January 13, 2004
Homeschoolers vs. Big Brother
By
Michelle Malkin
New Jersey’s child welfare system, like most state
child welfare systems, is a corrupt and
deadly mess. Children are lost in the shuffle,
shipped to
abusive foster homes, returned to rapists and
child molesters, and
left to die in closets while paperwork piles up.
So who does the government decide to punish for the
bureaucracy’s abysmal failure to protect these
innocents?
Homeschoolers.
And what does the government think will solve its
ills?
More power and paperwork.
Last week, a Democratic assemblywoman introduced a
bill that would
impose annual academic testing and annual medical exams
on home-schooled students in the Garden State.
Never mind a federal law that prohibits states from
requiring that homeschoolers take the state assessment
designed for public school students. And never mind the
fact that no public or private school students are
subject to such health regulations. The State Board of
Education would be given unprecedented regulatory
authority over homeschoolers.
The sponsor of this Anti-Homeschooling Act is
Assemblywoman Loretta Weinberg. [AswWeinberg@njleg.org]
She said one impetus for the legislation was the
infamous case in Collingswood, N.J., in which four
adopted boys abandoned by the state Division of Youth
and Family Services (DYFS) were found starving last
fall. The boys’ parents,
Raymond and Vanessa Jackson, allegedly home-schooled
the children when they weren’t rigging up security
alarms to keep their famished kids out of the kitchen.
The Weinberg proposal is a shameless smokescreen for
government social workers who botched the Jackson case.
Child welfare officials claimed they
visited the boys’ home 38 times in the past four
years. Apparently the sight of a 19-year-old teenager
who weighed less than a few bowling balls fazed no one.
Department of Human Services Commissioner Gwendowlyn
Harris admitted that she had employed staff who were
“either incompetent, uncaring or who had falsified
records.”
While New Jersey politicians attempts to punish
law-abiding
homeschoolers for the sins of DYFS and the Jacksons,
one of every 14 children in foster care in the state is
placed in a home operated by someone with a criminal
conviction or documented as having mistreated a child.
Moreover, according to a study released last summer
by the School of Social Work at the University of
Pennsylvania, one in 10 were abused or neglected by the
agency caregiver and one in five didn't receive needed
medical care.
"The DYFS picture is not just bleak; it is one of
chaos and tragedy," the
report concluded. "From the reading of the
disorganized and incomplete case files, to the
statistical analysis of the status of children in the
'care' of DYFS, institutional abuse, neglect and
ineptitude are the dominant themes."
Congressman Mark Foley (R-FL), a member of the House
Ways and Means Committee and Co-Chairman of the
Congressional Missing and Exploited Children's Caucus,
noted at a hearing last year that: “Most people
treat their pets better than the state of New Jersey has
treated its children.”
The problem is systemic and nationwide. In Foley’s
state, 7-year-old
Rilya Wilson is just one of
500 missing children in the child welfare system who
have vanished. In California, Independent Institute
research fellow
Wendy McElroy reports, children are rushed into
dangerous foster care homes thanks to a toxic
combination of perverse financial incentives and lack of
accountability for social workers’ gross misconduct and
neglect.
At bottom, Weinberg’s bill is a cynical power
grab—something homeschoolers across the country have
been fending off as the movement’s success has
skyrocketed.
“This is about legislators interfering with
parental rights,” Tricia McQuarrie, a South Jersey
homeschooling mother of five, told me. “It’s Big
Brother.”
Indeed, legislators and the liberal media (witness
CBS News’ anti-homeschooling
hit piece last October) are pushing for increased
regulation of home-schooling parents, including criminal
background checks, because the grass-roots movement
gravely threatens their socialist agenda of promoting
dependency.
God forbid children be taught by their own parents
without oversight from the all-knowing, all-caring,
infallible wizards of the child welfare-public
school monopoly!
A crackdown on innocent homeschooling families to
cure the incompetence of government child welfare
agencies is like a smoker lopping off his ear to treat
metastatic lung cancer.
It’s a bloody wrong cure conceived by a fool who
caused his own disease.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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