Foreign Influence

The Child Soldiers of the West

How Political Activism in Schools is Shaping Young Minds and Undermining Western Ideals

Alexandra Audrey Tompson

Jan 22, 2025 - 12:18 PM

The War for Children’s Minds

Western education systems have become a battleground for ideological influence, aiming to shape the next generation. From primary schools to university campuses, political activism is increasingly being introduced into classrooms, often targeting children as young as five. The goal is clear: to mold young minds into active participants in radical ideologies that align with anti-Western sentiments.

Indoctrination in the Classroom

A troubling example of this radicalization is the manipulation of Palestinian children, where education is used to instill hatred and resentment. Closer to home, this tactic is now being mirrored in Western schools.

In October of 2024, the Free Press reported on an open seminar hosted by United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) for their 35,000 members. The seminar broke down methods of maintaining "plausible deniability" about their intent to transport bus loads of school-children to anti-Israel protests during the school day, without their parents' knowledge or consent. For some perspective, those 35,000 teachers oversee 565,000 children from the ages of five. Unfortunately, this covert activism by UTLA is far from isolated.

Across the U.S., teacher unions and activist groups are pushing similar agendas, guiding children into radical activism under the guise of education. Example? The Portland Association of Teachers distributed lesson materials to 4,500 teachers that described Israel’s creation as "settler colonialism". The lesson omits critical historical contexts deliberately erasing parts of history to push a one-sided narrative.

As recently as in September 2024, the National Post reported on a school trip in Canada with children as young as eight years old, meant to educate on issues facing indigenous Canadians. It quickly degraded into a protest with students shouting "from Turtle Island to Palestine, occupation is a crime". No matter how one feels about the complexities of the Middle East, the young minds of children are not the place to wage a war of propaganda.

Who’s Funding the Radical Shift?

Foreign money plays a big role in reshaping young minds. The goal? To influence the next generation of leaders, intellectuals, and activists with anti-Western ideologies.

Let's dive into a few examples.

The Middle East Children’s Alliance (MECA), which supports the “Teach Palestine” project. This initiative promotes the narrative of Zionism as a colonialist movement. Disturbingly, MECA has been reported to have ties to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a U.S.-designated terrorist organization.

Then there is the Arab Culture Arts Program which is funded by the Qatar Foundation, a major player in this educational influence campaign. The Qatar Foundation has also funneled donations to the U.S. Department of Education through its subsidiary, Qatar Foundation International. According to reports from the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), Qatar is the largest foreign funder of American universities.

Many once revered American universities have entered into what can only be described as a deal with the devil. Since 2007, Qatar has poured an astonishing $5.6 billion into 81 U.S. universities, including elite names like Georgetown, Carnegie Mellon, Virginia Commonwealth, Yale, Stanford, and Harvard.

  • Harvard has taken $8 million since 2020.
  • Texas A&M: $404 million since 2015.
  • Northwestern: $690 million since 2007.
  • Cornell: $1.5 billion since 2015.

But it’s not just funding. Entire campuses have sprung up in Qatar. Georgetown, Northwestern, Texas A&M, Carnegie Mellon, Cornell, and Virginia Commonwealth all operate satellite campuses there. And while towing Qatar’s anti-Israel line might seem like a small price for a shiny, well-funded campus, the stakes couldn’t be higher.

These universities don’t just teach students; they shape the next generation of reporters, lawyers, lawmakers, and politicians. Instances of antisemitism are already three times higher at universities receiving Qatari funding than at those that do not. Prescribed terrorist organizations are being celebrated on Qatar-backed campuses in the U.S.

The fallout has been glaring. Harvard’s president resigned amidst accusations of mishandling antisemitism. And yet, these institutions, and the think tanks, unions, PR firms, and media personalities tied to them, seem increasingly dependent on lucrative foreign sponsorships. Their survival hinges on backing the most profitable, trending cause.

This isn’t happening in secret. It’s out in the open. Cash-strapped universities and unprincipled organizations have willingly sold the bright young minds of America, Canada, and the West to the highest bidder.

Protecting Our Children

Students are turned into pawns in a larger geopolitical strategy. But why? What is the true motive? Why are some groups so invested in pushing radical ideologies on vulnerable young minds?

Because a generation is being shaped that could radically alter the course of Western societies. Saving our education system is a battle for the future of democracy itself.

Alexandra Audrey Tompson

Alexandra Audrey Tompson

Journalist | Lawyer (Admitted in New York; England & Wales)

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