Education
Related: About this forumRepublican A.G.s object to U.S. Department of Education proposal on teaching about racism
WASHINGTON More than two dozen Republican attorneys general are voicing their disapproval over the U.S. Department of Educations proposed priorities for teaching K-12 students about American history and civics education because they would include references to systemic racism and how the history of slavery has shaped the United States.
The A.G.s argue in a May 19 letter to Education Secretary Miguel Cardona that public schools should not be given grant funds to teach about critical race theory, including any projects that characterize the United States as irredeemably racist or founded on principles of racism (as opposed to principles of equality) or that purport to ascribe character traits, values, privileges, status, or beliefs, or that assign fault, blame, or bias, to a particular race or to an individual because of his or her race.
Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody hasnt signed, but Gov. Ron DeSantis has been attacking the theory for months and has instructed the state Board of Education to ban it.
Its offensive to the taxpayers that they would be asked to fund critical race theory that they would asked to fund teaching kids to hate their country and to hate each other, the governor said Friday.
Read more: https://www.floridaphoenix.com/2021/05/23/republican-a-g-s-object-to-u-s-department-of-education-proposal-on-teaching-about-racism/
PortTack
(34,651 posts)Claire Oh Nette
(2,636 posts)The nation was founded with and built on an economic system whereby enslaved, unpaid Black labor made white owners wealthy.
Jefferson's Declaration of Independence was based on equality--equality of all white male property owners.
Those are both true. The More Perfect phrase meant equality would expand to all of us (over the loud and now violent objections of predominantly white men).
When the Republican AGs whine that "public schools should not be given grant funds to teach about critical race theory, including any projects that characterize the United States as irredeemably racist or founded on principles of racism (as opposed to principles of equality)" they're not whining about how women wrote themselves into the Constitution, oh wait, they didn't, or Black men writing for all the world to see that they are worth more than white men.
That 3/5 clause is a tricky one, isn't it. Hard to argue it didn't reference white supremacy, isn't it? That women didn't achieve the franchise until 1920 doesn't speak well for White men in power, either.
There is one demographic group who set themselves up as superior legally and constitutionally. One. That group doesn't want to let go of their power and position, nor do they want to acknowledge other's equality, not really. If they did, we'd not be refighting the same race and gender wars over and over and over.
They're not objecting to the practice of slavery, just teaching about it.