The Number One Book About Education
The Systematic Destruction of American Education
Here’s an excerpt from The Leipzig Connection (Basics in Education):
In the final years of the last century, a great transformation began in American education. By the end of the first World War, Americans would notice increasingly a change in the way their children were being educated. In the succeeding decades, the same schools that once nurtured the American dream would become infested with drugs and crime, and high schools would be graduating students who could barely read, spell, or do simple arithmetic.
Authors Paolo Lionni and Lance J. Klass introduce to the public a book that investigates the structure of the education system in the United States. From the beginning of the twentieth century to the present, the education system has changed, and not for the better, according to the authors. This is the number one book about education, and anyone who is remotely interested in education should own a copy.
Wilhelm Wundt founded the first formal laboratory for psychological research at the University of Leipzig, located in Germany. Wundt is considered the father of psychology. His students, many of whom were American, would bring the Wundt doctrine to the classrooms in America.
The Wundt doctrine would produce the first generation of researchers, professors, and publicists in the new psychology. The list of students taught by Wundt is substantial.
Rockefeller money, literally millions of dollars, would change the education system dramatically. This was an effort to sway public opinion and gain social control of the masses. This would be backed by John D. Rockefeller, Sr.
The Leipzig Connection (Basics in Education) also reveals how the Rockefeller money made its way into the American medical education. The grand design was to aid in the development of chemically oriented medicine in the United States.
One should get more familiar with the history and the players of the education system in America. The Leipzig Connection is the best place to begin the journey. This book is brief (115 pages), easy to read, precise, and very informative.
This is the complete story of education in America.