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Children schooled into silence
The Light
|Issue 60, August 2025
Pupils who question authority are threat to system of control
THE first thing we are taught at school is not how to read, write or reason - it is how to obey.
Before phonics and times tables come the silent signals. Raise your hand to speak. Don't move without permission. Sit still, face forward, and repeat after me.
Questions are only welcomed if they are easy to answer. And heaven help the child who speaks from instinct - the one who tilts their head and asks: “But why?”
Because ‘why’ is dangerous. It threatens the edifice. It tugs at the curtain. And in a society increasingly defined by managed perception, nothing is more terrifying than a child who sees clearly.
We call it education. But let’s not lie to ourselves. School, as it stands in the modern industrialised West, is not designed to liberate minds - it is designed to standardise them. To process the infinite curiosity of a human soul into measurable outcomes. To mould that soul into a worker. A follower. A compliant unit of productivity. And in that process, something is lost. Not just creativity, but sovereignty. Not just intelligence, but trust – in oneself, in one's instincts, and in the quiet inner compass that says: “This doesn’t feel right.”
We are schooled into silence. Not overtly, not with gag orders and handcuffs, but with soft mechanisms of behavioural control. Praise for obedience. Punishment for disruption.
It is the subtle message that your value lies not in who you are, but in how well you comply. The child who memorises and mimics is the good one. The child who questions the structure, who wanders off the page, who challenges the premise – that child is difficult. Disruptive. Possibly diagnosable.
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