Commentary
Antifa or antifa—lower case a, if you prefer—may have gotten its start in Germany, but it is flourishing here in the United States as never before.
This growth occurred even though truly achieving the movement’s stated goal—anarchy—would create chaos leading to civilizational destruction of a likely unparalleled extent in human history in our industrialized and high tech nation of 330 million.
The deepest causes of their violent and more than slightly deranged behavior are undoubtedly personal and psychoanalytic in nature. The story of the Seattle grandmother who identified her bomb-throwing grandson from video of a protective vest she bought him—he said he was “peaceful”—is a novel crying out to be written.
But whatever the psychological profiles of the individual Antifa members, almost all of them share one thing in common:
They went to American schools.
And those schools, with only a few notable exceptions, talked down and continue to talk down the United States of America to one degree or another from kindergarten through PhD.
It is, to my knowledge, unique in history that the public and private educational systems of a country so thoroughly and consistently criticize the country itself. (The Chinese Cultural Revolution did it briefly, but Mao’s immediate central government was always supported.)
For decades now our schools have been self-replicating machines, preaching to college students, directly or indirectly, the leftwing gospel according to Howard Zinn (and the Frankfurt School and so forth) and sending them out in turn to preach this junior varsity, critical theory Marxism themselves as teachers at whatever level at all manner of institutions throughout the country.
The youngest of those levels is perhaps the most dangerous because the most impressionable.
Antifa members are therefore only doing what they have been taught all along, getting rid of a cancer called the United States.
This connection between Antifa and the teaching profession is so profound some insist the majority of those hidden behind the black masks are indeed teachers. Others, needless to say including the liberal media, have denied this.
It’s impossible to know for certain. Antifa, like some Islamic terror groups, does not have a formal leadership structure; why would they need it? They also don’t keep records.
This, however, is probably a case where the cliché about smoke and fire applies. Whether Antifa is 50 percent teachers or 20 percent teachers, it’s a lot of teachers.
Any reader of websites like The College Fix or Campus Reform can see the extent to which almost all our schools have their tentacles buried deeply into the supposed social justice causes espoused more militantly in the streets by Antifa.
The governors and mayors of the localities where the riots are taking place are themselves the products of the same educational institutions. This may account in part for their reluctance to crack down. Some part of them is identifying with the rioters.
They want to burn it down, no matter if the violent protests lead to the renaming of this country as New Venezuela, figuratively and literally.
Antifa is an excruciating public manifestation of a very deep infection that has metastasized throughout our society from the schools.
It will only get worse if we don’t change our educational system—pronto.
Ironically, the beginnings of this change are one of the few, perhaps the only, good things to emanate from the pandemic.
With schools shut or online, many are evaluating whether the system serves our young people, practically (in terms of careers) or ideologically.
What kind of education is it when 95 percent of college professors vote Democrat, and mostly left Democrat at that?
Viewpoint diversity, anyone? Shall I home school my child? Shall I send him or her to college so they can come back Thanksgiving in an Antifa t-shirt and accuse me of being a capitalist pig when I just spent fifty grand for their tuition?
Something is wrong with this picture.
Change is undoubtedly coming. As a wise man once said, “Faster, please.” I don’t know about you, but I’m sick of mush brains throwing fire bombs at police stations.
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