Posted on Feb 6, 2022
Youngkin education appointees have been attacking CRT in right-wing and local media for years
964
8
2
5
5
0
Posted 3 y ago
Responses: 2
1SG (Join to see) "One of his appointees also has ties to an anti-CRT organization that paints itself as a parent advocacy group, despite being rife with GOP operatives.
Critical race theory (CRT) is a graduate-level academic framework that analyzes how racism is embedded into U.S. policies, institutions, and culture. Right-wing media and politicians have inaccurately used the theory’s name to demonize a wide variety of anti-racist practices.
Even though CRT is not taught as a subject in K-12 settings, conservative politicians nationwide are placing restrictions on teaching and increasing surveillance of teachers under the guise of combating CRT. These restrictions include outlawing substantive discussions of racism or the history of racial oppression in K-12 schools, proposing cameras in classrooms, and banning books about race and LGBTQ identity. Many Black parents and students suggest these policies are whitewashing U.S. history, and many teachers say such bans are hampering important conversations about race.
Meanwhile, conservatives are using the CRT boogeyman to stir up racist backlash for legislative and electoral gain. Youngkin’s gubernatorial run was an early test of this electoral strategy. On the campaign trail, Youngkin bashed CRT and said his “Day One Game Plan” included a pledge to ban CRT. On his first day in office, Youngkin signed an executive order banning the teaching of so-called “divisive ideologies” in schools — a move that Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Michael Paul Williams said amounted to “right-wing political indoctrination and the epitome of systemic racism.”
Youngkin’s picks for the state’s top education and diversity positions cemented his administration’s anti-CRT stance. He named Jillian Balow and Elizabeth Schultz as the superintendent and assistant superintendent, respectively, of the Virginia Department of Education. In a statement, Youngkin said that Balow and Schultz would work to “ban critical race theory and political agendas from our classrooms, and rebuild our crumbling schools.” Later on, Youngkin announced his pick for Virginia’s chief diversity officer, Angela Sailor, whose role he said will include “eliminating disparities in prenatal care," being "an ambassador for unborn children,” and ensuring that Virginia’s history curriculum is “honest, objective, and complete.”
These three appointees all have histories of using right-wing media and local outlets to undermine social progress, attack critical race theory, and advance a conservative agenda".
Critical race theory (CRT) is a graduate-level academic framework that analyzes how racism is embedded into U.S. policies, institutions, and culture. Right-wing media and politicians have inaccurately used the theory’s name to demonize a wide variety of anti-racist practices.
Even though CRT is not taught as a subject in K-12 settings, conservative politicians nationwide are placing restrictions on teaching and increasing surveillance of teachers under the guise of combating CRT. These restrictions include outlawing substantive discussions of racism or the history of racial oppression in K-12 schools, proposing cameras in classrooms, and banning books about race and LGBTQ identity. Many Black parents and students suggest these policies are whitewashing U.S. history, and many teachers say such bans are hampering important conversations about race.
Meanwhile, conservatives are using the CRT boogeyman to stir up racist backlash for legislative and electoral gain. Youngkin’s gubernatorial run was an early test of this electoral strategy. On the campaign trail, Youngkin bashed CRT and said his “Day One Game Plan” included a pledge to ban CRT. On his first day in office, Youngkin signed an executive order banning the teaching of so-called “divisive ideologies” in schools — a move that Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Michael Paul Williams said amounted to “right-wing political indoctrination and the epitome of systemic racism.”
Youngkin’s picks for the state’s top education and diversity positions cemented his administration’s anti-CRT stance. He named Jillian Balow and Elizabeth Schultz as the superintendent and assistant superintendent, respectively, of the Virginia Department of Education. In a statement, Youngkin said that Balow and Schultz would work to “ban critical race theory and political agendas from our classrooms, and rebuild our crumbling schools.” Later on, Youngkin announced his pick for Virginia’s chief diversity officer, Angela Sailor, whose role he said will include “eliminating disparities in prenatal care," being "an ambassador for unborn children,” and ensuring that Virginia’s history curriculum is “honest, objective, and complete.”
These three appointees all have histories of using right-wing media and local outlets to undermine social progress, attack critical race theory, and advance a conservative agenda".
(2)
(0)
The GOP are incessant bitchers and haters as they often take a point of view that is completely opposite of the Democrats. The GOP are a bunch of buffoons.
(0)
(0)
Read This Next