Two Generations Lost: How Teachers’ Unions and the Department of Education Hijacked American Minds
For over forty years, America’s public education system has been quietly transformed—not into a place of learning, but into a machine of ideological indoctrination. The culprits? The Department of Education and the powerful teachers’ unions have embedded themselves into every level of our schools.
Since its creation in 1980, the Department of Education has centralized control over curriculum, funding, and policy—removing authority from parents and local communities. This federal overreach opened the floodgates for progressive agendas to take root in classrooms nationwide. Teachers’ unions, especially the NEA and AFT, seized the opportunity. They became political powerhouses, pouring millions into school board elections, lobbying for leftist curriculum frameworks, and shielding activist educators from accountability.
The result? Two generations of students were raised to distrust their country, reject traditional values, and embrace divisive ideologies like Critical Race Theory and the 1619 Project. These programs don’t teach history; they rewrite it. They don’t promote unity; they sow resentment. And they’ve been pushed not by rogue teachers, but by a system designed to protect them.
Union contracts make it nearly impossible to remove educators who violate policy or inject personal politics into the classroom. Tenure laws and collective bargaining agreements prioritize job security over student outcomes. Meanwhile, parents are sidelined, and school boards—often stacked with union-backed candidates—rubberstamp the agenda.
This isn’t education. It’s indoctrination. And it must be stopped.
The answer lies in bold reform: passing right-to-work laws, eliminating tenure, banning union political activity in school board races, and restoring curriculum control to states and parents. We must demand transparency, accountability, and, above all, a return to education that teaches—not preaches.
Two generations have already been lost. We cannot afford to lose a third.
These are the facts as I understand them. Unions exercise control of instructional time, classroom autonomy, and professional development. This is affected by collective bargaining agreements, resulting in higher spending per student and control over teaching conditions.
Unions effectively control school boards by financing campaigns to elect individuals predisposed to implement union-backed curriculum, such as critical race theory, DEI, and EAD. Union-backed candidates win over 60% of school board races.
Union influences, professional development, social studies, literacy, and equity-focused instruction. Unions additionally resist attempts to reform curriculum or teacher accountability because it threatens their job security.
The broader issue is who controls the narrative. Parents, school boards, or federal agencies. This struggle reveals a deeper cultural issue, as conservatives believe that students’ parents should have a greater say, and progressives believe the state should rule over parents.
One such issue is government intervention by making it illegal to inform parents if the student indicates they want to transition sex. By providing counseling, puberty blockers, and hormone therapies, they violate a parent’s right to make informed decisions regarding their children’s medical and mental health.
It is my view that we need a “PATCO moment,” like Ronald Reagan, when he fired striking air traffic controllers. Nothing will change until we eliminate teachers’ unions and replace them with PTAs (Parent Teacher Associations) and get parents involved.
By banning teachers’ unions, we’d end their outsized control over school boards, teacher accountability, and tenure, and regain traditional values of teaching reading, writing, and arithmetic, stopping the political commentary and social science experiments altogether.
There is no hope in attempting to control these unions. They must be banned completely to stop their ability to collect dues. Deprive unions of their money, and their influence ends. Furthermore, like writing on a clean sheet of paper, we can begin to eliminate politics from classrooms. Only then can we restructure education, giving control of education back to the parents and states where it belongs.
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I agree with most of the parents being pushed out of curriculum and community needs . Education is no longer about teaching raw thinking but how to operate electronic devices to read.