TV Turn-Off Reflections from 2002
While our TV was gathering
dust on National TV Turn-Off Week our household was peaceful and
reflective. Millions of households all over America have participated
each April for the past eight years. My fourteen year-old, a Turn-Off
veteran, took the News article in which he and I were interviewed on the
“Real Turn-Off” going on in our home to English class. Not too often
does a kid get to bring to school a newspaper article about himself with
color photo for a current events assignment.
For those of you
who read the article and wondered if we completed the week – hey, no
problem! We have the TV turn-Off thing down. The trick is to start
when your children are young by reading to them or playing games.
When your children get to that difficult time known as the teen years,
they will be accustomed to applying self-control and hopefully have
learned life can be enjoyable without staring into a screen for hours on
end.
Our society has become entertainment-oriented instead of one
based on the work ethic of past generations. In the process history is
filtered through this lens and is being rewritten for the screen at
laser speed. Since schools have substituted social studies for history
very little actual fact is being transmitted. The founding fathers have
been viewed as irrelevant “dead white guys”. When you expunge their
memory and the values that motivated them from history books, there
isn’t a lot left to talk about except feelings, and not very good ones
at that. Some colleges have majored on the mistakes that were made like
slavery and displacing Indians without teaching what was done right.
Recent results of testing on history in our public schools showed
only 18% proficiency in fourth grade and it goes downhill from there.
Last week I substitute taught for that grade level and was reminded
that this is the time we learn about the birth of our nation. I enjoyed
reading a picture book about George Washington and learned he wasn’t
known as a particularly a good speller as a kid. By the time he was 14
he had an assignment to copy and perform an astounding list of 110
European rules for good behavior which I wish I could get my son to
adopt. “Undertake not what you cannot perform, but be careful to keep
your promise”. Come to think of it, he nailed that one on TV Turn-Off
Week!
After we plugged in the television I found myself pressing
into the couch instead of my study of the Book of Revelation which I had
gotten halfway through along with commentaries by a man who believes in
the Rapture, which is the subject of the popular “Left Behind” series.
I caught the final segment of a PBS series “Frontier House”, a
documentary about three modern day “families” taking on a challenge to
live like pioneers for six months. Coincidentally it validated concerns
I expressed about our losing our national edge and becoming soft. They
were evaluated by experts and found severely lacking in firewood to get
through the long Montana winter. Though the menfolk seemed to be
enjoying all the chopping and building, kind of like Tim the Toolman
circa 1880’s, the women were not happy with their role of non-stop cook
and washer without indoor plumbing. One woman was counting the days
until her return to the world of push-button appliances. For this
wealthy couple it was only a game because they knew a mansion was being
prepared for them in California. For the original settlers they
probably hoped for a mansion waiting in heaven.
Their children had
adjusted to the one room schoolhouse and one boy was totally lit up with
excitement about a hands-on archaeological dig. Weeks later, after
returning to the twenty-first century that boy played almost exclusively
with video games. The girls who had been at home on the range were
shown lazing in their hot tub overlooking Malibu as they reminisced
about their pioneer life which didn’t seem so boring after all compared
to life in a mansion. They had gained the perspective to perceive their
luxury as overkill. “How many times can you go to the Mall?” one sister
asked the other.
Locally another experiment supported my statement
that statistically youth today would not understand why they should
protect the Constitution. Proof came when two “big guns” of democracy
visited a class recently at Boston Latin Academy. Supreme Court Justice
Anthony Kennedy has been conducting a “Dialogue on Freedom” program
since 9/11 and invited Senator Ted Kennedy along for the ride since he
is one of the generals leading the charge for education reform, albeit
seated backwards on his horse.
The Boston Latin students credited
Socrates and not the Judeo-Christian tradition for inspiring the
Founding Fathers. Here in the Athens of America as the two Kennedy’s
sifted through the thinking of post-modern teens looking for evidence of
the moral infrastructure that under girds our Constitution and The
Declaration of Independence, no trace of biblical values was found.
Instead they uncovered the fact that truth lies buried in a shallow
grave of misinformation.
Kids today have been robbed of the facts
and moral guidance they need to carry the banner of freedom into the
future. TV shows mock and malign traditional values and serve up heavy
doses of cynicism. Jerry Springer-type shows proliferate while decent
shows are canceled. The patriots who established our democracy and those
who died to maintain it lived by values that are being questioned and
silenced today. The war on terrorism seems to have taken a back seat to
political correctness as biased politicians and pundits take aim at
Judaeo-Christian Values and Tea Party Patriots even using the IRS to
silence what not so long ago were voices for American Values.
In
the voting booth or while holding the remote control we are free to
choose. It is as easy as pushing a button. TV turn-off is about lifting
our eyes up to see the big picture.
Chris Noonan Funnell, May 18,2002 updated April 26, 2014