

Journaling is a very positive thing.

Neil:

The problem is that this particular method of journaling that was encouraged for the kids

Neil:

was to basically have them turn inward and focus on their emotions at absent the external

Neil:

world, basically to, you know, have them indulge their emotions rather than talk about

Neil:

or, or journal about the things that you mentioned about their interactions with the

Neil:

world.

Martin:

And I think and don't, and don't link the like responses, the emotions to value

Martin:

judgment.

Martin:

They haven't come so far maybe.

Neil:

So they're basically encouraging the kids just to rant emotionally in these

Neil:

journals.

Neil:

And this is really not the purpose of a

Neil:

journal or a diary even typically when you have a journal or a diary, because I've given

Neil:

this some thought.

Neil:

This is a time for quiet reflection about

Neil:

what's going on with you and your life.

Neil:

It's not a time where you, where you would

Neil:

sort of rev yourself up into this angry friends Nikolistic frenzy.

Neil:

And, and you know, it's, it's very interesting.

Neil:

You may have heard of the, the University of Texas school shooter, Charles Whitman.

Neil:

He was, I think he, I think that attack on the University of Texas was in 1964.

Neil:

I can't remember exact date.

Neil:

But he, he went to the, the, the clock tower,

Neil:

up to the clock tower at the University of Texas and committed a school shooting.

Neil:

And this was a very, very angry man.

Neil:

He, he had all kinds of family abuse at home

Neil:

in his life, but he spent time writing in a diary and he actually used the diary the way a

Neil:

diary or a journal is intended to be used as a means, as a, for, for the purpose of quiet,

Neil:

calm reflection.

Neil:

And I've read a number of his diary entries

Neil:

and, and, and, and this angry man that would basically use this diary as a chance to calm

Neil:

himself down, it didn't work.

Neil:

I think in the end he would, you know, his

Neil:

anger overcame him and he, and he became a school shooter.

Neil:

But what's what, what these students are being encouraged is, is the exact opposite.

Neil:

In these personal journals that Professor Simmons talks about, they're being encouraged

Neil:

to indulge their emotions to, you know, to indulge their anger into, like you said, that

Neil:

engage in this stream of consciousness kind of thinking.

Neil:

And when you, if in these journal entries are, you can find them at schoolshooters.

Neil:

Dot info on Professor Dr. Langman's website and you read these journals and it's just

Neil:

incredibly disturbing.

Neil:

They're just very angry and, and they, they

Neil:

revel in their Anger and in their emotions.

Neil:

And this is, I don't think, the intent of

Neil:

journal writing.

Blair:

I, I, I agree, I agree.

Blair:

Now you, and just to follow up with that and

Blair:

maybe tie a bow on it, you called learner based instruction and the personal writing

Blair:

journal assignments the perfect storm.

Blair:

And I think your evidence is overwhelming.

Neil:

Yeah, it's shocking.

Neil:

It's like you've got these two educational

Neil:

practices that almost seemingly have nothing to do with one another.

Neil:

I mean, the implementation of personal writing assignments was in the 1970s and prior to the

Neil:

introduction of learner centered education in the schools.

Neil:

The kids were writing in these personal journals and there were, you know, we didn't

Neil:

hear about any school shootings.

Neil:

So although I think this personal journal

Neil:

writing method, which I, I, I say is basically based on a subjective method of writing, I

Neil:

think it's problematic.

Neil:

But it clearly didn't lead to school

Neil:

shootings.

Neil:

We didn't get that until the, the introduction

Neil:

of this learner centered educational philosophy.

Neil:

And what these two practices are, are basically doing.

Neil:

They, they, they reinforce one another.

Neil:

So you, you're, you're pitting the, the kids

Neil:

against their schools, against the school system in the name of, on the basis that the,

Neil:

that the knowledge that they're being given is, is biased and false.

Neil:

And at the same time you're telling them that, you know, you should have an individualized

Neil:

learning and hey, go write in this personal journal and, and tell us all your, you know,

Neil:

your, your deepest, darkest feelings and your anger.

Neil:

And they're going to talk about how angry they are about the system.

Neil:

And that's exactly what Harris did in his personal circle.

Neil:

So there's kind of a synergy between these two practices that wasn't intended, but they came

Neil:

together, I argue, in a perfect storm which led to these attacks.

Martin:

Is it like this project or test or what was it called, the Wave or something like

Martin:

that? It was turned into a movie about how the

Martin:

students became national socialists and doing all this scary stuff like in indoctrination

Martin:

and taking orders and then follow orders and then put their hatred against what

Martin:

individuals.

Neil:

I think what's happening is that they're being encouraged to embrace their emotions.

Neil:

They're being, and to do it.

Neil:

And the school is basically sanctioning this,

Neil:

I mean, it's sanctioning this embrace of emotionalism and it's doing it in a very, in

Neil:

an academic manner.

Neil:

By introducing this irrational personal

Neil:

writing method into the schools, you're essentially saying, look, I mean, this is,

Neil:

this is more real, more important than, you know, learning your math lessons or learning

Neil:

Something about history.

Neil:

And this is why, you know, you get these

Neil:

students who today who are basically, you know, they're very subjective and they're

Neil:

always talking about their feelings.

Neil:

And the academics are almost like an

Neil:

afterthought in these schools.

Neil:

It's really a shame.

Neil:

When I was in school, you know, everybody was focused on trying to learn something.

Neil:

They were trying to acquire some knowledge and skills, trying to, you know, prepare

Neil:

themselves for the future.

Neil:

Well, Harris basically understood what his

Neil:

future was going to be.

Neil:

It's not that he was.

Neil:

That he was just against his school.

Neil:

He was against the institutions and the kind

Neil:

of life that was awaiting him after graduating from.

Neil:

From school.

Neil:

He. He rejected all of it because the

Neil:

institutions of our.

Neil:

Of our country and.

Neil:

And of the Western world, they all rely on scientific knowledge or the idea that you must

Neil:

acquire this knowledge if you want to achieve goal X or value Y. And he didn't like that.

Neil:

That approach.

Neil:

He just wanted to have his own thoughts and,

Neil:

and basically live in accordance with, you know, whatever ideas he had.

Neil:

And he didn't want to live in a world where he had to, you know, acquire this objective

Neil:

knowledge and live in accordance with such knowledge.

Neil:

He rejected the whole thing, man.

Blair:

Well, after all this horror and more than likely more horrors to come, the

Blair:

government remains unaccountable.

Blair:

Why do you think that is?

Neil:

Why?

Blair:

That's a big answer or a big question, I guess.

Blair:

And we.

Blair:

We don't have two hours.

Neil:

No. Well, I would, I would simply.

Neil:

I would simply point to the fact that they

Neil:

have the power of coercion behind them and they don't have to be accountable.

Neil:

You know, if we had private education and where people have to pay, you know, education

Neil:

has to be paid for by the private citizens and teachers and schools have to earn a profit,

Neil:

well, they're going to be a lot more accountable to parents when things go wrong or

Neil:

when there's.

Neil:

When there are problems or criticisms and so

Neil:

on and so forth.

Neil:

But how do you hold accountable this massive,

Neil:

you know, system of government education? Where do you turn and you have this department

Neil:

of Education that I don't think anybody is able to communicate with or have any, you

Neil:

know, any influence over? We certainly didn't vote for it.

Blair:

No. No.

Neil:

And so it's not accountable.

Neil:

And because it's not accountable, these.

Neil:

Our education system and those who basically inevitably take charge of it are free to

Neil:

implement ideas that may be destructive.

Neil:

And those ideas don't ultimately get examined

Neil:

or rescinded.

Neil:

They just, they.

Neil:

They typically remain in place.

Neil:

So they have these.

Neil:

This personal journal writing that continues on.

Neil:

It's problematic to say the least.

Neil:

And then you have this learner centered

Neil:

education, which, which nobody's examining.

Neil:

Nothing is being examined.

Neil:

When you have, when you're, when, when your field experiences some kind of disaster, like

Neil:

if it's in the aircraft industry, like I talk in my article, or the building industry, the

Neil:

people who are involved in these industries who have the knowledge, they have to come and

Neil:

examine the problem, examine their own practices, and they are accountable.

Neil:

Where is the accountability of educators today?

Neil:

Where are the educators who are examining their practices and asking, why are all these

Neil:

attacks occurring in our schools? I mean, aren't they responsible?

Neil:

They don't, they don't even recognize that they have anything to do with it.

Neil:

And yet these attacks are all, are all being done by their students on their schools.

Neil:

It's not as if the students are going out and attacking McDonald's or some, you know, or

Neil:

some mall or something.

Neil:

They're attacking their own schools.

Martin:

Yeah. Is that what they call in the industry product escape?

Neil:

That's right.

Neil:

And the idea is that there is some flaw that's

Neil:

been introduced that's been into a product, it's been overlooked or that has escaped our

Neil:

design intent.

Neil:

Right.

Neil:

And because it's escaped our design intent, that product is now behaving in a way that we

Neil:

didn't expect and it could be very harmful to consumers.

Neil:

And when that happens, we got to stop everything and we got to say, look, there's a,

Neil:

there's a problem here.

Neil:

We got to examine this.

Neil:

We got to examine our own practices.

Neil:

Only the people working in that particular

Neil:

industry who make the product are the ones who are qualified to examine the problem with it

Neil:

because they're the ones with the specialized knowledge to be able to do so.

Neil:

You and I can't really examine these school shootings.

Neil:

We don't, we're not insiders.

Neil:

I mean, I am a little bit because I have my,

Neil:

my certification.

Neil:

But it's really the educators that need to

Neil:

come together as a profession and take a hard look at their own practices.

Neil:

And until they do that, these school shootings are not going to end well.

Blair:

Again, let me take issue with what you've just said, though, in a way not to.

Blair:

But the teachers and the administrators that we have now, they were, they were educated in

Blair:

the same flawed system.

Blair:

So they wouldn't know.

Blair:

Well, examine it.

Neil:

Well, that, that.

Neil:

Well, that there is.

Neil:

You're right.

Neil:

I mean, there's a good point here that first

Neil:

of all, we don't expect these kind of catastrophes to occur in the educational

Neil:

system.

Neil:

We don't expect this, you know, mass death.

Neil:

Right? I mean, that's.

Neil:

That's completely unprecedented, isn't it?

Blair:

Right.

Neil:

So. So everybody looks at this and like, well, the schools can't be involved.

Neil:

The.

Neil:

The.

Neil:

The.

Neil:

The shooters must be mentally ill.

Neil:

You know, that must be it.

Neil:

So what we've had for decades now are

Neil:

primarily psychologists who have been researching into this and writing on it.

Neil:

But.

Neil:

And that's great.

Neil:

But the problem is that has had the unfortunate effect of delaying the actual

Neil:

investigation that we need, which is the investigation of the schools.

Neil:

I. I do disagree in one sense.

Neil:

You know, everybody is capable of examining

Neil:

their own practices.

Neil:

Yeah, you can, and I'm steeped in my.

Neil:

In my aircraft practices and my knowledge of engineering.

Neil:

But I still know that, hey, you know, when something goes bad with the engines that we

Neil:

produce, it's on us to figure it out.

Neil:

It's not, you know, it's not somebody outside

Neil:

of our field who's responsible.

Neil:

It's almost certainly us.

Neil:

And we got to take a look at what we're doing.

Neil:

You know, teachers are.

Neil:

The educators are perfectly capable of doing this, too.

Neil:

And Professor John Simmons demonstrates that perfectly, what he did in writing that

Neil:

article.

Neil:

That is the exact right thing to do.

Neil:

This is how it works.

Neil:

You see, you make a connection between your

Neil:

practice and some negative thing that has happened, in this case, a school shooting, and

Neil:

you're like, wait a minute, we got practices here that are connected to what this kid did

Neil:

at Virginia Tech.

Neil:

And now I got to write, I got to warn my

Neil:

fellow practitioners that we got a problem here.

Neil:

And that's exactly what he did.

Neil:

That's exactly the right thing to do.

Neil:

And what should have happened is that should have generated a conversation between

Neil:

Professor Simmons and his fellow practitioners.

Neil:

And had it.

Neil:

Had this been done, right, it would have

Neil:

generated this conversation.

Neil:

It would have led to the profession, or at

Neil:

least the English profession, coming together as a profession, saying, look, we need.

Neil:

We need a deeper investigation here to try to understand if there.

Neil:

If there really is something here.

Neil:

And Professor Simmons would have been

Neil:

recruited to lead the investigation.

Neil:

But that is.

Neil:

That is how it works.

Neil:

But that is not what has happened.

Neil:

But that is what needs to happen if this is going to be resolved.

Martin:

And as an positive end note, Blair, we have had on our show guests talking about

Martin:

homeschooling and also private new colleges and others.

Martin:

So there are a bright side in the future here.

Martin:

Have any comment on that, Neil?

Martin:

Any positive signs for the future for.

Neil:

You mean for.

Neil:

For other forms of schooling?

Martin:

Yeah, and education in, in general.

Neil:

But I do, I do see positive signs.

Neil:

There's some.

Neil:

I, there's something on Twitter that I've seen some person in Austin, Texas, who is promoting

Neil:

a school model in which you can do all your learning in just like two hours a day.

Neil:

And I really love that idea.

Neil:

I mean, I think it's so this idea that you're

Neil:

in school for eight hours a day.

Neil:

I just, the more I learn about it and

Neil:

understand it, it just seems crazy to me.

Neil:

You can learn a lot with focused instruction

Neil:

on the things that you need to know within a couple of hours, and then the rest of the day

Neil:

is yours to learn other things in other ways.

Neil:

So, yeah, I do have a lot of confidence in the

Neil:

future.

Neil:

What I'm not confident about is dealing, is

Neil:

dealing with this problem, which is not being dealt with and still isn't.

Neil:

And we've got continued attacks.

Neil:

And this is, this has got to be dealt with.

Neil:

This, you know, the education system is still a monolith, and it's got to be dealt with.

Blair:

Well, I certainly agree with that.

Blair:

And if, maybe after the show, if you could

Blair:

remember that, the instigator, the author of that particular education idea, we'll put it

Blair:

in our notes.

Blair:

But I also want to mention, I think, the mess

Blair:

that was the COVID and all the lockdowns, I think that woke a lot of people up to some of

Blair:

the horrors of the education system, because the teachers unions got a lot of press and

Blair:

they were saying that your parents don't, the students don't belong to the parents, they

Blair:

belong to us, or terrible things like that.

Blair:

And because of that, I think homeschooling

Blair:

went up 25% across the country and relatively short time.

Blair:

Yeah, so that's, that's a positive trend.

Neil:

Definitely.

Blair:

You still have the.

Blair:

And even if some Trump or some future

Blair:

president decides, okay, we're going to shave off the Department of Education from the

Blair:

federal budget, that's okay.

Blair:

That's the first step of what are you going

Blair:

to, you know, what, what happens after that?

Neil:

So, yeah, I, I agree.

Neil:

I think, I think the, the unions and the

Neil:

schools did reveal themselves quite a bit in this covet debacle.

Neil:

And I think that did open a lot of people's eyes.

Neil:

You know, for whatever reason, they, they played, you know, their cards too openly.

Neil:

And, and a lot of people learn more about the way the education system works.

Neil:

I think that's a good thing.

Neil:

There's no transparency.

Neil:

You have to have transparency.

Neil:

And there's, I think, very little transparency

Neil:

in the way our educational system works and the.

Neil:

What goes on in our schools.

Neil:

I just, I. And what goes on in these teacher

Neil:

training schools, the one that I went to, it's, it's.

Neil:

It's completely irrational.

Blair:

And you're a parent yourself.

Blair:

Not that I want to.

Neil:

Yes.

Blair:

Yeah. So. So that's what you've done I think is a magnificent.

Blair:

You shine a light on a very serious issue and I think you've hopefully have opened a lot of

Blair:

eyes in the.

Blair:

As we publish this podcast and add our links

Blair:

to it, I hope a lot of people will be able to read this.

Blair:

Have you had any feedback other than us wanting to have you on the podcast?

Blair:

I mean I know this was earlier this year, but it's so still relatively new article.

Neil:

But it is and I want to thank you for your kind words about it.

Neil:

But I have not received that much feedback.

Neil:

But generally what I have received is a bit

Neil:

skeptical.

Neil:

But that's understandable.

Neil:

It's a radical thesis and I certainly expect that.

Neil:

And it really is just the tip of the iceberg in my opinion.

Neil:

If there was a proper investigation of the schools on this issue, it would unload a whole

Neil:

truckload of additional evidence supporting my thesis.

Neil:

I mean I'm very confident this is a high conviction thesis.

Neil:

I'm very confident in it despite you know, some of the skepticism that I've encountered.

Neil:

But, but no, I. Overall I have not received too much feedback.

Neil:

So I guess I need to get the word out and I do appreciate being on your podcast because I

Neil:

think that will help get the word out.

Neil:

So I think this was a great, a great time.

Martin:

Yeah. And when we spread the good word and we also welcoming constructive criticism

Martin:

and feedback from our listeners and also you could send them a booster gram so called.

Martin:

It's a digital telegram and send small donation or a big donation.

Martin:

For example we have one Blair what we like 221905 Satoshis.

Martin:

That's Rand's birthday number.

Martin:

And you could also stream satushis to us and

Martin:

then we could split here with our guests.

Martin:

So what's on your plan or mind or agenda in

Martin:

the near future, Neil, if you want to share that?

Neil:

Well, I do plan to write more articles.

Neil:

The.

Neil:

The article that I wrote and published is really a top level, very concise article that

Neil:

I and I intended it that way.

Neil:

I wanted to be able to you to be able to read

Neil:

it in one sitting and you know, relatively quickly.

Neil:

But I do intend on writing articles to additional articles to elaborate on some of

Neil:

the further.

Neil:

Elaborate on some of the aspects that I raise

Neil:

in that article.

Neil:

So that's what I see in my future.

Blair:

Outstanding.

Blair:

All right, well, we'll definitely have you

Blair:

back then.

Neil:

Well, thank you.

Blair:

Great.

Blair:

All right, ladies and gentlemen, our guest

Blair:

today has been Neil Arian, who issued a product safety alert on progressive education.

Blair:

Neil, thanks for manning the foxhole with us.

Neil:

Thank you.

Neil:

I enjoyed it.

Neil:

I appreciate being in the foxhole with you, and I would definitely love to come back.

Martin:

Thanks.

Blair:

All right.