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:)(: Family CO-OPerative :)(: Academy of Realist Design
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DRINK IN THE PUBLIC
SCHOOLS. afcbuddy-
04/12/2003 09:55:40 AM
Christian Science Journal-MAY 1896
MR.
William George Jordan, a brilliant and forcible writer of New
York City, in a recent number of Current Literature, thus ably
animadverts upon the recent legislation in New York providing
for the introduction into the public schools, of experimental
study as to the effects of alcoholic drinks upon the
system.
"The most eloquent proof of the inherent
vitality of Christianity is that it has survived nineteen
centuries of its teachers. The unanswerable proof of the
indestructibility of the human mind is that it still lives
despite all the efforts of modern education. And now — they
have introduced Drink into the public schools.
A Herod
Legislature has decreed that the innocents are to be drugged
with lessons on alcohol and narcotics. They will see in all
detail the horrible results upon the system of excessive
drinking and smoking. Probably pictures will be shown them of
tissues as they appear after a few months' companionship with
alcohol. Young minds readily susceptible to impressions of
sweetness, purity, nobility will be tainted by this criminal
teaching. Does legislation think a mild inoculation of
intemperance will guarantee future immunity? If such
instruction be good, why does legislation stop here? Why does
it not run through the whole catalogue of human sin, misery,
and folly? Why does it not prepare a primary education of
Murder as a Fine Art, by De Quincey?
Why not have
daily clinics, with Confessions of an Opium-eater as a
quiz-book? Some kindly hand, keen to aid in the demoralization
of childhood, could readily expand the necessary pages from
Oliver Twist into Fagin Tactics for Youthful Readers, Approved
by Legislation. Each of the Commandments could be made into
separate manuals with graphic examples. But there is one
redeeming feature of legislative insanity — it is never
consistent. The whole question would be humorous if it were
not supremely serious.
Science and moral common sense
agree in forbidding such teaching. The revealings of the
latest science show the marvellous power of suggestion, the
stimulation of a thought sinking into mind — mind, that in the
exquisite accuracy of psychic processes never loses, never
forgets.
Constantly telling a child not to lie is
giving life and intensity to 'the lie.' The mere negative does
not amount to much, it is like a tag on a trunk — it may be
lost but the trunk remains. The true method is to quicken the
moral muscles from the positive side, urge the child to be
honest, to be loyal, to be fearless in the truth. Tell him
ever of the nobility of courage to speak the true, to live the
right, to hold fast to principles of honor in every trifle —
then he need never fear life's crises. So it is in the matter
of temperance teaching.
Continued ...
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afcbuddy-
04/12/2003 09:40:26 AM DRINK
IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS. (Continued)
Continued from previous post:
Drill exercises in the
intoxicating effects of various mixed drinks (here the child should
name all the drinks in alphabetic order, giving recipe for each)
will never make a pupil temperate. The tendency will be to make him
pursue the fascinating scientific method of following investigation
by experiment. The individual ever flatters himself that he is
clever enough to sip the sweet and avoid the bitter in all evil, and
familiarity with evil tends to strengthen this, not to weaken it.
Fill the mind of the child with the beauty of temperance, not the
horrors of intemperance; show him ever that the only way to highest
good is through sobriety.
Constantly suggest this to the
pupil in comments on the lives of the world's great men, their
influence and example. Moral common sense shows the falseness of the
theory of teaching evil as guideposts on the road to virtue.
Agitating stagnant ponds does not purify them; it merely sets the
filth in circulation. Subjecting our physical body to contaminating
disease is not an aid to health, and this is equally true of the
mind. No one ever learned morality by studying sin, but only by
fixing the eye on virtue and following that as the Magi followed the
star in the East. While the burden of the new law must fall on
legislators, greater blame must be given to those educators who have
been accomplices before the act, for from them we should expect at
least a germ of reason."
Mr. Jordan's strictures are
eminently just, and show to what ridiculous extremes the study of
physiology is being pushed.
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