White people are FREAKING OUT about “critical race theory”

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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The Deep State
This is the dumb shyt that "Both Sides" TLR shytheads couldn't comprehend for the past 4 years when we explained why Betsy Devos was a terrible choice for Sec of Ed

Cape for people who want to erase your history, brehs
goofy ass nikkas WONT vote

They WONT engage with even imperfect politicians, and they WONT do the slightest to get involved with local shyt like this.

what a fukking L.



















also if you've read my thread here I show how the project is CORRECT:

https://www.thecoli.com/threads/dis...revolution-gerald-horne-proved-in-2014.823081





miamiherald.com
Florida bans use of critical race theory, ’1619 Project’ in teaching history
Jeffrey S. Solochek
7-9 minutes
More than 60 people gathered at 215 Manatee Ave. W. in Bradenton to protest the school board’s mask mandate on Tuesday afternoon. A handful of other people denounced critical race theory and the 1619 Project, though neither were included in Manatee’s public school curriculum, Superintendent Cynthia Saunders has said. gsabella@bradenton.com
Lessons that deal with critical race theory and the “1619 Project” are not welcome in Florida’s public schools following a State Board of Education vote on Thursday.

At the request of Gov. Ron DeSantis, the board unanimously adopted a rule that, in the words of member Tom Grady, emphasizes historical facts over “fiction, projects or theory masquerading as fact.”

Grady offered an amendment that spelled out critical race theory and the “1619 Project” as examples of two well-known educational approaches that would not be acceptable in classrooms.

The theory is a perspective some teachers employ to explain the role of racism and race in American society, in the past, present and looking forward. The “1619 Project” is a Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times series that re-centered the focus on the nation’s history on the year the first enslaved Africans arrived. It uses race as a lens to describe events since.

Grady’s proposal, which the board accepted 5-2, also spelled out more specifically which subject areas would be required beyond the Holocaust, which was the only one mentioned in the original version.

Those include civil rights and slavery. Grady suggested those additions spoke to critics who accused the governor and board of attempting to whitewash history, while at the same time clarifying for teachers what the state expects.

“I think our intent should be clear,” board member Ben Gibson said in support of the amendment.

Public comments for and against
The action came after more than an hour of public testimony for and against the rule. Residents called for the schools to remove any vestige of critical race theory, which one speaker called “a Marxist tactic to divide our country,” while another called it important to understand the nation’s history.

“When people are too afraid to have the conversation, how will we ever progress?” Duval County student Grace May asked the board.

At one point, the room broke into a chant of “Allow teachers to teach the truth!” It prompted the board to take a five-minute break and clear the room.

The public comment and debate came after DeSantis addressed the board remotely, to open the meeting. He laid out his perspective as the board prepared for its widely anticipated action.

Florida must have an education system that is “preferring fact over narrative,” DeSantis told the board.

That means keeping “outrageous” approaches such as critical race theory out of the lessons, the governor said. He listed examples from New York and Arizona as objectionable, and said they should not occur in Florida.

Superintendents across the state have said they do not have that model in their schools. But that has not stopped the State Board of Education from considering a rule that aims to keep teachers from including such an approach in their classes. It is scheduled to debate and vote on the rule later this morning.

Many teachers have protested, saying they do not attempt to indoctrinate their students, as the governor and others have suggested, but rather present facts and allow the children to explore the ideas.

Some have said it appears the governor is seeking to keep important lessons about Black history out of the schools in order to paint a partisan “patriotic” vision of the nation.

DeSantis said that’s not the case. He noted that state law requires the teaching of slavery, civil rights and more.

“It is required to be taught, and it absolutely should be,” he said.

Teachers simply must not depart from the historical record to present a narrative that says the nation is rotten, he added.

A national Republican effort
DeSantis has been calling on schools to keep critical race theory out of schools for several months. His campaign falls in line with a national Republican effort to promote patriotism in civics and history lessons, while suggesting that school initiatives that focus on race and diversity promote hate and divisiveness.

Texas and Idaho are among the other states that have considered legislation barring schools from using the approach in which educators and students analyze U.S. law, culture and society through the lens of race.

DeSantis was unable to persuade Florida lawmakers to consider such a measure, when he promoted a multimillion-dollar civics initiative. So he looked to Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran and the State Board to implement a rule that targets the goal.

Some critics suggested that the governor’s effort had little to do with what’s taught in Florida schools. After all, they noted, superintendents across the state have clarified they do not have critical race theory in their curriculums, and it does not appear in the state standards.

“I think it is a political statement,” said state Sen. Janet Cruz, a Tampa Democrat who sits on the Senate Education Committee.

She and others observed that when DeSantis signed a social media oversight bill into law he declared, “Speech that is inconvenient to the narrative will be protected.” He also said, “We cannot have people whitewash the Holocaust in Florida schools” during a town hall meeting which Cruz also participated in.

Yet they get the sense that DeSantis is aiming to keep aspects of Black history out of classes, despite his statements otherwise.

“It is indeed hypocritical,” Cruz said.

Other recent comments have led many observers to conclude that the administration is pushing its own narrative. During a May speech to a conservative Michigan college, Corcoran spoke about the need to “keep all the crazy liberal stuff out” of instructional material.

The Department of Education took steps toward achieving Corcoran’s goal before the State Board met. On Wednesday, it sent a memo to math book publishers, telling them to not incorporate “unsolicited strategies,” such as social emotional learning and culturally responsive teaching, into the next wave of textbooks.

“These strategies are not called for in the specifications because they are not aligned to the B.E.S.T. Standards and, therefore, should not be in your instructional materials,” chancellor Jacob Oliva wrote.

The State Board is scheduled to consider updates to standards relating to civics and Holocaust education in July.

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Gov. Ron DeSantis, seen during a press conference at St. John the Apostle Catholic School in Hialeah, Florida, on May 11, 2021 for a bill that expanded and revamped Florida’s school scholarship and voucher programs, signed another bill, HB 7061, on May 21, 2021, to declare a sales tax holiday July 1-7. MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiherald.com
 

Hoshi_Toshi

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Sir… what do you think CRT is?

:stopitslime:

Watch them try to BS an answer. These idiots don’t know.
 

AAKing23

92' til Infinity....
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I'd be shocked if it was anything less, cacs will be cacs :yeshrug:
 
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