Newsweek reports that a rightwing group called “Accuracy in Media” or AIM has been surreptitiously filming educators as they explain how they evade state laws banning discussions of “critical race theory” and other controversial topics.
Their goal appears to be to smear public schools and educators, which advances the privatization agenda.
One educator talks of how a ban on teaching critical race theory could be skirted. Another boasts of how parents can be “tricked” over what goes in the school syllabus.
Both were recorded on hidden cameras by a conservative group that has been releasing videos periodically on the internet—and noting the fact that the videos have sometimes caused concerned parents to flood school board meetings.
As school battles take a central role at the grassroots of America’s culture wars over race, gender, language, COVID-19 rules and more, the group is going all out to draw attention to what progressives are saying, sometimes prompting accusations of unethical behavior with its recordings made under false pretenses….
“We’ll keep doing it until school officials stop lying. Public school administrators are not entitled to a monopoly on deception,” AIM President Adam Guillette, who joined from Project Veritas three years ago, told Newsweek…
AIM has been focusing largely on schools.
In January, it released a tranche of hidden-camera interviews. In Ohio, for example, there has been a so-far unsuccessful effort to ban the teaching of critical race theory and transgender issues to schoolchildren.
Critical race theory (widely known as CRT) is an academic framework based on the idea that there is systemic racism in U.S. institutions. It has become a hot issue for conservatives, who say it is divisive, while progressives say the controversy was stirred up by the right…
Progressives similarly take issue with conservative efforts to stop the teaching of young children about transgender issues in the name of child protection, saying that by doing so the LGBTQ community is being targeted.
Guillette says that AIM’s cameras recorded school employees suggesting that they’ll teach whatever they like, regardless of what laws are passed.
In one video, Matthew Boaz, the executive director of diversity, equity and inclusion for Upper Arlington Schools says to undercover AIM activists: “You can pass a bill that you can’t teach Critical Race Theory in a classroom, but if you didn’t cover programming, or you didn’t cover extracurricular activities, or anything like that, that message might still get out. Oops! There will be a way.”
Upper Arlington Schools did not respond to Newsweek’s emailed request for comment. An automated message from Boaz’s email said “I have requested leave and will be away from my office and email”.
Guillette wouldn’t say who he and others at AIM pretend to be when speaking to their subjects. “It would be a lot more difficult if they knew our tactics. I can confirm that the camera was not behind the salt shaker,” he said.
That said, a day after the AIM video hit the Internet, an email sent to parents from Upper Arlington Interim Superintendent Kathy Jenney said, in part, “We know the video was recorded with a hidden camera and under false pretenses by a man and woman who claimed to be interested in enrolling a student. The couple guided the conversation to focus on the topic of critical race theory.”
The video dropped in mid January, and at the following school board meeting about 40 people spoke on the matter, about 15 of whom were upset about what they had seen while the rest were there to support Boaz….
Open the link to read the article in full.
.
.

So, how many of these conservative “activists” have any idea, even, what critical race theory is? These people are simply disrupters. They are activists in the sense that a gorilla or an incarcerated person who throws shit through the bars at people is an activist.
LikeLike
This is a pathetic attempt to besmirch public schools. It is entrapment. Public school administrators should urge teachers to tell the truth. CRT is not taught in public schools. It is a topic taught in some schools of higher education.
LikeLike
CRT is taught in some law schools. Not in K-12, not in college. Its a made-up story to smear public schools and colleges. Chris Rufo claimed credit.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Are we sure James O’Keefe isn’t behind these? Seems like his MO…
LikeLike
One word: SICK. These rePUG-ni-CONs have definitely “gone ’round the bend.” This tells me so much re: who these people are.
Hmmm…I wonder what tapes Moms for Liberty has about themselves?
LikeLiked by 1 person
For their private viewing pleasure only. ROFL.
LikeLike
Depending on a state’s laws, it may be illegal in some states or all of them, I don’t know, to record someone with a hidden camera without letting them know. If someone is holding a mobile phone and aiming it at you, that’s usually a giveaway you are being recorded even if the person holding the phone doesn’t tell you they are recording.
Still, if the camera is hidden in some way and it’s not obvious, this extreme right group of MAGA lunatics and its members may end up finding themselves in court.
If this group asked questions to bait the educator, setting them up to provide a response they can use as propoganda with editing and revisions, that also may be illegal. I think that is called entrapment.
The question as bait should also be on the recording that was released as propoganda.
LikeLike
typical, the weaponizing of snitches to get your opponent in trouble. This characterized the communist hunting days depicted recently in Oppenheimer. It produced witch trials in medieval times and prevents rational discourse in our modern day.
LikeLike
This Propublica article is about one Texas school board member Courtney Gore who was elected on an ultra-right platform – – and then did her homework!
https://www.propublica.org/article/texas-granbury-isd-school-board-courtney-gore
It also cites the GOP PLAYBOOK from the source – Bannon – to use school boards.
“Before Gore decided to seek office for the first time, prominent GOP operatives had been pushing for like-minded allies to take over school boards, framing the effort as necessary to maintain conservative Christian values.
“In May 2021, former Trump adviser Steve Bannon told followers on his podcast that school boards were the road back to power for conservatives following the 2020 presidential election. Two months later, North Texas-based influential pastor Rafael Cruz, the father of U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, amplified that message on social media, saying that getting candidates on school boards was critical
“We need to make sure that strong, principled Americans, those who uphold our Judeo-Christian principles that have made America the greatest country in the world, are elected to school boards,” Rafael Cruz said in a July 2021 video posted to his Facebook page. “Because I’ll tell you the left is controlling the school boards in America.”
We’ve seen this play out across the country and stories in this blog. They figured out that national news, especially the right-wing rhetoric does not reach “everyday people.” So what better way to get local than show up at a board meeting, raise a dark issue, and sure enough it shows up the local weekly newspaper or online local paper and every district facebook parents page.
They’re dumb but not stupid.
LikeLike
This is tiresome. Fortunately, in the Missouri legislature, after last year’s barrage of anti-CRT, anti-DEI, anti-Trans, anti-LGBTQ+ issues, book bans, and all the rest – this year there were few bills proposed which did not go anywhere even through they trotted them out as amendments to other bills to get attention. Except for the attorney general who is fixated on “wokeness” (so 2022) it was a quiet session (vouchers is another story).
Still tiresome.
From above “Critical race theory (widely known as CRT) is an academic framework based on the idea that there is systemic racism in U.S. institutions. It has become a hot issue for conservatives, who say it is divisive, while progressives say the controversy was stirred up by the right…“
Why are we not (were we not) going on offense? The U.S. government (nothing more “systemic” than that”) was founded under the veil of race and racism. Missouri, as example was voted in to the U.S. in the compromise to balance Maine – one slave state and one free state entering at the same time. A vote in Congress is as systemic as it gets. Civil Rights Act, Title programs, necessity for non-discrimination policies in hiring… All systemic.
LikeLike