One thing a Texas Republican is afraid of these days is drawing a tea party-backed primary opponent. So when a conspiracy theory whips up fear among the electorate, legislators are less likely to calm voters with facts and logic. Instead, they will push that conspiracy theory into a legislative hearing where it could have real effects on policy. The latest example stems from a certainty among a segment of parents that President Obama is forcing Texas public schools to teach Muslim propaganda, Marxism, and Nazi mind control.
“One would never imagine that for the last seven years students all across the state of Texas have been indoctrinated with a pro-communist, pro-Islamic curriculum called CSCOPE,” wrote Ginger Russell of redhotconservative.com. Russell had found what she called Obama’s “liberal strategy for indoctrinating children.” When evaluated on the basis of mere fact, her claims were dismissed. But that didn’t make them go away.
In fact, the conspiracy is being taken very seriously. This week the Texas Attorney General announced that he is investigating CSCOPE and reportedly promised to “shut them down completely” if he uncovers illegality. And on Friday in Dallas, a panel from the State Board of Education will meet to review CSCOPE. This is the same State Board of Education that rejected mandating studies on the Establishment Clause but required Texas students to learn about the Contract With America, the Moral Majority and the National Rifle Association.
Back in 2006, regional education centers created a way for small school districts to buy web-based lesson plans and exams that tracked the state curriculum. Most Texas school districts can’t afford to hire staff to create lesson plans so the idea took off. Today, about 70% of Texas school districts use what are known as CSCOPE materials.
There was no sign of the Muslim-Commie-Nazi infiltration until a tutor named Janice VanCleave was unable to access a student’s lesson plan online. Seeing evil behind a locked door, she and her blogger daughter, Ginger Russell, kept digging and “discover(ed) a Marxist/Communist takeover of Texas Schools,” Russell wrote.
One CSCOPE lesson presented students with a British newspaper story that described the Boston Tea Party as terrorism and asked the students to make up their own minds.
Charged with teaching kids about world geography, CSCOPE also encouraged schoolchildren to imagine a new socialist or communist country. The lesson asked them to design a flag so that kids would learn that certain symbols are associated with socialist countries.
And since state law requires the instruction of world religions, CSCOPE offered some basic information about Islam which struck some as pro-Muslim. Russell’s angry emails triggered an official investigation by a North Texas school district, but the findings didn’t confirm her fears. Last December, the investigation actually found a “bias against radical Islam,” reported the Dallas Morning News.









