In his compelling and sharply critical book titled Lies My Liberal Teacher Told Me: Debunking the False Narratives Defining America’s School Curricula, political scientist Wilfred Reilly takes aim at the dominant ideologies shaping modern education in the United States. Reilly, known for his earlier works like Hate Crime Hoax and Taboo, continues his mission of challenging politically correct dogmas that have become sacred cows in elite circles. This book is a direct rebuke to progressive historical revisionism—particularly the kind found in bestsellers like Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States and James Loewen’s Lies My Teacher Told Me.
These earlier works, widely adopted in classrooms across the nation, frame American history primarily as a narrative of oppression, racism, imperialism, and systemic evil. According to Zinn, the Founding Fathers were power-hungry elites, capitalism is inherently unjust, and the only true heroes in American history are radicals who sought to overthrow the system. Loewen takes a similar approach, accusing mainstream textbooks of whitewashing America’s sins and promoting jingoistic patriotism. Reilly’s book is a deliberate and much-needed counteroffensive to these one-sided and ideologically driven narratives.
It should be obvious to most that the Democrat Party has been the main vehicle of this propaganda, in their effort to obtain and to maintain political power over the nation. Education is one of the primary institutions that the left have infiltrated with their ideology in the “long march through the institutions”.
“Liberal” or “Leftist”? Naming the Enemy
The title of Reilly’s book refers to “liberal” teachers, but the term is arguably too soft and imprecise. What Reilly is truly critiquing is not the classical liberalism of free speech, individual rights, and open inquiry, but the radical leftism that now dominates education departments, teacher unions, and university faculties. These are not mild-mannered moderates, but hardened ideologues who are consciously reshaping curricula to align with progressive politics—often inspired by Marxist or postmodernist frameworks. Calling them “liberal” may be a concession to branding or market familiarity, but “leftist,” “neo-Marxist,” or even “radical progressive” would be more accurate descriptors of the worldview being promoted in American schools and universities.
The Central Accusation: America as a Uniquely Evil Nation
One of Reilly’s central contentions is that the modern educational establishment, heavily influenced by the political left, teaches students to view America as uniquely evil among the nations of the world. Slavery, racism, colonialism, economic inequality, and patriarchy are portrayed not as historical problems common to virtually every civilization, but as distinctively American sins. The good done by the nation—its constitutional government, its unprecedented economic mobility, its abolition of slavery, its defense of freedom in two world wars—is minimized or dismissed altogether.
Reilly systematically dismantles this view. He points out that slavery existed on every continent and that many non-Western civilizations were more brutal and enduring in their practice of it. He reminds readers that the United States fought a bloody civil war to end slavery, passed civil rights legislation, and continues to be one of the freest and most diverse nations in the world. The notion of American exceptionalism should not be redefined as uniquely evil, but rightly understood in its historical context as a country striving (and often succeeding) to live up to its founding ideals.
Tangentially, the black population is not the only population that has been enslaved. People of all ethnicities and skin tones have been enslaved throughout human history by others of the same and different ethnicities and skin tones. However, these facts don’t support the leftist narrative, therefore ideological educators often ignore this basic fact of history. If reparations were demanded for all descendants of victims of slavery from the descendants of the villains who enslaved them, they would offset each other.
We are all victims and villains in some sense, and descendants of victims and villains.
Progressives’ Political Motivation
Reilly goes further than simply correcting historical distortions. He argues that the left’s obsession with portraying America as irredeemably evil is not merely a pedagogical error—it is a political strategy. By tearing down national pride and undermining trust in American institutions, the radical left creates a psychological vacuum. Into that vacuum they pour their vision of social justice, equity, redistribution, and centralized control. In other words, if the American experiment is fundamentally corrupt, then it must be replaced. And who better to replace it than the self-anointed progressive elite?
The irony, as Reilly emphasizes, is that these critics of America are ideological descendants of the very tyrants whose crimes they conveniently ignore. Karl Marx’s ideas were put into practice by Lenin, Stalin, Mao Zedong, and Pol Pot—regimes that collectively murdered over 100 million people in the 20th century. Yet you’ll search in vain for any serious reckoning with these atrocities in most classrooms. While high schoolers are inundated with lectures on the evils of American capitalism, they remain blissfully unaware of the genocides committed in the name of egalitarian utopias. This is not accidental; it is deliberate ideological grooming.
Reilly’s Main Points in Detail
- Historical Context Matters
Reilly insists that America should not be judged solely by modern moral standards. Context matters. While slavery is rightly condemned, pretending that it was uniquely American is dishonest. Other nations had slavery for centuries longer and abolished it much later—or never at all. America’s trajectory has been one of self-correction and progress, not perpetual oppression. - Data over Dogma
True to his background as a social scientist, Reilly relies on hard data to refute common leftist claims. He tackles topics like police shootings, income inequality, and supposed systemic racism with statistics that undermine the mainstream narrative. His aim is to show that the loudest voices in education are often the least informed. - Educational Indoctrination
Reilly lays out how public education has become a factory for leftist ideology. From elementary school to college, students are not taught to think critically but to conform politically. Teachers’ unions, university departments, and textbook publishers often act in lockstep to push progressive values under the guise of inclusivity and equity. - The Silencing of Dissent
The book also documents how opposing views are not just marginalized—they are actively suppressed. Conservative professors are a vanishing species. Students who challenge the narrative face social ostracism, grade penalties, or administrative retaliation. Education, Reilly argues, has ceased to be about inquiry and become a tool of soft totalitarianism. - Cultural Suicide
Ultimately, Reilly warns that teaching children to hate their country is a form of cultural suicide. No nation can survive if its youth are trained to despise their history, institutions, and values. If the left’s control of education continues unchecked, the consequences for national unity and civic order will be dire.
A Caution and a Recommendation
Though Reilly makes many solid points, I must note a personal caution: his language is sometimes foul, and he is certainly more liberal than I am—especially on cultural and social issues. Nevertheless, his blunt honesty about the left’s infiltration of education and his willingness to expose the ideological rot in academia are a welcome breath of fresh air. He is a rare voice in today’s intellectual landscape: fearless, factual, and unafraid to offend.
I strongly encourage readers to pick up Lies My Liberal Teacher Told Me. If you don’t have time for the full book, look for Reilly’s interviews and talks on YouTube. He is an engaging speaker, often lacing his arguments with biting humor and wit. But be warned—some of his language may be rough around the edges.
Final Thoughts
The future of America depends in large part on what we teach our children. The classroom is not a neutral space; it is a battlefield. Reilly’s book is a crucial weapon in that fight, equipping parents, students, and concerned citizens with the facts needed to push back against leftist propaganda. Let us not remain silent while the minds of the next generation are poisoned with lies. Truth matters. History matters. And the fight for both begins with reclaiming our schools.
Robert Sparkman
rob@christiannewsjunkie.com
RELATED CONTENT
Author Wilfred Reilly is the subject of multiple interviews on various Youtube channels. As mentioned, his use of coarse language is distracting, and I may not agree with him on every single point. However, he offers a lot of excellent criticism of the state of education today.
Leftists often claim that America is uniquely evil in relation to slavery.
Historian Colin Heaton of Forgotten History Youtube channel covers the real facts related to slavery, and the slander of America in relation to slavery.
American slavery was wrong, but America is not unique in participation in this evil sin. Additionally, slavery was not limited to the black and brown skin tone. Whites were enslaved as well.
The reality is that most of us are probably descendants of slaves at one time or another.
Concerning the Related Content section, I encourage everyone to evaluate the content carefully.
Some sources of information may reflect a libertarian and/or atheistic perspective. I may not agree with all of their opinions, but they offer some worthwhile comments on the topic under discussion.
Additionally, language used in the videos may be coarse . Coarse language does not reflect my personal values.
Finally, those on the left often criticize my sources of information, which are primarily conservative and/or Christian. Truth is truth, regardless of how we feel about it. Leftists are largely led by their emotion rather than facts. It is no small wonder that they would criticize the sources that I provide. And, ultimately, my wordview is governed by Scripture. Many of my critics are not biblical Christians.
Feel free to offer your comments below. Respectful comments without expletives and personal attacks will be posted and I will respond to them.
Comments are closed after sixty days due to spamming issues from internet bots. You can always send me an email at rob@christiannewsjunkie.com if you want to comment on something, though.
I will continue to add items to the Related Content section as opportunities present themselves.