Over the weekend, The New York Times published a detailed breakdown of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s plan to indoctrinate Russian schoolchildren with pro-government propaganda.
The Times described the Kremlin’s maniacal obsession with making sure young Russians remain slavishly loyal and uncritical of Putin’s government as it wages war on Ukraine and seeks to expand its power across the globe.
I recommend you read it, so you can draw parallels between what the Kremlin is doing and Republican efforts in American schools.
Take this excerpt, for example:
Starting in first grade, students across Russia will soon sit through weekly classes featuring war movies and virtual tours through Crimea. They will be given a steady dose of lectures on topics like “the geopolitical situation” and “traditional values.” In addition to a regular flag-raising ceremony, they will be introduced to lessons celebrating Russia’s “rebirth” under President Vladimir V. Putin.
The Times quoted a senior Russian official who spoke at a teachers workshop: “Patriotism should be the dominant value of our people.”
That’s identical to the stated purpose of then-President Donald Trump’s “1776 Commission,” which produced the widely rebuked “1776 Report.” Remember, he commissioned that report in response to the Times’ “1619 Project,” which examined slavery’s ties to America’s past and present. The Trump administration’s commission was ostensibly created to promote “patriotic education.”
In his 2020 announcement of the project, Trump said: “We will state the truth in full, without apology: We declare that the United States of America is the most just and exceptional Nation ever to exist on Earth.”
Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., made a similar remark in the 11-point GOP “plan” for America he released earlier this year.
“We will inspire patriotism and stop teaching the revisionist history of the radical left; our kids will learn about the wisdom of the US Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the founding fathers,” he said in the roundly mocked plan.
The Kremlin comparisons don’t end there.








