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UK Tug of PeaCe

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For once there is good news on the battle to fight political correctness in Great Britain thanks to an infusion of nearly 3 million dollars into British Schools to encourage all school age children to exercise.

After decades of politically correct mentality schools can now host competitive events where there are actual winners and losers, instead of the “everybody is a winner” declaration that has dominated thinking for years.

As one PE specialist told the Daily Express, “Competition is good for children and they all aspire to be the best but to make sure everyone is able to have fun, we offer a wide range of sporting activities including golf, so everyone is able to find something they are good at. Children know who has won and who has lost and to pretend any differently is silly.”

That’s right. Despite the efforts of the politically correct bureaucrats they really couldn’t fool the students into believing that there are no winners or losers in life. In one of my first blog posts I wrote about my own daughter’s experience with the “Tug of Peace” when she was in elementary school.

Competition is natural and healthy. Children need to learn that they can’t win every time and that losing is perfectly fine and that you can actually learn from losing, sometimes even more than from winning.

Thankfully the British have seen the destructive nature of the politically correct thinking that stifled competition. Maybe, just maybe educators in the U.S. will wake up before they have totally destroyed our competitive spirit.

Don Irvine is the chairman of Accuracy in Academia and Accuracy in Media.

Don Irvine
Donald Irvine is the chairman of of Accuracy in Academia (AIA), a non-profit research group reporting on bias in education. Irvine follows his father’s legacy, Reed Irvine, to critically analyze the liberal media’s bias and brings over thirty years of media analysis experience. He has published countless blog posts and articles on media bias, in context of current events, and he has been interviewed by many news media outlets during his professional career. He currently hosts a livestream weekly show on AIA’s Facebook page which discusses current events. Irvine graduated from the University of Maryland and rose up the ranks to become chairman of Accuracy in Media until his transition to AIA. He resides in the suburbs around the nation’s capital and is a proud father and grandfather.

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