Stephen Sawchuk is a staff writer for Education Week. He wrote this article back in May, and I missed it. I think it’s one of the clearest, most balanced explanations of CRT that I have read.
Sawchuk writes:
Is “critical race theory” a way of understanding how American racism has shaped public policy, or a divisive discourse that pits people of color against white people? Liberals and conservatives are in sharp disagreement.
The topic has exploded in the public arena this spring—especially in K-12, where numerous state legislatures are debating bills seeking to ban its use in the classroom.
In truth, the divides are not nearly as neat as they may seem. The events of the last decade have increased public awareness about things like housing segregation, the impacts of criminal justice policy in the 1990s, and the legacy of enslavement on Black Americans. But there is much less consensus on what the government’s role should be in righting these past wrongs. Add children and schooling into the mix and the debate becomes especially volatile.
School boards, superintendents, even principals and teachers are already facing questions about critical race theory, and there are significant disagreements even among experts about its precise definition as well as how its tenets should inform K-12 policy and practice. This explainer is meant only as a starting point to help educators grasp core aspects of the current debate.
Just what is critical race theory anyway?
Critical race theory is an academic concept that is more than 40 years old. The core idea is that race is a social construct, and that racism is not merely the product of individual bias or prejudice, but also something embedded in legal systems and policies.
The basic tenets of critical race theory, or CRT, emerged out of a framework for legal analysis in the late 1970s and early 1980s created by legal scholars Derrick Bell, Kimberlé Crenshaw, and Richard Delgado, among others.
A good example is when, in the 1930s, government officials literally drew lines around areas deemed poor financial risks, often explicitly due to the racial composition of inhabitants. Banks subsequently refused to offer mortgages to Black people in those areas.
Today, those same patterns of discrimination live on through facially race-blind policies, like single-family zoning that prevents the building of affordable housing in advantaged, majority-white neighborhoods and, thus, stymies racial desegregation efforts.
CRT also has ties to other intellectual currents, including the work of sociologists and literary theorists who studied links between political power, social organization, and language. And its ideas have since informed other fields, like the humanities, the social sciences, and teacher education.
This academic understanding of critical race theory differs from representation in recent popular books and, especially, from its portrayal by critics—often, though not exclusively, conservative Republicans. Critics charge that the theory leads to negative dynamics, such as a focus on group identity over universal, shared traits; divides people into “oppressed” and “oppressor” groups; and urges intolerance.
Thus, there is a good deal of confusion over what CRT means, as well as its relationship to other terms, like “anti-racism” and “social justice,” with which it is often conflated.
To an extent, the term “critical race theory” is now cited as the basis of all diversity and inclusion efforts regardless of how much it’s actually informed those programs.
(A good parallel here is how popular ideas of the common core learning standards grew to encompass far more than what those standards said on paper.)
Does critical race theory say all white people are racist? Isn’t that racist, too?
The theory says that racism is part of everyday life, so people—white or nonwhite—who don’t intend to be racist can nevertheless make choices that fuel racism.
Some critics claim that the theory advocates discriminating against white people in order to achieve equity. They mainly aim those accusations at theorists who advocate for policies that explicitly take race into account. (The writer Ibram X. Kendi, whose recent popular book How to Be An Antiracistsuggests that discrimination that creates equity can be considered anti-racist, is often cited in this context.)
Fundamentally, though, the disagreement springs from different conceptions of racism. CRT puts an emphasis on outcomes, not merely on individuals’ own beliefs, and it calls on these outcomes to be examined and rectified. Among lawyers, teachers, policymakers, and the general public, there are many disagreements about how precisely to do those things, and to what extent race should be explicitly appealed to or referred to in the process.
Here’s a helpful illustration to keep in mind in understanding this complex idea. In a 2007 U.S. Supreme Court school-assignment case on whether race could be a factor in maintaining diversity in K-12 schools, Chief Justice John Roberts’ opinion famously concluded: “The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.” But during oral arguments, then-justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said: “It’s very hard for me to see how you can have a racial objective but a nonracial means to get there.”
All these different ideas grow out of longstanding, tenacious intellectual debates. Critical race theory emerged out of postmodernist thought, which tends to be skeptical of the idea of universal values, objective knowledge, individual merit, Enlightenment rationalism, and liberalism—tenets that conservatives tend to hold dear.
What does any of this have to do with K-12 education?
Scholars who study critical race theory in education look at how policies and practices in K-12 education contribute to persistent racial inequalities in education, and advocate for ways to change them. Among the topics they’ve studied: racially segregated schools, the underfunding of majority-Black and Latino school districts, disproportionate disciplining of Black students, barriers to gifted programs and selective-admission high schools, and curricula that reinforce racist ideas.
Critical race theory is not a synonym for culturally relevant teaching, which emerged in the 1990s. This teaching approach seeks to affirm students’ ethnic and racial backgrounds and is intellectually rigorous. But it’s related in that one of its aims is to help students identify and critique the causes of social inequality in their own lives.null
Many educators support, to one degree or another, culturally relevant teaching and other strategies to make schools feel safe and supportive for Black students and other underserved populations. (Students of color make up the majority of school-aged children.) But they don’t necessarily identify these activities as CRT-related.
As one teacher-educator put it: “The way we usually see any of this in a classroom is: ‘Have I thought about how my Black kids feel? And made a space for them, so that they can be successful?’ That is the level I think it stays at, for most teachers.” Like others interviewed for this explainer, the teacher-educator did not want to be named out of fear of online harassment.
An emerging subtext among some critics is that curricular excellence can’t coexist alongside culturally responsive teaching or anti-racist work. Their argument goes that efforts to change grading practices or make the curriculum less Eurocentricwill ultimately harm Black students, or hold them to a less high standard.
As with CRT in general, its popular representation in schools has been far less nuanced. A recent poll by the advocacy group Parents Defending Education claimed some schools were teaching that “white people are inherently privileged, while Black and other people of color are inherently oppressed and victimized”; that “achieving racial justice and equality between racial groups requires discriminating against people based on their whiteness”; and that “the United States was founded on racism.”
Thus much of the current debate appears to spring not from the academic texts, but from fear among critics that students—especially white students—will be exposed to supposedly damaging or self-demoralizing ideas.
While some district officials have issued mission statements, resolutions, or spoken about changes in their policies using some of the discourse of CRT, it’s not clear to what degree educators are explicitly teaching the concepts, or even using curriculum materials or other methods that implicitly draw on them. For one thing, scholars say, much scholarship on CRT is written in academic language or published in journals not easily accessible to K-12 teachers.
What is going on with these proposals to ban critical race theory in schools?
As of mid-May, legislation purporting to outlaw CRT in schools has passed in Idaho, Iowa, Oklahoma, and Tennessee and have been proposed in various other statehouses.
The bills are so vaguely written that it’s unclear what they will affirmatively cover. Could a teacher who wants to talk about a factual instance of state-sponsored racism—like the establishment of Jim Crow, the series of laws that prevented Black Americans from voting or holding office and separated them from white people in public spaces—be considered in violation of these laws?It’s also unclear whether these new bills are constitutional, or whether they impermissibly restrict free speech.It would be extremely difficult, in any case, to police what goes on inside hundreds of thousands of classrooms. But social studies educators fear that such laws could have a chilling effect on teachers who might self-censor their own lessons out of concern for parent or administrator complaints.
As English teacher Mike Stein told Chalkbeat Tennessee about the new law: “History teachers can not adequately teach about the Trail of Tears, the Civil War, and the civil rights movement. English teachers will have to avoid teaching almost any text by an African American author because many of them mention racism to various extents.”
The laws could also become a tool to attack other pieces of the curriculum, including ethnic studies and “action civics”—an approach to civics education that asks students to research local civic problems and propose solutions.How is this related to other debates over what’s taught in the classroom amid K-12 culture wars?
The charge that schools are indoctrinating students in a harmful theory or political mindset is a longstanding one, historians note. CRT appears to be the latest salvo in this ongoing debate.
In the early and mid-20th century, the concern was about socialism or Marxism. The conservative American Legion, beginning in the 1930s, sought to rid schools of progressive-minded textbooks that encouraged students to consider economic inequality; two decades later the John Birch Society raised similar criticisms about school materials. As with CRT criticisms, the fear was that students would be somehow harmed by exposure to these ideas.
As the school-aged population became more diverse, these debates have been inflected through the lens of race and ethnic representation, including disagreements over multiculturalism and ethnic studies, the ongoing “canon wars” over which texts should make up the English curriculum, and the so-called “ebonics” debates over the status of Black vernacular English in schools.
In history, the debates have focused on the balance among patriotism and American exceptionalism, on one hand, and the country’s history of exclusion and violence towards Indigenous people and the enslavement of African Americans on the other—between its ideals and its practices. Those tensions led to the implosion of a 1994 attempt to set national history standards.
A current example that has fueled much of the recent round of CRT criticism is the New York Times’ 1619 Project, which sought to put the history and effects of enslavement—as well as Black Americans’ contributions to democratic reforms—at the center of American history.
The culture wars are always, at some level, battled out within schools, historians say.
“It’s because they’re nervous about broad social things, but they’re talking in the language of school and school curriculum,” said one historian of education. “That’s the vocabulary, but the actual grammar is anxiety about shifting social power relations.”

CRT = Crappy Republican Tattle
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yup
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Caustic Right-wing Tropes
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I have another translation of the latest misleading war of fraudulent words from the extremist right. CRT = Conservative Repitlian Trumpers.
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The unfortunate thing is that righties have poisined the well for anyone with a reasonable, intelligent concern about even a small part of CRT.
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We should stop referring to CRT and leave it to the researchers to debate. Most of us don’t really know what it refers to anyway. Stick with cultural relevance. You can’t win people over by directly opposing them.
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That would be great. However, the right knows a winner when they see it, and this one has legs as agitprop.
Critical Race Theory. n. Snowflake, libtard stuff I hate.
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The tighty whitey righties aren’t about to stop using this term.
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Today, my life was forever changed when I learned that Critical Race Theory was released from a lab in Wuhan, China, under orders from Anthony Fauci. Quick, where’s that hydroxychlorquine and horse tranquilizer?
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Hahahahaha! I have some left over Heartgard from the last time I had a dog. I can send it along if you need it, Bob.
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Thanks, Mark. Much appreciated! A tip: tin foil hats are effective against Jewish space lasers.
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I just fashioned one, and am wearing it.
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Glad to know you are safe. Hope you also have plenty of ammo because the final assault by CRT is coming. Caravans of CRT, organized by George Soros.
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Thanks Bob. My new job has kept me quite busy, so I haven’t had time to stop by here much. I blame the liberals.
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Hope it’s going beautifully, Mark!!! Love to you and yours!
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I have the same issue. Just when I think I might check into Diane’s blog, I have to go fix errors that CRT introduced into one of my short stories!
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I hear tin foiled yamulkes are most effective against the Jewish space lasers.
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Even better protection against Jewish space lasers is to coat your entire body in schmaltz.
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There are actually a couple reasons for that.
First, the relatively flat shape of the yamulke tends to reflect the laser beam back in the direction from, which it came, thereby decreasing the chance that the reflected beam will destroy surrounding objects and increasing the chance that the Jewish laser will be destroyed by its own beam. Compare that to a cone snapped hat which tends to reflect the beam downward where it might hit and vaporize neighboring objects.
Second, the wearing of the yamulke tends to repel the beam simply for religious reasons, since Jewish photons are repelled by yamulkes.
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Mark
I hope your hat is appropriately shaped.
But it’s never too late.
You can always flatten it if its a cone.
I studied optics at University so I know a little about this stuff.
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Hahahaha! Perfect.
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Although back then the space lasers were actually called Ronald’s Rayguns (part of the Star Wars program), but the principles are still the same.
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The schmaltz defense! So fancy!
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Thanks for all the chuckles in this subthread! 😀 Much appreciated for starting a Monday morning.
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A component of the CRT attack can be understood by reading a new book,”Free Speech and Koch Money: Manufacturing a Campus Culture War.” The book is described as a field guide to the integrated strategy that is in play- allied actors who include visiting provocateurs, media amplifiers and ALEC which provides templates for campus related laws.
The book discusses what we’re witnessing, a right wing campaign that crosses national borders, the Atlas Network.
A couple of new projects to thwart authoritarian billionaires include the Corporate Genome Project and Faculty First Responders which aids faculty who are in the cross hairs of the wealthy intent on subverting American democracy.
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Sorry, gotta run. Critical Race Theory left a set of my chisels in the shed, where they rusted. Gotta clean those.
And I recently heard that Critical Race Theory is having an affair with my brother’s husband.
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As I understand it, the major critique given by Bell and the other Critical Race Theorists was that Civil Rights decisions and laws like Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka and the 1964 Civil Rights Act did not extirpate racism in the U.S. because it goes a lot deeper than the stuff addressed by these–because it is systemic, which is, ofc, true.
But here’s what has happened: The term has been picked up by the right-wingers and turned into a generalized racist epithet for anything that they hate. In this respect, it’s like the term Socialist as used by people with the intelligence of Trump or Boebert or Geene. It’s just a general curse word, like the word blin in Russian. It’s the right’s current Emmanuel Goldstein, subject of the Two Minutes Hates on Trumpy radio and television.
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The Great CRT Scare of 2021 is great agitprop to stir up the racist rabble, like the International Jewish Conspiracy/Protocols of the Elders of Zion and Jews Are Poisoning the Wells myths. This technique has always been effective for aspiring fascists.
The only seed of truth in The GREAT CRT Scare of 2021 is this: These days, lots of public-school kids are learning more in school than they did in the past about racism in our country’s past–about stuff like the Mystic and Fort Pillow and Tulsa Massacres, for example. And lots are being taught that diversity and inclusion are excellent things. And the white supremacists who came out of the woodwork at Trump’s invitation are REALLY UPSET about little Whitey Jr’s coming home and talking about such things at dinner. They are FURIOUS that little Whitey Jr. is calling them out on their abominable, backward beliefs.
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Well put, Bob. Bell realized that the Brown decision helped some Black students, but not most.
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Agreed, Diane. Our schools are as segregated or more segregated today than they were at the time of Brown.
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And the economic disparity is breathtaking. Two topics about which you have written eloquently and often, Dr. Ravitch! ❤
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For thoughtful opposition to CRT and how it is implemented in K-12 schools read this long essay by Andrew Sullivan. I will pre-empt the ad hominem responses that are a staple of this blog whenever left-wing orthodoxy is challenged: Sullivan is a fierce critic of Trump, and he advocated for a Biden victory and a Democratic landslide in 2020.
https://andrewsullivan.substack.com/p/dont-ban-crt-expose-it-2d9
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You are using the word “thoughtful” quite loosely, I see.
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Did you even read the essay? Andrew Sullivan is a careful and very learned writer, and you are in no position to even try to condescend to him.
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Yes. I read it. Polemic.
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Now, if you will excuse me, I have to run. CRT left some soup boiling over on my stove.
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It’s darkly, troublingly amusing to watch Repugnicans combing through the Internet to find someone, somewhere, among the three and a half million K-12 teachers in the US who said something bad about white people. Oh, there was this thing on a Powerpoint slide at a PD session in the Peoples Republic of California. PROOF that CRT is overwhelming school borders, flooding into our classrooms! Organized by George Soros! You won’t have a country anymore! Proud boys, stand back and stand ready! There we were. I had made the country great again in the Trump Whiter House. Melanie–do I know how to pick them? Nobody knows the ladies like Donald Trump–even ripped out the Rose Garden and planted it in all white flowers! And we held all these beautiful rallies in places where whites in the past had held their ground against. . . . you know, right? But the Blacks, you know, they love me. They love Trump. Where’s my Black? There. That one. Great guy. But this CRT. Terrible. Stole the election from me. All those mail-in ballots? Filled out by CRT.
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Is this the Andrew Sullivan attached to the new Rogues Gallery University (University of Austin)?
Julie, I don’t know if you are a woman as your name implies or if you employ the silly game of men at conservative blogs who post avatars of themselves as Black women. If you are a woman, two more people associated with UTAX that may be of interest to you are Ahmari and Lonsdale. Lonsdale formed a company with Peter Thiel, who infamously said, “Women voting in a capitalistic democracy is an oxymoron.” Lonsdale was the subject of a sexual assault lawsuit at Stanford. (Lonsdale denied the charges, settled before trial.)
You should be very concerned about your legal rights falling victim to right wing men.
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Bob and friends, I literally choked with laughter as I read, “Andrew Sullivan is a careful and very learned writer, and you are in no position to even try to condescend to him.” That’s comedy gold! Gold, Jerry (in this case Bobby), gold! You reckless, very stupid writer, you! Get in the proper position to condescend, dammit.
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So, my condescension form is what, a 5.3? Surely, I broke 4.0. Gosh, I TRIED SO HARD. One day when I grow up, perhaps I will be careful and learned just like Andy! Here’s what I was aiming for:
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Greg: “Bob and friends”
Addressing me and, in addition, those who are his friends. LMAO. Not only am I reckless and ignorant, but I don’t get to sit at the cool kids’ table in the cafeteria!
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It’s overrated company.
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I honestly don’t know who sits at the cool kids’ table. Do I? Sometimes, maybe? Other times, definitely not. I’m not sure there even is a cool kids’ table. This is a blog, not a social medium. There are no likes and no ratings. If there were, I wouldn’t be here. Ever. This is an intellectual blog, not a popularity contest. We discuss ideas, not each other.
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LCT, how I wish that were true: discussing ideas, not each other
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I thought it was clear that I was totally joking about GregB, whom I greatly admire and respect and think of as a friend. Would love to have a dark German beer with him one day.
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At any rate, I was totally pretending to take offense. Sorry that that wasn’t clear.
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Unfortunately, Bob and a few others seem to be only ones who get the joke. The only way I can keep a bit of semblance of sanity as the concepts of governing and fairness crumble around us. But, OK, let’s get to the point. The comment that started this discussion is an insult and an example of why we are in the shit we are in. “Did you read the essay?” Please, show us a modicum of evidence that you did and that you are capable of supporting your views.
Now if one of my students had come to me and said, “here, read this essay, this guy is obviously smarter than you are, and he says everything I would have said anyway,” how should one respond? IN my case, first with a laugh, than an F, and then let them know that I won’t do their work for them, come back when they have. What evidence do we have that the person who posed this question actually read the article they dropped in front of me? How am I supposed to interpret this…I can’t call it an argument.
If, by honestly stating that this comment made me laugh, not because it was funny, but because this is what we have come to consider as “serious.” Please explain to me what the difference is between this comment and the Jordan Klepper piece where a fascist claims people need to read the evidence to not be sheep and then admits they never read it. I have carefully explained why I think this CRT garbage is a cynical, deadly game of bait and switch. This is a badly acted Kabuki play about race. I have called out the racists on this blog who beat around the bush, never daring to articulate the core reason for their sophistry. But the idea that the strides have been made, that I’m not racist so how dare you even imply that I ever benefitted from it, or that this is just another political phase we’re going through is beyond folly.
This is deadly serious and we’re playing debating games. And jokes, as acidic as they may be and are intended, are just that. The criticisms, on the other hand, are not jokes.
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Perfectly said, Greg, though I suspect that other readers got those jokes as well.
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Oh, you said Bob and a few others. Sorry. Ofc you did, wise one.
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Greg’s response should be preserved for history. I wish I had the skills to write what he wrote.
Some right wingers advocate for the use of the left’s civility against them. Greg knows the people to respect (some of whom are uninformed and want to be more knowledgeable) as contrasted with the people who should be called out.
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Greg’s response should be preserved for history.
I heartily concur!
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GregB, thanks for that reply.
I happen to think that we should all be careful not to condone posts that are clearly not by conservatives who want a discussion, but by right wingers who are there to attack and insult.
I have seen a couple people here I happen to respect a lot shock me by commenting about how much they enjoy and appreciate posts by certain “contrarians” (to put it kindly) who post right wing agitprop and have never shown any interest in a real discussion about it. Those “contrarians” (to put it kindly) post provocative comments and then attack and insult those replying, or whine that they are being victimized because the replies are too mean.
Once you condone that and normalize that, more of them pop up and it becomes acceptable and that is now considered “discussion”.
Our public discourse has been poisoned by those who now feel empowered to express the most abhorrent views because those abhorrent views have now been normalized as just “the other side” where two sides both have good points and need to be listened to.
One side wants a discussion. The other side accuses the other side of not allowing discussion while every action they take is designed to silence and punish all who disagree.
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Sometimes I enjoy those posts because of their wholly unintentional hilarity. Sometimes because they generate thoughtful or funny responses. They keep things lively.
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But condone and normalize. Absolutely not.
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I, for one, would find this blog a somewhat diminished thing without the occasional accidental comedy routine.
And
“Let her and Falsehood grapple; who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free and open encounter?” ― John Milton, Areopagitica
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Julie said: “…ad hominem responses that are a staple of this blog whenever left-wing orthodoxy is challenged….”
Diane Ravitch has allowed your comment to be posted unlike many orthodox right wing sites which dump lefties from commenting. You righties swoop in, drop your stink bombs and make sweeping generalizations about this site and the people who frequent this blog.
Julie is so typical of the right wingers who think they have a monopoly on the truth, their skewed and highly slanted version of the truth. Telling the truth about righties is not an ad hominem attack. To quote Harry Truman: “I never did give them hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell.”
If Julie can’t stand the heat, she should get out of Diane’s kitchen.
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Sorry about the snark. I agree with Andrew Sullivan that CRT is now being used not to refer to what it referred to but as a generalized term for race-related ideas that some folks don’t like. And some of those ideas do, in fact, have a connected to the ideas advanced by Bell et al. His analogy to not teaching kids Aquinas but teaching them ideas that Aquinas would approve of is well drawn. Nice bit, that. But in this case, the analogy breaks down against the actual facts of our history and of our currently actually, demonstrably systemically racist institutions.
I think that the right in the U.S. learned from the Virginia race that this gambit will work with the electorate. God helps us.
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cx: have a connection to
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cx: God help us. Sorry about the typos. I’m running back and forth between this and cooking lunch. So, too much haste.
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BTW, saying that “implicit bias science” is an oxymoron emphatically does not mean that implicit bias does not exist. I mean by this, rather, that the science there isn’t very scientific and that the phenomenon is complex. I mean that the studies purporting to reveal this are a lot like trying to do macrame with a sledgehammer.
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One of my favorite book titles ever was Difficult Questions, Easy Answers, the title that Robert Graves gave to one of his collections of essays. He was poking a bit of fun at himself there, in keeping with the etymology of “essay”–from the Old French essai, a foray, an incomplete trial or attempt.
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Agreed. Anti-CRT sentiment is also being used as an excuse to attack and target academics in universities and administrators and teachers in public education. It is a tool to cast doubt on all things public. As Linda has noted, the Koch network and ALEC feed on sabotaging all things democratic and public. When the public turns on each other, the distraction gives the billionaires and corporations cover for their nefarious dealings.
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If female commenters at this blog are embracing Aquinas, a bit of a warning should be issued. Women’s rights are guaranteed by human law. Aquinas thought divine law was first, then, natural law, and pulling in at 3rd place, human law.
Do Andrew Sullivan and the Catholic church agree that when Christ didn’t choose women to speak for him that his intent was to keep them from being behind the pulpit in 2021?
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Aquinas thought monarchy was the best form of government, he hoped for a benevolent one. People who agree with him should leave America and settle in a monarchy.
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In order that the happiness of the saints may be more delightful to them and that they may render more copious thanks to God for it, they are allowed to see perfectly the sufferings of the damned. So that they may be urged the more to praise God. The saints in heaven know distinctly all that happens to the damned. [Summa Theologica, Third Part, Supplement, Question XCIV, “Of the Relations of the Saints Towards the Damned,” First Article, “Whether the Blessed in Heaven Will See the Sufferings of the Damned?”]
Gee, I hope that at least the Mr. Sullivan can from his height likewise witness and draw sustenance from my lowly state of reckless ignorance, recognizing by the grim foil that I present his relative Blessedness. In nomine patris et fili hocus pocus ad nauseum.
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To Aquinas’s credit, he goes on to say that though the Blessed can see the tortures to which the Damned are subjected that they might thereby appreciate more fully their own Blessed state, they take not pleasure in those torments.
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cx: ad nauseam
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The term hocus pocus, btw, is etymologically derived from the Latin Hoc est enim corpus meum. It’s mock Latin.
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Bob
Thanks for the Aquinas quote. Rhetorically, the odds that Julie is evangelical like Jerry Falwell?
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I think that an unwarranted assumption, Linda.
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As planned, Bob. Julie disparages fundamentalists later in the thread.
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And I, for one, am a BIG FAN of the traditional liberal attack on racism as embodied in Brown, etc. And I think that implicit bias science is, from what I’ve seen of it, an oxymoron. So there are a number of actual CRT notions that I don’t buy. But I think that we should all just agree that elementary kids should be taught that we believe here in the U.S. that everyone is equal under the law and deserves fair treatment.
I recently taught high school in Flor-uh-duh. And even though racism is rampant here, I was delighted to find that it was very, very rare among my students, who freely made good friends, socialized, and dated across racial lines. Many strongly detested racism and called it out a lot. That was freaking beautiful to see.
There are many adults in the U.S. who would not share my happiness about that, alas. Including the parents of some of those kids. That’s what I think all this fuss is really about. The country is changing, and a lot of folks don’t like that.
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Mr. Sullivan could have saved himself a lot of time and effort by simply quoting this conversation, replacing the word “glory” with “CRT,” and replacing the meaning with the long list of “stuff I don’t like that is sometimes said somewhere by someone about wealthy white people.”
“There’s glory for you!’
‘I don’t know what you mean by “glory”,’ Alice said.
Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. ‘Of course you don’t — till I tell you. I meant “there’s a nice knock-down argument for you!”‘
‘But “glory” doesn’t mean “a nice knock-down argument”,’ Alice objected.
‘When I use a word,’ Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, ‘it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.’
‘The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things.’
‘The question is,’ said Humpty Dumpty, ‘which is to be master — that’s all.’
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“There’s CRT for you!’ said Andy Dandy.
‘I don’t know what you mean by “CRT”,’ Alice said.
Andy Dandy smiled contemptuously. ‘Of course you don’t — till I tell you. I meant “Something bad about white people said once somewhere by someone sometime!”‘
‘But “CRT” doesn’t mean “Something bad about white people said once somewhere by someone sometime!”,’ Alice objected.
‘When I use a word,’ Andy Dandy said, in rather a scornful tone, ‘it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.’
‘The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things.’
‘The question is,’ said Andy Dandy, ‘which is to be master — that’s all.’
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FYI
Ad hominem responses that are a staple of this blog are technically known as “ad hominyums”
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As in “I’d like some ad hominyum grits, if you please”
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Socialists consuming hominids! Just what one would expect!
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Julie Zanton– Most of Sullivan’s piece is not “thoughtful opposition to CRT” because it’s a disingenuous attempt to demonstrate “how it is implemented in K12 schools.” He presents exactly two examples, one of which is a baby book by Kendi [irrelevant]. The other is the Cupertino 3rd-grade math lesson, which is an excellent example of his “demand answers from teachers and principals” [9th para from end]. As Sullivan himself acknowledges, this was an individual teacher’s interpretation of how to implement an equity policy, which was eliminated as soon as a handful of parents brought it to the principal’s attention. That’s how things are supposed to work.
Sullivan’s 5th and 6th paras from the end are a good synopsis of what should be going on in the classroom, and how CRT relates. I expect most teachers would agree with it, as well as with his brief summary just above that on the problems with the anti-CRT laws in play.
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The practical upshot of all this is the following: Repugnicans plan to run in 2022 and 2024 on riling up parents about what they are being taught in school. It doesn’t matter, of course, whether what they say is true. All that matters is that the consumers of sound bites be upset by that bad stuff the government schools are teaching.
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A practical counter to this strategy is, of course, suggested by the many parents who have recently shown up at school board meetings around the country to denounce the GOP call for book burning in school libraries. More, much more, of that!
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cx: about what kids are being taught in school
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Here’s a concept, just teach actual American history, warts and all, which does happen to include slavery and the pogroms against the indigenous peoples and black Americans.
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and which, if taught inclusively, will openly expose the “patterns of discrimination”
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Amen, Joe and Ciedie!
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Can’t get much more unAmerican than teaching American history.
Teaching unAmerican history is the only American thing to do.
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My goodness! This is such a clear, precise, and matter-of-fact article. It calmly, substantively refutes the garbage we hear about CRT. And I agree with Joe above. Warts and freaking all. Taking the responsibility to learn and know about persistent wrongs in race and doing something about them is what’s called citizenship.
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Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé and commented:
Who is behind the attack on Critical Race Theory?
Answer: Conservative Reptilian Trumpers.
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My guess is that the vast majority of Black parents (80+%) would prefer that teachers spend their limited time teaching reading, writing, science, geography, history, technology, music, art, and foreign language rather than harping on racism and white supremacy.
Funny that racism seems to be much more of a hang up for White folk. The more it is talked about the less likely it will go away as the pushback is proving.
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Rage-
That’s just what my sister-in-law (White) who lives in Jim Jordan’s district said. “Don’t talk about it and it will go away.” She got the talking point from Fox like most ditto heads.
I replied, “Yes, I see how that would be convenient for you.” When my sister-in-law was young, growing up in the county seat, there was a sign posted outside of the city that told Black people they couldn’t stay in town overnight. She voted for Trump in 2016 and 2020.
I’m curious, Rage, what have you personally done to advance civil rights?
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I think that negative social sanction is a powerful force for change. You see this ugly garbage, call it out. Every time.
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The pushback is evidence that white racism is alive and well.
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Nailed it.
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Much of the pushback has nothing to do with white racism and everything to do with guilting white people who share zero blame for slavery, Jim Crow laws, or discrimination. Incessant harping about “white privilege” and the enabling of black vitctimhood have done more harm than good. Viewing every single societal issue through the lens of racism implies that America 2021 is no better than our 1950 version. The progress made through the civil rights movement, the war on poverty, and affirmative action policies have resulted in a long list of laws, policies, programs, and practices that belies the claim that America is still a deeply racist country. Amazing that we have somehow deceived the millions of African and Caribbean immigrants who have come here for our freedoms and opporunities.
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The Haitian people, for example, have so many good, nearby geographical options to choose from. Family in Greenland could help them with their transition. Good idea, Rage, we should tack up flyers on the caravan route extolling the virtues of Iceland.
The Syrian refugees head to countries where they are treated badly because it’s preferable to Assad’s regime.
The American people have a history of striving to be something good.
Koch’s campaign fomenting grievance and Russia’s campaign fomenting racial conflict, cuts at the core of what it is to be American.
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There has been only one small effort to actually respond in a serious way to the Andrew Sullivan essay, after which that commenter reverted to his customary adolescent snark. You’re right about the woke/CRT craze being overwhelmingly a phenomenon of the white college-credentialed Left. Almost all commenters here are the mirror image of many right-wing religious fundamentalists who devote too much time to being holier-than-thou. This blog’s frequent commenters devote too much time trying to be woker-than-thou and rarely/never expose themselves to diverse opinions.
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Julie,
Since you’ve described fundamentalists in disparaging terms, I’m curious what your faith was/is. Is it the same as the 6 conservative judges on SCOTUS?
Your argument would hold more weight if media hadn’t documented the Koch network’s promotion of anti-CRT.
Btw, the reporting from RT (Russian state media) about Christopher Rufo in regard to the CRT conflict, does it seem objective to you, because I think it favors him? Fomenting racial discord in the U.S. is
one of the Kremlin’s tactics, according to those who study the subject of U.S./ Russian relations.
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rarely/never expose themselves to diverse opinions
So, you know what all these commenters read? Listen to?
I, for one, read a wide variety of topical material across the political spectrum. Any given time that I’m consuming “news,” it is as likely to be from Fox as from The Guardian. But then, I like to know what the other side of issues I care about is thinking and what kinds of arguments they are making. And, when you posted the piece by Sullivan, I dutifully read it.
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I considered writing a detailed response to the Sullivan piece, but ars long, vita brevis.
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ars longa, via brevis
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This blog’s frequent commenters devote too much time trying to be woker-than-thou”
Or, as Luke Sky Woker once said : May the Race be with you!
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And as the Wokey Chewy said :
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It is interesting how much time they spend dancing around the point of the whole exercise, never once daring to state the factual case, whether it is obvious or not. Hint: it’s not about CRT, never was, never will be.
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Metaphors be with you, SomeDAM Poet!
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Still waiting for a response… There has been no effort made to actually explain why you conclude as you do in your final two sentences. You criticize (are critical, even), yet do not explain why we are “woker-than-thou.”
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Wokeys of the World, Unite!
We are the Wokeys
Woker than thou
Doing the pokeys
Hokey, and how
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I keep trying to put my left foot in, but they never take the right ones out, just putting more in to crowd me out. So frustrating.
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The Wokey Pokey
You put yer left foot
You take your left foot out
You put yer left foot in
And you shake it all about
Ya do the Wokey Pokey
And you turn yerself around
That’s what it’s all about!
You put yer left hand
You take your left hand out
You put yer left hand in
And you shake it all about
Ya do the Wokey Pokey
And you turn yerself around
That’s what it’s all about!
You put yer left side
You take your left side out
You put yer left side in
And you shake it all about
Ya do the Wokey Pokey
And you turn yerself around
That’s what it’s all about!
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I limit my reading of praise for Catholic schools/disparagement of public schools to one article per source. I’ve read my quota of the Manhattan Institute (Koch), Fordham Institute (libertarian billionaire-funded), Notre Dame and Georgetown. This morning, I checked Sullivan’s propaganda off my reading list. I estimate that I’m at about a dozen of the state Catholic Conferences and counting.
“Decoding language”, if anyone knows all about that, it’s Sullivan who spouts religio-speak.
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I did today, see above.
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Julie Zanton,
You did not respond to bethree5’s intellectually sound reply, which does suggest that you don’t want a discussion of the issue.
I have noticed that Julie Zanton is one among a small number of disingenuous folks here who post links to misleading and and sometimes rabidly dishonest articles, who don’t have the courage to defend what they post. Instead, when other people take the time to read the link they post and note the problems with it and what is untrue, people like Zanton whine that no one here is responding to their comments in the way that they approve of, which allows them to simply insult and attack or ignore everyone who challenges the sentiments in the link they are posting.
They don’t want a discussion. They post their opinion or a link to articles ranging from conservative leaning agitprop to hateful right wing propaganda, and then they simply attack every response.
If Julie Zanton can’t defend the article she posted from bethree5’s good comments — which would require Julie Zanton to admit that Sullivan couldn’t come up with any meaningful examples to support his point of view or would require Julie Zanton to defend the ridiculously skimpy “evidence” Sullivan cites — then it is a shame that Zanton can poison the very good discussions here with her agitprop posts.
Are there really no people on the other side who aren’t like Julie Zanton and a few others here whose definition of “debate” is to post a provocative article and insult and attack everyone who challenges the article they linked to instead of defending the article?
What a sad statement on how even Julie Zanton and others like her understand that they have no real defense for the abhorrent views that they have and they believe that insults are all they have. That is certainly the Donald Trump way of “discussion”, which the Republican party has embraced. So when I see posters here who mimic the Republican way of “debate”, their political leanings are very clear.
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Many here seem to be stuck in a time warp. It is 2021, not 1950 or even 1963. Why are you overlooking or ignoring the tremendous progress produced by MLK and the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s and subsequent legislation and anti-discrimination policies put in place? King knew he couldn’t drive racism out of the hearts of individuals but he could change laws and public policies that promoted discrimination and segregation. The Civil Rights movement was so successful that all that is left is the racism in a small minority of backward people. America, all progress considered, is no longer a predominantly racist nation. That is a fact., despite the rantings of the super-woke.
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You miss the point completely. I mean com-plete-ly. No one is overlooking or ignoring anything. We just understand how fragile those victories have been and how close to the precipice we are to not only losing them but actually going backward. I’m guessing you are aware of that trend in, for example, education. Wake up, you don’t have to be woke to know that democracy is fast approaching life support. How’s that for ranting?
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Rage,
You’re just messing with us, got it.
“Small minority of backward people”, would that be the Republican ALEC members in every state who created the U.S. as the most incarcerated nation in the world? Would that be the legislators in S.C. and Wisconsin who, respectively, kept laws on the book to present (used by the McMichael’s defense) which were created for the purpose of returning slaves to their owners and that allow vigilante oppression?
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I did not miss the point. This discussion is about the ugly, discriminatory/racist side of American history and how it should be taught in schools. I don’t recall any commentary here regarding the teaching of the progress produced by 1964 Civil Rights act or the 1965 Voting Rights act, or the Affirmative Action policies and practices enacted in the 1960s. The relentless focus on racism and white privilege would leave most students thinking that America is still mired in the Jim Crow era.
The undermining of our democracy by Trumpism and the GOP, including supposedly discriminatory new voting restrictions, is a direct threat to ALL Americans and has everything to do with clinging to the political power they see slipping away, threatened by our diversity and the freedoms we ALL have thanks to the progress of the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s.
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You still miss the point. The moment you conceded that this is a discussion about education makes that clear.
Do you think all the progress made in the Civil Rights Movement will survive if Republicans win Congress next year and all three branches of the federal government in 2024? Or will being on the correct side of history now become a liability in housing, employment, public life, etc, in a couple of years? History is process. The moment we worry about getting credit and a pat on the back for what we’ve accomplished is the moment we start losing for good.
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Rage, are you suggesting that racism ended in the 1960s due to federal legislation abd the Civil Rights Movement. I wish that were true but it’s not. School segregation is nearly as great (or greater) than it was before the Brown decision. A very large proportion of incarcerated people are black. Housing segregation continues. We had a president who embraced the white nationalists, refused to condemn them, instead praises them. Racism now is no different from racism back then. It hurts more because it’s allegedly illegal.
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So, the problems with regard to racial equity in the U.S. are over with? That would be big news to the vast numbers of African Americans living in poverty; to the ones who, when they buy a home, pay higher interest rates even if they have the same credit scores; to the ones whose relatives have been killed while sleeping or walking through a white neighborhood carrying skittles or, at the age of twelve, while playing with a squirt gun in a park; to the ones who are much more likely to be arrested for the same infractions and when tried, are much more likely to be convicted and given longer sentences.
At first, I thought this comment (“all that is left is the racism in a small minority of backward people”) was so obviously off base that it didn’t merit a response. I really wish that this were the case. Yes, we have made some progress, but are you really putting forward the idea that the BLM marches were all based on imaginary or negligible phenomena? Those examples of systemic racism that I cited here are demonstrable.
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Are you really citing the 140 BLM “marches” that produced over 2 billion dollars in property damages and looting? The same group that supports the dismantling of the nuclear family and conveniently ignores the epidemics of single mother households, black on black violence, and a highly disproportionate share of violent crimes committed largely by young black males? The same group sorely in need of a good course on statistics so they can spread some accountability beyond white law enforcement.
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Ah, so there it is. The parade of Racist stereotypes. I was wondering how long it would take for those to appear.
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A few years ago, I took a teaching job and rented a place in a poor, African-American community because it was near the school, and what I saw there were single-parent households, crime, drug use, and young, unemployed males. Back at the beginning of my career, I took a teaching job in a poor, white community in the Midwest and took an apartment there, and what I saw were single-parent households, crime, drug use, and young, unemployed males. I now live in a relative affluent, mostly black community, and what I see there is two-parent households, no crime, no drug use, and almost no unemployment.
Are you a Bible reader? Then you will be familiar with the strings of begots. Social ills are begotten of poverty. Poverty is begotten of centuries of discrimination. And now, for your homework assignment: move to a poor white community in West Virginia or Kentucky and report back in a year on what you find there. Unwed mothers addicted to Oxycontin? Check. Are you a Bible reader? Then you will be familiar with the strings of begots.
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This is exceptionally vulgar, Rage. Shame on you.
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If we were playing racist trope Bingo, the game would have been over quite quickly after that barrage of ignorant (most diplomatic word I can come up with now), lazy stereotypes. Get used to it. The prospect would seem to fill many here with a giddiness they never thought they could experience. It’s so good when the laws and enforcement of them finally keep people in their places and shut them up. Kinda makes you confused that one of them would claim to be against testing since that’s one of the most important ways to start creating a cadre of drones at an early age.
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We came so close. Trump tried to use the military as a police force against protestors, in violation of the Posse Comitatus Act, but Milley and Esper refused to comply. When the now Trumpy Repugnican Party has the House, the Senate, the Supreme Court, and the Presidency in 2024, forget that separation of military and police powers. It’s over with. And so is the playing at democracy in the United States. No doubt, the Fourth Reich that emerges from this will still call itself a democracy, but that will be even more, far more, a joke than it is now.
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Do you remember all those signs carried by BLM protestors reading “End the Nuclear Family,” all those crowds chanting “Too bad. So sad. No more Mom and Dad”? Uh, no. Neither do I. It has become almost impossible to satirize the stuff said by racists in the U.S. because it is self-satirizing.
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BTW, when I lived in that poor African-American community, the only time I had a gun pulled on me was by a white guy.
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Every time I hear or read moaning about the value of property over lives, I think of this example in history: the starving child in the Warsaw ghetto who in desperation steals a moldy piece of bread to survive is a criminal in the eyes of the law under which he or she lives. The guards maintaining the ghetto were state employees.
I’m wondering what the value might be of the wealth extracted from slaves to Blacks under Jim Crow to the entrenched racism throughout our history in policy ranging from military to housing to education to health care that was transferred to white and wealthy communities over history. Surely in comparison, the mythical “over [sic] 2 billion dollars” would be about .0000000001% of it. And I’m being quite conservative in my estimate. And let’s not even get into Native Americans. No way we could ever pay that bill.
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Of course, the redlining alone due to federal regulations led to many billions of generational wealth NOT being transferred to black Americans because, for most people, their wealth is primarily in the house he or she owns over much of a lifetime.
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Research shows an American culture where Black men spend more time with/ are more involved with their children than White men.
Serial killers fit a profile of White loneliness and sociopathy, having nothing to do with crimes related to poverty.
The preceding, while true, doesn’t fit the right wing narrative.
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Exactly, Linda.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/black-fatherhood-statistics_n_5491980
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Playing with Rage’s assumptions and pretending they are true-
why would he want women confined as wives in violent men’s homes… wait…I forgot that it’s the Bible’s prescription.
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Yes, Linda. The irony is off the chart.
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Este comentario es muy linda.
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UConn Today reported 8-22-2017
Data from the Fed. Bureau of Prisons suggest that atheists are far less likely to commit crimes than the religious. It appears to be a finding that is not unique to the U.S.
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Yeah, and they are a lot less prone to embody a lot of self-destructive and antisocial behaviors. But this is, ofc, a function of other matters, like where they are on the Moral Foundations spectra, their intelligence, their levels of education, etc.
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And, ofc, these are statements about how things are in general. There are quite bright, quite educated people who believe really crazy things. I myself try to believe six or seven crazy things every morning before breakfast. You know, a sort of five-finger exercise.
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Bob
Thanks for the laugh(s).
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Rage– what GregB said, “We just understand how fragile those victories have been and how close to the precipice we are to not only losing them but actually going backward.”
Your argument implies that the progress made through and subsequent to MLK/ civil rights movement is not discussed in the classroom– has been minimized or ignored due to emphasis on CRT, diversity/ equity/ inclusion etc. I strongly doubt that, and suggest this describes instead the polarized media discussion [not how history/ social studies is being taught in public K12]. It describes, too, the doomsday note you pick up here– obviously we’re all aware of progress made since Jim Crow, come on! We are discussing our worries based on current events in the context of our education and life experience… Prove, don’t assume that teachers round the country are dragging the long face into classroom to pronounce ‘repent, the end is near.’
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Above in the thread, Andrew Sullivan and UTAX are mentioned.
Some tweets about UTAX which is located in Austin, “And, it’s super smart to have your university dependent on a fragile and isolated grid that’s a third or fourth priority behind creating the Republic of Gilead.” Gilead is a place mentioned in the Bible. The Hand Maid’s Tale used the name Gilead in reference to a government that ordered death punishments for condemned criminals and “unwomen” via slave labor camps.
Titles for “Forbidden courses” include, “Why do I have to be nice to trans people” and, “Isn’t racism kind of o.k., actually?”
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Andrew Sullivan is a token grifter and is only considered to be an “intellectual” by people who rarely read because the people on teevee like Chuck Todd thinks he’s smart. Plus the British accent. Never forget that there are still Americans who associate a British accent with smarts.
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Chuck Todd proved once again this morning that he’s a Republican.
He said (paraphrasing) that Biden should take back the role of media spokesperson for all things Covid. Yep, that’s a winning proposition (sarcasm).
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All legitimate intellectuals have a British accent (or a computer accent, as in Stephen Hawking’s case)
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Another tweet about UTAX, “Frankfurt School sequel just dropped.”
Critics of the Frankfurt school described its theorists as residing in the “Grand Hotel Abyss”, a metaphorical place from which they comfortably analyzed the abyss below.
Grand Hotel Abyss franchise in Austin- UTAX
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One of Grand Hotel Abyss’ theorists is a frequent guest on Joe Rogan’s show, Lex Fridman, who moved from Russia to the U.S. after high school. He’s at MIT, the Koch’s alma mater. Davis Koch was a lifetime member of the MIT Board.
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Heather Heying is also a Grand Hotel Abyss guest. Her view about the miracle of Ivermectin – not recommended.
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I would suggest not using the UATX acronym when discussing this venture (because that is what it is). It seems to me that this falls into the category of not using the enemy’s vocabulary because it is meant to skew the conversation before it begins.
I suspect the acronym and location are not by accident. It causes confusion with the actual, legitimate, honored, and respected university in Austin, the University of Texas. By using the acronym, the owners of it hope to create confusion–which is the goal of virtually all right-wing political activity (they seek not to build, but to rule and confusion serves cause). They also want to capture the cachet of the state’s university system, of which Austin is the unquestioned jewel.
So, although it takes up more virtual ink, my I suggest getting rid of the acronym altogether by calling it: the “university” located in Austin, TX? I would actually call it: the so-called “university” located in Austin, TX founded by pseudo-intellectual malcontents. But that’s a lot of ink. The SULAT (pronounced sullied)?
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Greg
I’ll call it Rogue’s Gallery U. (although I did like my version, UTAX)
Adding scholar, Jordan B. Peterson.
Be warned- there is a variable that can push average Joe (or, maybe all men?) into harsh, fascist political ideology. While Jordan doesn’t say women are the variable, it’s an inference I drew.
(Wikipedia)
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That was also my impression about the name “University of Austin” — that it was specifically chosen because is closeness to University of Texas at Austin
I checked and was surprised to see that they had actually been allowed to trademark the name University of Austin.
Normally , USPTO disallows trademarks for names covering similar things that are so close to existing names as to create confusion.
The whole purpose of disallowing them is so that someone can not attempt to piggyback on a preexisting entity thereby benefitting from it.
I think they really screwed up in this case.
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I think that Linda nailed this with her suggestion: The University of Grievance
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I really wish that the University of Texas at Austin would bring suit against these people for a trademark violation. It seems pretty clear that Greg is right: they want to capitalize on confusion of the two places, one a highly prestigious and respected institution of research and scholarship and teaching, the other–well, there is a name for what it is, but I won’t use that out of respect for Diane and her salon.
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Bob
It’s not legally a trademark violation, cuz the USPTO has awarded a trademark for the “University of Austin” name.
Now, there might be a mechanism under the trademark system by which a trademark can be contested and nullified, but as it currently stands, University of Austin has a legal trademark on their name.
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Jordan Peterson, after American doctors were unable to cure him, went to Russia for a cure.
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Under their own rules for awarding trademarks, the USPTO should not have allowed the “University of Austin” trademark , but they did and now it is legal.
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If Jordan Peterson wants to go to Russia or anywhere else for a cure, he is entitled to do so.
I don’t have any problem with that.
But I do have a problem with his “IDW” (Indubitably Dumb Web) pal Bret Weinstein essentially fearmongering about the covid vaccine and propagating unproved claims about Ivermectin.
Peterson , the Weinstein brothers and other self appointed members of the “IDW” seem to have anointed themselves the Saviors of the American Experiment (TM). And to top things off, Eric Weinstein has been making the rounds of nutball podcasts like Joe Rogan’s claiming to have a physics Theory of Everything, which, due to basic mathematical errors amounts to a Theory of Nothing.*
It’s actually quite comical and more than a little pathetic.
*Tim Nguyen , a mathematician who got his PhD in the specific area relevant to Weinstein’s claims, has gone thru them with a fine toothed comb and found them seriously lacking.
http://backreaction.blogspot.com/2021/03/guest-post-problems-with-eric.html
But actually, one need not even be a mathematician to see the problem. A critical element (a mathematical “operator”) in the central equation for Weinstein’s theory is actually not defined by Weinstein (and he actually now admits he doesn’t know how to do so) so it’s exactly like the situation where a junior high student just makes up a special term on a math exam and tells the teacher “Trust me, it makes everything work out”. Sad.
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USPTO rules regarding likelihood of confusion
https://www.uspto.gov/trademarks/search/likelihood-confusion
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SomeDAM, yes, I know that they have a trademark, that this was granted. I should have been more explicit about what I was suggesting. I would like to see the University of Texas at Austin challenge the grant of that trademark in court.
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I wonder if Haidt and Jordan B. Peterson have been recruited to Christ Church, Moscow, Idaho, in addition to the University of Grievance in Austin.
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The Absolutely Best County Ever. You Have No Idea How Good It Is, OK? Nobody Knows Countries Like I Do. People Call Me Up and They Say, “Sir, Thank You for Making It Great Again Again.”
A 1776 Curriculum
Look around you. See all the great towers with the Trump name on them? Donald Trump built those. But once upon a time, there was nothing worth having here. No gold plumbing fixtures. Nothing. But there were a bunch of Redskins running around with feathers on their heads. They had a pretty good baseball team, if you want to know the truth, but now they want to rename it, which is just a disgrace.
But then some really great guys called Putains came over from Germany—Fred Trump, for example—and Great Bitten. OK, it wasn’t actually so great. But the Fake News media aren’t gonna tell you that. So, the new guys from Germany and Great Bitten invited the Redskins over for pie, and this was the First Thanksgiving. Sadly, the Skins were so embarrassed by how much prettier the new people were that they got discouraged and stopped reproducing, so now there are almost none of them left, but you can see what they looked like in John Wayne movies from way back then in the 1950s.
Being the nicest people, the Putains weren’t content just to help out the ‘Skins. Nope. They heard that over in Africa there were a lot of s—hole countries where things were even worse than in Democrat hells like Portland, so they said, “Hey, come on over. We’ll give you nice cushy places to live and you can sit around all day playing the banjo and singing about Jesus and reading Two Corinthinans, which is the best book ever after The Art of the Deal, and we’ll take real good care of you so later we can have some great football draft picks.
Well, everything was going real nice until the leader of Great Bitten, King George Soros III, decided that the Putains were cheating on their taxes and not paying enough. A witch hunt. A total witch hunt. So, they sent over a bunch of tax lawyers in red suits and funny three-pointed hats, but the Putains lawyered up and captured the British airports and stole their ramparts and started a who new country based on the idea that all MEN were created equal but some were more equal than others. That last part was needed because of the colored ones, who were worth 3/5ths of a man. Then—a lot of people don’t know this—but before the Socialist Democrats starting rigging elections using mail-in ballots from China and voting machines from Venezuela, who voted was left up to the states to decide, and not only did you have to be a white man to vote, in most of them you had to own property like a golf resort or a hotel, OK? So, things were nice there for a while. Perfect.
I’m gonna skip the whole Civil War thing, except I’ll just say there were some very nice people on both sides. And then there was World War II, where the Americans, despite being the Greatest Country Ever what with Trump steaks and all, took the wrong side and won and then the Democrat Socialists took over and ran everything into the ground until Donald Trump said, “You know, I really don’t want to do this, but I have to. I have to take our country back.” And that’s what he did until the Democrats fixed the election and he had to set up a better, Whiter House at Mar-a-Lago, which is a lot nicer anyway, where he is still President despite what you read in the Fake News Media, which nobody believes anyway.
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If you want the scoop on Great Britain, see this:
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“They used to run around naked and set up big rocks in circles”
Some might argue that nothing has changed.
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Prince Andrew runs around naked and the Queen sets up a big circle of rocks around him for protection.
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Originally called Stonehenge
Now called Stonewalling
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The Circle of History
His liege is under siege
Encircled by a wall
Protected by the Queen
The overlord of all
Though clothing does he wear
His Liege is naked bare
Like members of his kin
Who walled themselves within
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His liege feels quite secure
But danger lies within
The Stonehenge wall, for sure
With gaps that let it in
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Now called Stonewalling. LMAO. Yup.
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People in power are ”… nervous about broad social things, but they’re talking in the language of school and school curriculum,” said one historian of education. “That’s the vocabulary, but the actual grammar is anxiety about shifting social power relations.”
Exactly!
This “debate” has far reaching consequences. Steve Bannon and other right wing GOP operatives have applauded the heavily funded, essentially astroturf movement against CRT with helping to win elections in Virginia earlier this month.
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Thanks for the quote.
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Nailed it!
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“Critical race theory is not a synonym for culturally relevant teaching, which emerged in the 1990s. This teaching approach seeks to affirm students’ ethnic and racial backgrounds and is intellectually rigorous.”
This is great, thanks! Next time anyone questions the value of “culturally responsive and sustaining education,” I’ll say, “You don’t understand, it’s intellectually rigorous.”
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“emerged in the 1990’s”. Please bring commenter, Rage, up to date.
Thx.
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What happened, is Rage being cast out of the fold for saying something other than “I agree entirely!” and “stop repeating right-wing talking points”?
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Sorry, I don’t know Rage’s fate.
Right wing media had convinced him that the Civil Rights Act was not being taught in schools. Rufo and Girdusky are spinning and he appears to be absorbing. Pat Buchanan has all of our best interest at heart.
A bit of a musing-
Students, whether they are POC or not, whatever their gender, are told to,”be all you can be.”
Pastors and priests tell adult White men, that if women don’t stand back, the men are shit out of luck. Was I asleep for a long period of time? Before my slumber, men had the confidence to compete on a level playing field. What the heck happened?
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flerp says: “What happened, is Rage being cast out of the fold for saying something other than “I agree entirely!” and “stop repeating right-wing talking points”?
Linda, why even bother to reply to this blatant lie in which the replies to Rage’s comments made by bethree5, Bob Shepherd, GregB, Linda and Diane Ravitch herself are falsely characterized by flerp as casting Rage out of the fold or a demand that his response be “I agree entirely”?
I notice too many times that some of the contrarians on this blog will post comments that are simply insults and false characterizations of other people’s replies or tone. Tone policing is their substitute for actually defending a position that apparently even they find indefensible.
We often criticize the Democrats for bending over backward to treat the Republicans like they are interested in finding compromises instead of determined to obstruct everything. It is very reasonable to give people the chance to express their views. But when time after time those people demonstrate no interest in having real debates and discussions and instead seem devoted to throwing insults or attacks or simply distorting reality, then it is time to marginalize them and call them out.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on twitter – Jan. 2021:
“Listening to them, you’d really think some Conservatives interpret the right to free speech as “I have the right to be liked, accepted, and popular no matter what I say, who I endanger, or how much I lie”
Also today, Ilhan Omar’s comment about her conversation with Rep. Lauren Boebert:
“Today, I graciously accepted a call from Rep. Lauren Boebert in the hope of receiving a direct apology for falsely claiming she met me in an elevator, suggesting I was a terrorist, and for a history of anti-Muslim hate.”
“Instead of apologizing for her Islamophobic comments and fabricated lies, Rep. Boebert refused to publicly acknowledge her hurtful and dangerous comments. She instead doubled down on her rhetoric and I decided to end the unproductive call.”
Sometimes it is good to understand when trying to engage with those who have no interest in being honest does a lot more harm than good.
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Have to say I’ve never heard a priest tell an adult white man that “if women don’t stand back, the men are shit out of luck.”
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Flerp- paraphrasing
NYC – AOC’s comment, the nation needs more like her
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How is that one can’t keep the same thoughts in one head? Yes, the nation is a deeply racist country. Anyone who reads the history, understands it, and is honest with themselves (that last one is a doozy) can figure this out. Does that lead to the logical conclusion that those who argue this–with volumes of evidence!–hate this country? No. And anyone who can’t or won’t see that is not capable of being objective. Hence the narcissistic navel gazing as policy and “ideas.”
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Ah, another thousand-word entry in the memoir entitled “What I Have to Say About What Flerp Says”!
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Feeling like I know NYC, I think she’d agree with me. A chuckle is warranted.
I appreciate NYC’s willingness to make clear her points, much preferable to people failing to understand as you did, about my point related to the message from right wing pulpits.
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SMH
The controversy surrounding CRT is really about what, how, and when to teach novice learners (children and adolescents) the full scope and impacts of slavery, racism, and discrimination throughout US history.
Distilling this very complex and nuanced history so that it is not misconstrued by students is a more than daunting challenge. It requires a fair, balanced, accurate, well coordinated, and age appropriate approach and all in proper historical context. The current and relentless emphasis on the deeply racist nature of white America and white Americans will be too easily misconstrued by students of all colors to their detriment. Emphasizing (almost exclusively) the “warts” paints a very distorted picture and will leave many students believing that America is still a deeply racist country. Nothing could be further from the truth.
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On the other hand, your tactics are to throw out trite polemics and bad attempts at humor (why is it that right wingers have no senses of humor?) rather than respond. Whatever you may say, write or think about NYCPSP, one never has to ask the question why she (again, assuming) believes what she does. Granted–and I am very guilty of this–sometimes ridicule is the only way to respond to some of the “logic” presented here. But in your case, you seem to be scared to enter that ground. It’s easier to ridicule than respond, I gather. And to be honest, I’m a bit shocked that a law school grad–which I assume you to be–would constantly make magical leaps of logical thinking with absolutely no supporting arguments at all. Whether I agree, which I often do, or disagree, which I also often do, NYCPSP never leaves me with questions about why she thinks as she does, she explains. She thinks! For herself! Regardless of what others think! What a concept!
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“will leave many students believing that America is still a deeply racist country.”
It’s my impression that many commenters here firmly believe exactly that.
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“Emphasizing (almost exclusively) the “warts” paints a very distorted picture and will leave many students believing that America is still a deeply racist country. Nothing could be further from the truth.”
Please let us know about whatever you are taking. That’s some good stuff.
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Whoa, it’s a wall of words from GregB, the learned consultant who calls me a “right-winger” and a “Klansman,” who said he wished I would die from Covid, and who apparently can identify a great sense of humor when he sees one. Greg, how’re you doing, buddy?
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You really don’t want to go back to the Covid arguments you spewed last year, do you? I’ve explained why you are a Klansman in a nice suit and why people who think as you do are the most insidious threats to this nation. You can’t be a citizen if you are a self-absorbed narcissist.
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GregB, why can’t we live in a world where I make my little childish quips, you bloviate bumptiously to the four people who think you’re erudite, and never the twain shall meet?
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I don’t want to let this pass without pointing out an important sentence Rage writes above that demonstrates both our areas of agreement and disagreement:
“Distilling this very complex and nuanced history so that it is not misconstrued by students is a more than daunting challenge. It requires a fair, balanced, accurate, well coordinated, and age appropriate approach and all in proper historical context.”
I think everyone, on all sides of the debate agree on this. There is no question the history of going from Reconstruction to Jim Crow should be taught at the appropriate age, probably in later high school. It certainly shouldn’t be shoved down a second grader’s throat. Nor should it be used to make anyone “feel guilty” about who they are. And this is where we so radically diverge.
I would argue that most teachers, who are professionals, understand this and are conscientiously try to respond to reality and accurate history and its implications. The point that many of us are making is that the mythical teachers who are “making kids feel guilty” don’t exist, much like the proverbial welfare queens never existed. Yet an entire political “reasoning” is built around it. Give teachers a little credit. And if we unshackled them from preplanned lessons, I’d bet they’d figure out a way to teach these issues better within the existing framework of their teaching and lessons.
Where we also diverge is on the use of CRT in the classrooms. See the argument I made above. To extend it, since CRT is not a real issue in our schools, making it an issue exposes a fundamental racist intent. Where we lastly diverge is that knowing how about this racist past and letting teachers find their way to teach it should not make anyone feel guilty if they were not a part of it. But acknowledging it does not lessen my attachment of citizenship to this nation. It strengthens my resolve. My knowledge of the WWII Japanese internment and its aftermath does not make me oppose this nation. It motivates me to make sure something like this never happens to anyone, anywhere.
So, Rage, I hope you at least understand where we diverge. We start at the same place and end up without sight of each other. If I disrespect your argument, it is because I refuse to accept the underlying narrative that you do since it is based on objective facts. Show me the proof of widespread use of CRT in our classrooms, not just some isolated anecdote of a misguided teacher somewhere. Show me the proof that racism is not in our society today, or at a minimum, that whatever victories that have been made are immutable. If you can do that, we can talk. I think plenty of us here have done just that.
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GregB nailed it:
“your tactics are to throw out trite polemics and bad attempts at humor (why is it that right wingers have no senses of humor?) rather than respond.”
“But in your case, you seem to be scared to enter that ground. It’s easier to ridicule than respond, I gather. And to be honest, I’m a bit shocked that a law school grad–which I assume you to be–would constantly make magical leaps of logical thinking with absolutely no supporting arguments at all.”
Thank you.
There is a difference between sometimes posting snark or jokes (as GregB and Bob and others do) and exclusively posting snark. GregB and Bob and others who use sarcasm or jokes in some replies also write many thoughtful posts defending the positions they have.
It’s easier to ridicule than defend ideas that are very often indefensible.
There is still a lot of racism in America. It is shocking to me that it is so hard for some people to acknowledge it.
They seem to want to teach students that there is no racism in America. Or maybe that the real victims of racism in America are white Americans.
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GregB,
Posted that reply above before reading your latest thoughtful comment (which proves my point that there is a difference between posting some snark and exclusively snark).
Your reply to Rage above was brilliant. Thank you again.
“The point that many of us are making is that the mythical teachers who are “making kids feel guilty” don’t exist, much like the proverbial welfare queens never existed. Yet an entire political “reasoning” is built around it.”
As a parent in supposedly “woke” NYC public schools, you nailed it.
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Off topic-
Flerp might find my following comment resonates (based on his comment earlier in the thread, “I agree entirely.”)
If there is a post about the SCOTUS decision relative to abortion rights, I predict that all commenters here will omit churches/religion as the origin of the conflict over the right to choose.
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Linda, I wouldn’t be surprised, but mainly because people will focus on bad-actors like “the right-wing” and “Republicans” as a super-category that includes a raft of bad things, including religion.
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No
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From the dreaded Chris Rufo, here’s the Superintendent of Detroit Public Schools saying “Our curriculum is deeply using critical race theory, especially in social studies, but you’ll find it in English language arts and the other disciplines. We were very intentional about . . . embedding critical race theory within our curriculum.”
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The definition of representative democracy- the community elects a school board which hires a superintendent.
The definition of an authoritarian government/plutocracy/oligarchy- paid operatives use Murdoch’s media to create conflict (fulfills the Russian goal to foment civil discord in the U.S.).
The New Republic reported within the past couple of years that Rufo receives funding from the Manhattan Institute (Koch network).
If the Koch network promotes apple pie or opposes baseball, the wise citizen thwarts the efforts of the network’s operatives. It’s a backstop to the despots’ takeover of America.
While I believe the content of a program that uses benchmarks to ascertain racial progress should be taught (age appropriate), I’m still able to recognize that the right has made CRT a distraction. American democracy is the Titanic. Moving the chairs while the ship sinks, is the objective of the right wing.
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I think the correct response would have been “CRitICaL rACE tHeOrY iS TAUGht iN LAw SChoOL . . . .”
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QUOTE FROM CHALKBEAT DETROIT, 11/15/2021
“Bill 5097 passed the Michigan House on Nov. 2 and is awaiting a hearing from the Senate Committee on Education and Career Readiness. The proposed legislation would prohibit school lessons that promote “race or gender stereotyping.”
If Senate Bill 460 passes, schools would lose 5% of their funding if educators teach critical race theory, an academic framework that historically examines systemic racism as a part of American life and institutions. The bill has not come to the Senate floor.
“Michigan educators could also be docked for teaching “anti-American ideas” about race, or material from “The 1619 Project,” a New York Times Magazine initiative that ties the growth of the United States to the consequences of slavery and the contributions of Black Americans.
CRT has quickly become a catchall term used by some conservative lawmakers and activists to describe various state and local efforts to create equity policies or diverse curriculums in K-12 schools.
“Our curriculum is deeply using critical race theory especially in social studies, but you’ll find it in English language arts and the other disciplines,” said Superintendent Nikolai Vitti during a school board meeting Tuesday.
“Students need to understand the truth of history … understand the history of this country, to better understand who they are and about the injustices that have occurred in this country.”
“In a subsequent academic committee meeting Monday afternoon, Vitti reiterated that the district embraces the basic tenets of CRT as part of its 2020 anti-racism resolution to reexamine district-wide policies and curriculum and encourage students and teachers to critically analyze dominant historical narratives and question institutions of power.
School board member Deborah Hunter-Harvill suggested drafting an additional resolution outlining the district’s opposition to the anti-CRT bill at the December school board meeting, as well as promoting letter writing among district parents and teachers.
Vitti said he believed the proposed bills may get passed based on what other Republican-controlled legislatures with similar measures have done. The district’s best strategy to fight the bills, the superintendent added, is to lean on Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s veto power.
“What I find interesting about this whole idea is that if you look at what critical race theory is, by definition, this legislation is probably the best example of it,” Vitti said.
“You have white Republicans largely outside of Detroit — a community of color — legislating what you can or cannot teach in schools. If that’s not one of the best examples of structural racism, I don’t know what is.”
“Community members decried the recent bills occurring at the Legislature and across the country and its attempts to censor Black history.
“We are at a point where history is about to repeat itself and the repeat is keeping the truth away from our children,” Helen Moore, a longtime education activist, said at Tuesday’s school board meeting.
“American history. Black history. African-centered education. (Critical) race theory. What’s the difference? Why are we so afraid to deal with what has happened in America?”
…
“Jerome Shell, a self-described “concerned senior citizen,” took issue with the anti-CRT proponents’ avoidance of acknowledging the importance of teaching Black history for African American students.
“If you don’t know where you come from, you don’t know where you’re going,” Shell said.
“Our children need to know their story. No student needs to be able to graduate from any public school or institution without knowing our story in its entirety, with all of its graphic (details).”
END QUOTE
Some people want to discuss this. Other people just want to throw grenades. I don’t understand how Chris Rufo fans and their grenades have any place on this blog. Why do they want to destroy and get people to hate so much?
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Linda,
Isn’t it obvious that CRT is not simply a distraction for flerp — some parents do believe that their own children have been badly harmed by being forced to be exposed to anti-racist teaching in their too woke public schools. Given that NYC is known to be a hotbed of radical thinking, isn’t it likely that flerp is a parent who believes strongly that anti-racist teaching is very bad and needs to be banned in every public school in the country?
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Christopher Rufo is not a “source” — he is an activist. So before I become outraged, I would certainly expect flerp to post at least the 20 minutes before and after this meeting so I can hear the context for it.
The above is exactly what I posted about earlier about people who come here to provoke hate and not a discussion. This is a 25 second clip, just like in the past few months flerp has posted other links to right wing twitter feeds where a similarly short soundbite by an educator is transcribed to make that educator look “dangerous” so that readers might be more inclined to hate them and threaten their lives.
These people don’t want a discussion. They want to get you to hate.
flerp wrote this reply: “if women don’t stand back, the men are shit out of luck.”
flerp also wrote above: “why can’t we live in a world where I make my little childish quips?”
I could also quote some of the offensive profanities that flerp has included in some of his comments here. But what would be the point? I am interested in a real discussion. That is an anathema to those like flerp and Christopher Rufo, who think “gotchas” are better.
Rufo is the exact opposite of Diane Ravitch. Christopher Rufo posts to enrage, while Diane Ravitch posts to engage. Rufo doesn’t care about the truth, Rufo cares about making people angry about something that doesn’t exist.
I have no idea if flerp became an acolyte of Christopher Rufo because he became enraged that his own children were exposed to horrifying, anti-racist teaching in their NYC public schools that flerp believes harmed them. If that is flerp’s experience and it has turned flerp into an angry parent who is an acolyte of Christopher Rufo, then so be it. But anyone posting links to Christopher Rufo is clearly a fan.
I read a Chalkbeat Detroit article about the same thing — it used the same quote but also provided a much larger context, which is that it came up in the discussion of fighting against a right wing bill in the state legislature.
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^^I posted an excerpt from the Chalkbeat Detroit article about the same meeting that Flerp’s beloved Christopher Rufo took his 25 second soundbite. But it is being held up on moderation.
If readers on here who aren’t Christopher Rufo acolytes like flerp want a larger context for this, they can google this article and read it.
“Detroit school district pushes back against anti-CRT legislation”
By Ethan Bakuli Nov 15, 2021, 6:25pm EST, Chalkbeat Detroit
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If we yell “Chris Rufo” and “right wing” often and loudly enough, I’m sure we’ll find that DPS isn’t “deeply using critical race theory, especially in social studies,” and hasn’t been “very intentional about embedding critical race theory within our curriculum.”
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flerp,
I don’t understand your comment:
“If we yell “Chris Rufo” and “right wing” often and loudly enough, I’m sure we’ll find that DPS isn’t “deeply using critical race theory, especially in social studies,” and hasn’t been “very intentional about embedding critical race theory within our curriculum.”
flerp, you are yelling Chris Rufo loudly, so did you find that DPS is deeply using critical race theory or did you find that it isn’t?
Can you even define Critical Race Theory at all? Or is it just something you use to get people to hate educators and threaten them?
You want us to hate DPS for embedding critical race theory within their curriculum or do you want us to hate DPS for not embedding critical race theory in their curriculum and supposedly lying about it to us that they are embedding it in their curriculum?
Or do you just want us to hate as much as you do?
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Also, notice that flerp replied without providing any additional context for the 25 second soundbite he posted after seeing that Christopher Rufo posted it first.
Christopher Rufo provided all the evidence flerp needed to know that Detroit was very very bad and flerp felt obligated to warn us all that Detroit was doing very, very bad things in their public schools.
I don’t expect flerp to be interested in the Chalkbeat Detroit article, since Christopher Rufo didn’t post a link to it yet, but other readers who are interested in more than right wing agitprop may be interested in reading it.
“Detroit school district pushes back against anti-CRT legislation”
By Ethan Bakuli Nov 15, 2021, 6:25pm EST, Chalkbeat Detroit
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For those who are interested in more than flerp’s right wing propaganda as encapsulated in a 20 second Christopher Rufo-approved soundbite:
QUOTE FROM CHALKBEAT DETROIT, 11/15/2021
“Bill 5097 passed the Michigan House on Nov. 2 and is awaiting a hearing from the Senate Committee on Education and Career Readiness. The proposed legislation would prohibit school lessons that promote “race or gender stereotyping.”
If Senate Bill 460 passes, schools would lose 5% of their funding if educators teach critical race theory, an academic framework that historically examines systemic racism as a part of American life and institutions. The bill has not come to the Senate floor.
“Michigan educators could also be docked for teaching “anti-American ideas” about race, or material from “The 1619 Project,” a New York Times Magazine initiative that ties the growth of the United States to the consequences of slavery and the contributions of Black Americans.
CRT has quickly become a catchall term used by some conservative lawmakers and activists to describe various state and local efforts to create equity policies or diverse curriculums in K-12 schools.
“Our curriculum is deeply using critical race theory especially in social studies, but you’ll find it in English language arts and the other disciplines,” said Superintendent Nikolai Vitti during a school board meeting Tuesday.
“Students need to understand the truth of history … understand the history of this country, to better understand who they are and about the injustices that have occurred in this country.”
“In a subsequent academic committee meeting Monday afternoon, Vitti reiterated that the district embraces the basic tenets of CRT as part of its 2020 anti-racism resolution to reexamine district-wide policies and curriculum and encourage students and teachers to critically analyze dominant historical narratives and question institutions of power.
School board member Deborah Hunter-Harvill suggested drafting an additional resolution outlining the district’s opposition to the anti-CRT bill at the December school board meeting, as well as promoting letter writing among district parents and teachers.
Vitti said he believed the proposed bills may get passed based on what other Republican-controlled legislatures with similar measures have done. The district’s best strategy to fight the bills, the superintendent added, is to lean on Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s veto power.
“What I find interesting about this whole idea is that if you look at what critical race theory is, by definition, this legislation is probably the best example of it,” Vitti said.
“You have white Republicans largely outside of Detroit — a community of color — legislating what you can or cannot teach in schools. If that’s not one of the best examples of structural racism, I don’t know what is.”
“Community members decried the recent bills occurring at the Legislature and across the country and its attempts to censor Black history.
“We are at a point where history is about to repeat itself and the repeat is keeping the truth away from our children,” Helen Moore, a longtime education activist, said at Tuesday’s school board meeting.
“American history. Black history. African-centered education. (Critical) race theory. What’s the difference? Why are we so afraid to deal with what has happened in America?”
…
“Jerome Shell, a self-described “concerned senior citizen,” took issue with the anti-CRT proponents’ avoidance of acknowledging the importance of teaching Black history for African American students.
“If you don’t know where you come from, you don’t know where you’re going,” Shell said.
“Our children need to know their story. No student needs to be able to graduate from any public school or institution without knowing our story in its entirety, with all of its graphic (details).”
Some people want to discuss this. Other people just want to throw grenades. I don’t understand how Chris Rufo fans and their grenades have any place on this blog. Why do they want to destroy and get people to hate so much?
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If and when the excerpt I posted from the Chalkbeat Detroit article ever shows up, readers who aren’t racist might actually see how DPS’ use of CRT ideas in the curriculum is actually a good thing that poses absolutely no threat to white students.
Other parents like the Christopher Rufo acolyte here will likely believe their own children would be hurt by having those ideas be included in the curriculum.
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Embedding CRT in the SS and ELA curricula of the DPS will undoubtedly lead to some very mixed up messages. The golden rule of teaching states, if information presented can be misconstrued, it will be misconstrued. CRT lessons are the opposite of bulletproof and would require artful and delicate deliveries and a level of maturity and attentiveness rarely displayed by students in early adolescence. Maybe no “harm” per se, but plenty of cognitive dissonance and/or emotional confusion. None of the quotes from the superintendent even hinted at a balanced approach to the subject and its historical context which is unsurprising; just the warts! Thanks for posting as the full Chalkbeat excerpt seems to prove the Euro acolyte’s point. Odd.
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Rufo acolytes point
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Rage says: “Embedding CRT in the SS and ELA curricula of the DPS will undoubtedly lead to some very mixed up messages.”
“Mixed messages”? Like that white culture isn’t supreme?
Please convince me with an actual example of this thing that you fear so much that you claim has already happened in Detroit that you want to ban from schools because you believe the “message” is too “mixed”? Explain how this “embedded CRT” example that you say exists and must be banned is bad.
It is revealing that you believe including more African American history and perspectives leads to “mixed messages”. Because that sounds like you believe that students might be confused but you are only hinting about what students might be confused about.
Why do you believe that excluding African American history and perspectives will help students get a single clear message and what exactly is that single clear message you believe students must be taught that makes you demand the exclusion of African American history?
“You have white Republicans largely outside of Detroit — a community of color — legislating what you can or cannot teach in schools.”
Let’s agree to disagree, Rage. I find the idea that what Republican Trump supporters who don’t believe in science or facts are going to control what Detroit schools can teach in their classrooms to be very problematic.
But Rage believes that it is making history and English classes more inclusive of African American perspectives, history and voices, that is the problem. Because that is what “embedding CRT” means.
And if you disagree because you believe “embedding CRT” means something so bad that you can’t even explain it, but you demand that Detroit be ordered to do whatever Trump Republicans tell them to do, then that speaks for itself.
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Those who abhor the idea of living in a feudal society, racists and not, sexists and not, religious and not, conservative and liberal, educated and uneducated, should be fighting Koch. No battle large nor skirmish small should leave the Koch axis unscathed.
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