If the last five years in American politics have taught us one thing, it is that we can all use a refresher course in civics. The events of Jan. 6 were only the latest and most extreme illustration of America's confusion over the meaning of words like freedom, truth and democracy.
One of us is a long-time White House correspondent. One of us is a former United States education secretary. Amidst feelings of fear and hope, we're speaking with one voice today to call on our fellow Americans to relearn the lessons of American history so as to prevent the kind of madness we have experienced since Donald Trump descended that escalator more than five years ago.
Our children and young people are watching, and they rightfully wonder if this experiment we call democracy actually works.
They saw what happened in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017 and they heard what the president said. They have seen armed terrorists invade newsrooms, classrooms, synagogues, mosques and churches and murder journalists, educators, children and worshippers of every faith.
They have seen politicians evade responsibility for lax gun laws. Instead of open, honest debate in our politics, they see the opposite — lies, blaming, fear-mongering and racist dog whistles. And they saw what happened on Jan. 6 and read the president's tweets telling the people storming the U.S. Capitol that the election was "stolen" and "We love you. You're very special."
Civics education would help all of us understand that, for all our noble aspirations, America remains a nation of contradictions, inconsistencies and hard truths. It would remind us that while America's first immigrants came here seeking religious freedom, other people came here in chains.
It would remind us that our historic commitment to equality expressed in our founding documents was directly contradicted by slavery. Many of the Founding Fathers we revere were also slave owners.
It would show us that the same pioneers who tamed the American wilderness and created the breadbasket of the world also slaughtered millions of Native Americans with the approval and the assistance of our government.