Politico reports that the Scholastic company – producer and distributor of a wide range of educational products to our nation’s school systems – has teamed up with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on an “educational” program about US energy consumption.
In the article, entitled “Chamber: Worry about energy regulations, kids”, Politico writes:
“The U.S. Chamber of Commerce wants middle school students to consider what would happen if government regulations shut down the coal industry or another domestic energy source.
The question is part of a teaching guide the group plans to distribute to roughly 100,000 classrooms across the country as part of its “Shedding Light on Energy” program with educational publisher Scholastic Inc.
“What do you think could happen if one of our energy sources was suddenly unavailable (e.g., power plant maintenance, government curb on production, etc.)?” the guide asks.
Chamber officials maintain that there is no “hidden agenda” behind the question or the educational outreach effort in general. But given the current political climate surrounding the Environmental Protection Agency’s efforts to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, the group’s direct involvement in public school education is expected to make environmentalists and like-minded progressives uncomfortable.”
Actually, the fact that Scholastic is using its wholesome name to traffic the US Chamber of Commerce’s pollution-friendly propaganda should be alarming to anyone with kids in the public school system (I have two.) In fact, the hypocrisy embedded in the US Chamber's involvement in producing education materials on energy for kids is downright shocking.
What makes the US Chamber such an inappropriate partner in child education?
One reason is that the Chamber’s information is extremely one-sided. It neglects to mention the public health, environmental and national security consequences of our reliance on dirty energy sources. The coal and oil which supplies a great deal of our energy also creates extraordinary amounts of air, water and soil pollution, and of course are primarily responsible for the warming of our planet. Our addiction to oil makes the US vulnerable to oil-producing nations that wish us harm. These are consequences that today’s kids will have to deal with as tomorrow’s leaders.
It is puzzling that Scholastic is willing to align itself with incomplete and biased material, especially since its own “Kids’ Environmental Report Card” ranks global warming and other pollution issues as serious challenges kids want to take on.
But even more puzzling is why Scholastic would partner with an organization that has so little regard for the health and welfare of our nation’s kids. The US Chamber of Commerce has a long track record of opposing common-sense public health protections, especially those intended to protect our children. A few examples:
“Some phthalates are hormone-disrupting chemicals that interfere with production of the male hormone testosterone, and have been associated with reproductive abnormalities.”
Yet the US Chamber opposes protecting children from these dangerous chemicals, explaining in one letter to Congress that “Manufacturers would be forced to use more expensive alternatives that may unfairly subject them to additional safety and legal liability concerns.”
Scholastic’s decision to partner with the US Chamber is all the more disappointing because it does include environmental education resources (full disclosure, including some links to NRDC.)
So what can you do about this? You can let Scholastic’s CEO and executives know that you are concerned about the partnership with the US Chamber and ask them to stop the program. Here’s how you can reach them (and a sample note is below.)
Write these top Scholastic executives:
If you prefer snail mail:
Scholastic
557 Broadway
New York, NY 10012
Or a phone call:
(212) 343-6100
SAMPLE LETTER
Dear Mr. Robinson and Scholastic,
I am writing to express my concern about Scholastic’s “Shedding Light on Energy” partnership with the US Chamber of Commerce.
The materials that have been made public fail to shed much light on the critical consequences of our energy use and fail to challenge students to think of creative solutions to our energy problems. They also appear to neglect topics that Scholastic's own "Kids' Environmental Report Card" identifies as important.
In addition, the US Chamber has a long record of opposing efforts to protect children from dangerous chemicals and pollutants like mercury, smog and phthalates.
Kids today are will be our leaders tomorrow. We owe them – and ourselves – better than what the US Chamber materials have to offer.
I urge you to end the partnership with the US Chamber, and to recall and recycle all materials printed and distributed in association with it.
Please let me know what you plan to do.
Sincerely,
Your name, address and zip
Can't have that... considering the ramifications of Progressive policies... must be stopped...