The Department of Education still stands in Washington, its marble façade uncracked, its offices lit long after dusk. On paper, it is alive — funded, staffed, and humming with the quiet machinery of federal administration. But beneath the fluorescent glow, something essential has slipped away. The institution no longer fulfills the needs of a civically minded electorate. It no longer forms citizens. It maintains a system that has forgotten its purpose, and in doing so, it quietly debases the Republic it was meant to sustain.
The Founders would not have been surprised. They knew that a republic is not held together by force or wealth but by the character of its people. John Adams warned, “Liberty cannot be preserved without a general knowledge among the people.” Thomas Jefferson insisted that the survival of the Republic depended on “an educated citizenry,” not as a luxury but as a necessity. And long before them, Aristotle wrote that “the fate of empires depends on the education of youth.”
These were not poetic flourishes. They were structural truths. A republic is a fragile architecture, and its load-bearing beam is formation — the deliberate shaping of citizens capable of reason, restraint, and shared moral grammar. Without that formation, the Republic becomes a hollow shell, a set of institutions still standing but no longer transmitting the meaning that once animated them.
Yet the modern education system, especially in its federal form, has drifted from this purpose. It measures what is easy — attendance, test scores, credential attainment — while ignoring what is essential: civic literacy, historical memory, moral reasoning, and the capacity to engage in disagreement without hatred. It funds the machinery of schooling while neglecting the formation of citizens. It preserves the administrative skeleton while the civic soul withers.
The historian Will Durant once observed, “Civilization is not inherited; it has to be learned and earned by each generation.” But our institutions no longer teach the inheritance. They no longer transmit the grammar of the Republic. Instead, they offer a fragmented curriculum, a patchwork of disconnected facts, slogans, and grievances. The result is not ignorance but unformedness — a population fluent in data but starved of meaning.
In this vacuum, even constitutional knowledge becomes distorted. Those who possess it wield it not as a stewardship but as a weapon. The Constitution becomes a newspaper rolled tight, used to strike rather than illuminate. The civic inheritance becomes leverage rather than responsibility.
This is how republics decay: not through sudden collapse, but through the slow erosion of the transmission chain. The institutions remain. The buildings remain. The budgets remain. But the meaning evaporates.
The Restorationist view begins here, with the recognition that the crisis is not partisan but structural. It is not a failure of funding but a failure of formation. The task before us is not to repair the machinery of schooling but to restore the architecture of meaning — the shared moral grammar, the civic virtues, the historical memory that once allowed a free people to remain free.
As the philosopher Hannah Arendt warned, “Education is the point at which we decide whether we love the world enough to assume responsibility for it.” If we do not restore that love — that responsibility — the Republic will continue to drift, its institutions intact but its foundations hollow.
This is the beginning of the Restorationist project: to rebuild the transmission chain, to recover the memory of the Republic, and to form citizens capable of sustaining it.