A reader writes:
Your reference  to the AP US History test excluding all military history took me back to my high  school. In 10th grade I took "Honors World History;" not an AP class  (those were only offered to Juniors and Seniors), but intended for those who  were on an eventual AP track. My 10th grade teacher had a whole unit on WWII,  and it certainly wasn't the PC pap that would leave a kid with the impression  that the only things that happened between 1939 and 1945 were Rosie the Riveter  and the Japanese internment. We learned about honest-to-goodness battles and one  week even had an assignment where we had to design an alternative to the Allies'  North African campaign!
I came up with some nonsense about attacking Vichy France's "soft  underbelly" with an amphibious landing across the Mediterranean - cut me  some slack, I was 15. The point was that it was an assignment that actually  tried to get us to think about history and war in way that didn't leave out the  actual war.
By contrast, when I took AP US History the next year, the material on the Civil  War failed to mention even one significant fact about an actual battle. Phrases  like "Pickett's charge," "the Wilderness," "Little  Round Top," "Battle of the Crater" and the like were never  mentioned. Much focus was given to the 54th Massachusetts Volunteers, the first  black unit.
The AP class was based on a nationalized standard, since there was a test you  could teach to. The Honors class was much more up to the whims of the  inidividual teacher. I was lucky enough to get an old guy. He retired that year.
So, the great majority of  the future verbal elite of America study no American military history during  high school. Besides benefiting girls over boys, one purpose of this exclusion  is to reduce the politically incorrect surplus of white male heroes in American  history. Thus, Ulysses S. Grant is merely a bored and lackadaisical President,  not the unflappable commander who turned terrified recruits into a victorious  army during the desperate fighting at Shiloh in April 1862, or who conjured up  an extraordinary strategy for capturing Vicksburg.
And what of the only man ever promoted on the battlefield by Grant, Joshua  Lawrence Chamberlain, that peerless combination of modesty and valor, the  college professor from Maine who might personally have saved the Union during  the crisis at Little Round Top in the Battle of Gettysburg? Well, who needs to  know about him these days?
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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