America's next 250 years begin in the classroom

As America marks its 250th anniversary, we have an opportunity to reflect on one of history’s greatest experiments.The Founders established a nation unlike any the world had ever seen, not built on inherited privilege, but on the belief that every person possesses God-given, inalienable rights.They believed that free people would accomplish more than concentrated political power ever could.
That vision transformed the world.The United States has lifted more people into prosperity than any other nation.No country has produced more innovation.
America has consistently led the world in charitable giving, volunteerism, entrepreneurship, and scientific advancement.Millions have come because the American Dream is unique: the freedom to build a better life through opportunity.MIKE PENCE: THE NEXT GENERATION NEEDS FAITH IN GOD AND CONFIDENCE IN THE AMERICAN IDEALYet today, something has shifted in our national outlook.A growing number of young Americans are skeptical of capitalism and more confident in government solutions.
That should concern every American, not because government has no role, but because a free society depends on citizens who understand why liberty, limited government, personal responsibility, and free enterprise have produced more opportunity than any alternative.So how did we get here? Much of the answer lies in the classroom.BLISTERING REPORT EXPOSES HOW NATIONAL K-12 GROUP'S DEI AGENDA IS TRICKLING DOWN TO LOCAL SCHOOLSMany students leave school without mastering the skills needed to succeed in college, the workforce, and life.At the same time, schools increasingly emphasize America’s shortcomings while giving comparatively little attention to the extraordinary ideas that transformed the world: constitutional government, individual liberty, free markets, religious freedom, and equal opportunity under the law.A Texas mom told Fox News Digital that she is "grateful to the Trump administration" for passing federal tax credit scholarships to advan...