WorldNetDaily writer Bob Unruh has freaked out about yoga in the past, so it’s no surprise that even the benign practice of meditation would set him into freakout mode as well.
A Feb. 2 article by Unruh rewrites a press release from the right-wing American Center for Law and Justice that attacks a school “trying to push a Buddhist-based meditation program on preschoolers,” purportedly with federal education money. As usual for Unruh, he can’t be bothered to talk to any school or federal official for the other side of the story; ACLJ appears to be his only source of information. Thus, there’s no explanation of how meditation itself, or seeking “discernment, insight, wisdom, enlightenment,” can only been seen as promoting the religion of Buddhism, or why that can’t have a secular purpose.
(Of course, while the ACLJ presents this as imposing religion in public schools, it has no problem when the religion being imposed is Christianity.)
Unruh writes that the ACLJ “wants to find out from the Department of Education how many grants it has awarded for the programs ‘and how it justifies using federal taxpayer dollars to implement them,'” citing as one alleged example “a $3.3 allocation to Portland State University for a MindUP program, ‘a mindfulness-based social emotional learning program to be implemented on preschool-age children in 120 schools in Oregon.'” But mindfulness is not necessarily meditation; it’s the ability to be fully present in where you are and whatever you’re doing. That is not an explicitly religious principle.
Unruh and the ACLJ won’t tell you this, but mindfulness programs in schools appears to work in improving student behavior and test scores.
The weird thing, though, is that WND chose as its lead image for the article a briefcase filled with money:
The federal government should be trying to fund educational programs that work (which mindfulness does). But it’s utterly ridiculous to portray that funding as suitcases full of cash presumably being shoved across or under a table.
These sort of outrageously biased editorial choices are just another reason why nobody believes WND.