• Red State Racist Homo Filth And Their Attacks Against Teaching The Hist

    From Brad Wood@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 22 02:13:43 2023
    XPost: tx.politics, sac.politics, alt.politics.usa.republican
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns

    Juneteenth commemorations in recent years have spread across America, recognizing the end of slavery following the Civil War.

    Last year marked the ultimate milestone. President Biden signed
    legislation to observe Juneteenth as a federal holiday. South Dakota is
    now the only state without a Juneteenth holiday on June 19, according to
    the Congressional Research Service.

    Yet as the nation prepares to celebrate the 156-year-old observance,
    efforts continue to limit discussions about the role racial discrimination
    has played in shaping American history and modern society.

    Republican politicians in 42 states have introduced varying legislation to restrict how teachers, workplaces and public institutions address what
    they consider “divisive concepts," according to Education Week magazine.
    Those concepts include racism, sexism, transphobia, unconscious bias,
    white privilege and discrimination.



    Republicans decry discussions around these topics as “indoctrination,”
    while civil rights leaders and Democrats condemn bans as attempts to
    whitewash the history of enslaved Africans, their descendants in America
    and other marginalized groups.

    “(Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis) turned our classrooms into political
    battlefields and put kids in the crossfire to advance his presidential ambitions,” Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Florida, tweeted April 18,
    2022, while sharing video of a media appearance.

    Here are some of the forms the political rhetoric has taken across the
    country. Florida

    The Sunshine State is on the front lines of this divisive national debate.

    Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis and other Florida lawmakers enacted the Stop
    WOKE Act to restrict discussions and diversity training in schools and workplaces, rejected more than 50 math textbooks to protect students from "indoctrination" and sought to punish Disney for opposing a bill that
    prohibits instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity in
    kindergarten through third grade.

    DeSantis is among many right-wing politicians who have broadly applied to
    these issues the term "critical race theory" while attempting to rally supporters against teaching practices related to race and racism. Critical
    race theory, or CRT, is a college-level academic framework that examines
    how racism permeates institutions. It is not taught in elementary and
    secondary education.

    “Florida’s education system exists to create opportunity for our
    children,” DeSantis tweeted in June 2021. “Critical Race Theory teaches
    kids to hate our country and to hate each other. It is state-sanctioned
    racism and has no place in Florida schools.”

    Democrats claim the rhetoric and legislation are designed to diminish past
    and present inequities faced by minorities.

    “Why is it bad to be awake, to be conscious of things, aware of what’s happening and aware of what’s happened?” Sen. Gary Farmer, D-Lighthouse
    Point, said during a state Senate session in March 2022. “Make no mistake, racism is alive and doing all too well in the year 2022.” Tennessee

    Tennessee lawmakers have followed a similar page, particularly when it
    comes to books.

    In June 2021, after state restrictions on race and bias teaching took
    effect, a parent group petitioned for the removal of “Ruby Bridges Goes to School: My True Story” by Ruby Bridges. The book was published in 2009.

    As a 6-year-old, Bridges made history on Nov. 4, 1960, as one of the first Black students to integrate America's public schools following the U.S.
    Supreme Court's landmark ruling in Brown v. Board of Education.

    Back in Tennessee, a parent group, Williamson County Moms for Liberty,
    argued the autobiography contains "explicit and implicit anti-American, anti-white and anti-Mexican teaching" designed to make children "hate
    their country, each other, and/or themselves."

    The group later tweeted in July 2021: "'I always say that it would be
    really really hard to explain to a six year old child what I was about to encounter, going to school that day.' --Ruby Bridges. Should history be
    taught? Emphatically, YES. But with objectivity and at an appropriate
    age."

    Rep. Jerry Sexton, R-Bean Station, introduced an amendment during a state
    House session on April 27, 2022, that would give his state’s politically-appointed textbook commission veto power over what books are allowed in school libraries. When asked on the House floor what he would
    do with any books that are banned — specifically whether he'd put them in
    the street or light them on fire, Sexton replied, "I don’t have a clue,
    but I would burn ‘em."

    Sexton later said on the floor he wasn’t a member of the textbook
    commission and didn’t think any book-burning was likely to occur. Sexton’s comments came less than three months after Tennessee pastor Greg Locke organized a book burning that destroyed copies of Holocaust-themed graphic novel "Maus," "Harry Potter," "Twilight" and other works. Arizona

    An investigation by USA TODAY and its network of newspapers found
    right-wing groups such as the Center for Arizona Policy and the Goldwater Institute helped draft much of the anti-CRT legislation proposed across
    the nation.

    In Arizona, legislation seeks to make teachers subject to a $5,000 fine if
    they allow classroom discussions on controversial topics such as racism,
    or fail to give equal weight to divisive topics. Legislation has also been proposed that would allow parents to review instructional material and
    school library books.

    "Racism cannot be combated by teaching children to be racist," Republican
    state Rep. Michelle Udall, the sponsor of Arizona’s "Unbiased Teaching
    Act," said in a May 2021 release.

    Parents have voiced similar views at school board meetings in Arizona and beyond, igniting heated confrontations throughout many traditionally nonpartisan government bodies.

    State Sen. Martín Quezada is among the Democrats who condemned Udall's arguments.

    "This bill is nothing more than a knee-jerk reaction to a complete misunderstanding of what #CriticalRaceTheory even is," Quezada tweeted in response. "The people who need it the most are the ones who voted to ban
    it." Oklahoma

    Incendiary remarks about racism haven’t been confined to anti-critical
    race theory bills. A Oklahoma state representative sparked backlash in
    April 2021 when he, a white Republican, compared lawmakers’ push to end abortion to the fight against slavery.

    Rep. Jim Olsen, R-Roland, defended his comments after Democrats asked for
    Olsen to be formally censured.

    "I made a very historically appropriate analogy. I never spoke positively
    of slavery," Olsen told the Associated Press. "One evil at one time was acceptable in our society, and now it’s not. I look forward to the time
    when we stop killing babies."

    Later in the year, Olsen proposed a slavery education bill to prevent
    Oklahoma schools from teaching students that one race was the "unique oppressor" or "victim."

    "The fact that Jim Olsen chooses to fight to romanticize the legacy of
    slave owners in the American south is a little strange, but not all that surprising," Rep. Monroe Nichols, a Black Democrat, tweeted in response on
    Dec. 15, 2021.

    Oklahoma’s Republican majority killed a bill last year that would have
    mandated all state lawmakers attend racial sensitivity training. Indiana

    Indiana is another state that has pitched legislation to allow parents to review teachers’ lesson plans and educational materials.

    Lawmakers’ efforts to pass broad restrictions on teaching content
    ultimately failed, unlike in other Republican-controlled states, but a watered-down version of the bill did offer school districts the option to create parental review boards.

    While the legislation is softer than other states like Florida that grant parents authority to sue schools if they believe critical race theory is
    being taught, teachers have expressed concern the measure will still have
    a chilling effect.

    Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita tweeted on April 28, 2022: "Staff
    from my office attended the Noblesville School Board Candidates’ Forum
    earlier this week to interact with Hoosiers who are concerned about their children’s education. My office fights for parents' rights!" Maine

    Maine hasn’t passed any legislation restricting lessons on racism, but GOP leaders did use the Republican Party’s convention in April 2022 to adopt a platform aimed at doing so.

    The symbolic platform would limit teaching about critical race theory,
    sexual orientation and gender identity, the Bangor Daily News has
    reported. The platform now defines teaching or promoting biological
    genders other than male or female as child sexual abuse, with limited exceptions, according to the newspaper.

    A measure to remove same-sex marriage opposition from the platform failed, meaning the Maine GOP's official platform still considers marriage to only
    be between a man and a woman.

    Gubernatorial candidate Paul LePage, a former governor, said during the convention, according to a Maine GOP tweet: "The Choice next November is
    Clear – I stand for Faith, Freedom and Trust. My opponent stands for
    Power, Control, Mandates and DC Swamp Politics." Texas

    After the University of Texas Faculty Council passed a resolution in
    February 2022 to affirm the academic freedom to teach about race, gender justice and critical race theory, the state’s Republican lieutenant
    governor fired back.

    Dan Patrick proposed ending all tenure for new hires at Texas public universities, on top of revoking tenure for faculty who teach CRT. The
    move is one of several Texas is considering this year to fight what it considers liberal indoctrination.

    Joining Texas teachers and Democrats in opposition to Patrick’s proposal
    were professors in other parts of the country, including those who said
    they disagree with lessons contained with CRT.

    University of Chicago economics professor Harald Uhlig tweeted on Feb. 21, 2022: "Let me state clearly that banning CRT teaching at universities or revoking tenure of faculty that do, is a terrible idea, @DanPatrick (and I
    am not a friend of CRT). It should not be done in a free country.
    Enhancing the diversity of views is the way to go." New Hampshire

    After attempts to pass legislation banning CRT and other "divisive
    concepts" failed in the New Hampshire House in 2021, Republicans used a
    trailer bill to insert the language into the state’s budget.

    State Rep. Richard Littlefield, R-Laconia, tweeted his support in June
    2021, one month before Republican Gov. Chris Sununu signed the budget and language into law. He tweeted: "Why first amendment rights in this case supercede childrens rights not to be indoctrinated by liberal hate filled Rhetoric?"

    In November 2021, the Granite State’s Department of Education created an
    online tip line parents and students can use to report teachers who
    violate the restrictions. A New Hampshire chapter of national group Moms
    for Liberty followed the announcement with tweets offering $500 to the
    first person "that successfully catches a public school teacher."

    Educators fired back and 10 members of the governor’s Advisory Council on Diversity and Inclusion resigned over the "divisive concepts" language.

    "The language of this bill is scary, it’s scary for educators, public employees; all of us who want to have, who need to have, deep
    conversations about the issues really affecting New Hampshire," said state
    Rep. Jim Maggiore, D-North Hampton, one of the individuals who resigned
    from the governor’s council. "We’re not just talking about race, ability, gender and sexual orientation; it’s everything that touches our lives.
    (With this budget), what we’ve said is we’re going to put a gag order, and
    put up a time limit on history, and only talk about a historical context
    that is undefined."

    Supporters of banning "divisive concepts" used social media to
    characterize teachers who publicly came out against the reporting site as "communists."

    The New Hampshire chapter of the Free State Project, a libertarian group, tweeted Nov. 11, 2021: "Unsurprisingly, the communists in the teacher's
    union are big mad about New Hampshire's public school CRT ban."



    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2022/06/15/which-states-celebrate- juneteenth-ban-critical-race-theory-slavery-racism/9617749002/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)