Some More News - Revisiting Some News: Why Is Critical Race Theory?
Episode Date: May 1, 2024Hi. This is a re-release of the audio of our August 2021 episode, "Why Is Critical Race Theory?" It's got a new introduction from Cody, who explains how CRT fits into the current timeline of weird, ra...cist conservative outrages. The script was written by Will Gordh with David Christopher Bell. We'll be back next week with an all-new episode of Some More News. Here's the original episode on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZhW1k_m7OY Sources: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1JpoFiDnY6PG_rcDrNKNmL13m-3Acjmxm3gqCliUe49w/edit?usp=sharing Check out our MERCH STORE: https://shop.somemorenews.com SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh Subscribe to the Even More News and SMN audio podcasts here: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA Follow us on social media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram:
Transcript
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Hi! Here's some news, the Requel!
Listeners and watchers and feelers of the showdy might be familiar with a lot of concepts we'll be talking about today,
partly because it's an episode that's already been released, commonly referred to as a rerun,
though it's also probably going to sound familiar because so much about the topic and the language and purpose behind the topic,
much like the song, remains the same.
The topic, of course, is political correctness,
sorry, wokeness, wait, sorry, affirmative action, sorry, DEI, CRT. Did I get it right? Ah, yes,
finally, CRT. Yes, today we are revisiting our CRT episode, written by our director, Will Gord,
who has joined me via typing, no voice, Will, no speaking for you, to point out a few things regarding the current DEI panic
and how it relates to, well, what this old episode is about.
DEI, much like CRT and the rest of these right-wing bogeymen
are meant to preserve white supremacy
and serve two primary functions.
The first might be obvious,
which is ostensibly to be a substitute for the N-word,
which they really want to say, apparently.
You can see this when paid subscribers to formerly Twitter
will call a black mayor who won his election in a landslide a DEI mayor.
The other function is to disseminate an insidious set of pseudo-intellectual ideas
designed to justify racial inequality in America
by implicitly assigning the cause of this inequality to innate racial
inferiority.
You can see this when paid subscribers to formerly Twitter will respond to the formerly
Twitter's current owner with formerly tweets saying,
DEI equals didn't earn it.
Or you know, that DEI mayor thing.
Terms like this allow people to say these things without saying them.
The CRT panic served similar functions as a rebuke against the idea that systemic racism actually exists and continues to impact the lives of black people to this day.
But you'll probably notice that nobody seems to mention CRT anymore.
Did they win the battle against it? Is it all gone? Or did something else happen?
As Will writes,
For one, fighting over whether or not America has a racist past that still impacts the lives
and opportunities of black people today was a losing battle.
There is just way too much documented evidence of horrendous racist shit in our history to
keep fighting that claim.
In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests, millions of Americans were learning about the Tulsa massacre,
the Wilmington coup, the racist history of the filibuster,
redlining, and so on and on and on for the first time.
And so creating the CRT boogeyman was their move.
But again, it's hard to full-throatedly argue
well-documented history.
And so DEI is probably a much better target,
and it's really what Christopher Ruffo, the architect of the CRT Panic, was really
talking about in the first place.
And that's because, as we've discussed on this show, the actual implementation of
DEI policies in corporate America is largely bullshit.
It's mostly just corporate PR.
That is not to say that the goals are wrong, but just that these policies
don't actually achieve these goals. More importantly, this allows conservatives to
ignore history and pretend that we live in a meritocracy again. Talking about hiring
practices allows you to talk about qualifications, and if black people need special treatment
because they can't earn the jobs on their own, then what does that say about black people?
There must be something inherently inferior about them, right?
The pilot is black?
Well, surely the plane malfunction is his fault,
as opposed to bowing, cutting corners to save money.
Through this lens, you don't need to look
at systemic reasons that black people
may have disproportionately less wealth,
worse schools, worse healthcare, less opportunity, et cetera.
It lets you ignore the causes of inequality and, ironically, only focus on the outcomes,
and it implicitly attributes those unequal outcomes to innate racial inferiority,
all in order to maintain what W.E.B. Du Bois, yes, that's how he pronounced his name,
called the psychological wages of whiteness, the non-material wage
that nonetheless gives a white person the
psychological benefit of believing that they are the superior race.
None of this is new.
Like I said, this is a re-quel, a bad remake, racism, frozen empire.
Another rebrand is of course inevitable.
So here is our CRT, DEI, fill in the blank of whatever they say next episode.
Special thanks of course to Christopher Rufo who the morning this episode first aired went out of his way to find me on Twitter and block me.
Really cute stuff. He wasn't mad at all.
Okay, back to the episode. Or I guess start the episode.
back to the episode, or I guess start the episode. I'm sorry, we don't have time for pleasantries or cutesiness or sight gags or wordplay or
the welcome you to Cody's showedy baloney we sometimes do.
I'm not going to find a time sandwich and talk to the ghost of dinosaur me or eat a
stick of butter or any of-
Mr. Cody!
Get the fuck out of here, you leech!
I don't have time for you!
Because we have a serious crisis on our hands, people.
Apparently, there is an insidious force
that is currently infecting
nearly every aspect of American life.
It's assaulting our brains, our bodies, our souls,
our whatever you hold dear.
It's invading our homes, our corporations,
even our military, and even more sadistically,
it's polluting the minds of our children by completely consuming our schools.
It's like a virus, but like one they care about.
Who are they, you ask?
What the fuck am I talking about?
You followed up on with me.
Well, in case you didn't see the title of the episode, it's
Critical Race Theory Ah yes, critical race theory.
Ah yes, critical race theory.
The latest boogeyman being ridden by the GOP
to hell, I guess.
The latest cancel culture outrage triggering
of conservative snowflakes.
The latest thing we have to talk about
in order to coddle these oversensitive whiners.
We don't want to, but they make us.
Republicans are always able to manufacture controversies
out of whole cloth and force the entire country
to talk about them.
Weeks of Dr. Seuss, every year the war on Christmas,
the threat of Sharia law in America, fucking Benghazi,
Barack Obama's citizenship, the caravans,
oh, the caravans. Oh, the caravans.
Of course, there was the gay agenda.
Now there's the supposed transgender agenda,
which granted way catchier.
We had to talk about whether or not
three million illegals voted in the 2016 election,
an election that they won,
unlike the one they just lost,
stolen by communist Joe Biden.
They recently made people debate
whether or not Joseph Robinette Stalin Jr. is planning to ban hamburgers.
Do you remember when the United States
House of Representatives cafeteria
changed their French fries and French toast
to freedom fries and freedom toast for years
because Fox News and conservatives got mad
that France didn't invade Iraq as good as us.
Do you remember these things?
And now we are forced to talk about whether or not
critical race theory is destroying America
and should be canceled, cast out of the marketplace
of ideas, very un-American of our GOP representatives
for shame, but whatever, let's do it.
Let's hear them out, let's do it.
Let's hear them out, as apparently we must.
What is so bad about critical race theory?
You're hearing a lot about critical race theory.
So what is it?
This is-
Teaching kids to hate their country.
Teaches that America is totally screwed.
Critical race theory teaches children
as young as kindergarten to be ashamed of their skin
color.
Which is nothing more than modern day racism.
Replacing the racism of the past with the racism of the critical race theory.
A historical claims about our nation's origin.
Says the United States is rotten to its core.
Indoctrinating children.
You're either an oppressor or a victim.
And dumb as a bag of hair.
Whoa, okay, okay.
That all sounds really bad and true.
Kids coming home, saying they're being taught
to hate themselves and their nation,
and question the wisdom of our many dear leaders,
being told it's okay to be racist to them,
sobbing, pleading to not be white anymore.
The teachers shove them, pointing, cackling,
white, white!
Plus, a lot of the teachers are white.
They just, they've been spitting on them and stuff.
Anyway, let's hear from the parents.
Here with more are three parents
from Loudoun County, Virginia. We have Jessica and Fred and Patty.
We've got this mother of two criticizing
a Colorado school board over the impact
critical race theory is having on students.
For another example of everyday Americans
fighting back for their liberties,
Keisha King is a Florida mom who took a bold stance
against critical race theory,
claiming that the teaching of race is in fact racist.
Joining me now is Loudoun County parent Ian Pryor and Kim
Klasek, president of Red Renaissance.
Our next guest were both there, father of three
in US Army vet Joe Mobley and a teacher at Douglas School
in Loudoun County, Jeremy Wright.
Both join me from the Commonwealth of Virginia.
Guys, good morning to you.
You going to deliberately teach kids?
This white kid right here?
Got it better than you because he white?
You gonna purposely tell a white kid, oh, the black people are all down and suppressed?
How do I have two medical degrees if I'm sitting here oppressed?
Sandra, the Florida State School Board has now voted to ban critical race theory from
being taught in public schools in the Sunshine State.
It comes as more parents across the country are pushing back against so-called woke curricula being taught in classrooms. Bridget Ziegler is a mother of three girls
and a Sarasota County School Board member. She joins us now.
I'm joined now by Carrie Lucas, a Virginia mom of five, and her 13-year-old daughter
Meredith, currently a Virginia public school eighth grader.
Here to react is Alexandria Little League parent and an informal advisor to the 2016
Trump campaign,
Barry Bennett.
Wow, what an amazing outpouring of holdup.
Can we run that last clip again?
Here to react is Alexandria Little League parent
and an informal advisor to the 2016 Trump campaign,
Barry Bennett.
Did he say that guy was an informal advisor
to the 2016 Trump campaign?
That's a weird coincidence.
How Barry Bennett, the concerned coach
that Fox is interviewing there,
also happens to be a political operative
and lobbyist for the Republican Party, huh?
I mean, surely that's just one,
and the rest of these parents and teachers are,
what's that, Mr. Finger?
You love where I've been putting you?
Oh, and every single one of them
is a political activist or operative or lobbyist. And in fact, of those people I just showed
being interviewed along with the Trump advisor,
there were multiple right-wing talk radio hosts,
several GOP consultants and professional commentators,
the founders of multiple conservative super PACs,
a conservative author and the former senior
domestic policy analyst for the House Republican
Policy Committee amongst many other things,
and multiple conservative activists and think tank members,
including one with connections to Turning Point USA.
Literally zero of those people were fresh off the street,
non-politically tied individuals expressing their concern
about critical race theory and their children.
Yes, it turns out that a lot of this grassroots,
concerned parent movement
sure feels like it was put there artificially,
like some sort of artificial grass or fake turf, if you will.
So while it's important to not hand wave
every single parent or teacher
as some kind of operative for the GOP,
it does seem as if the most vocal
of these concerned Americans,
the reasons this is a thing anyone's even talking about,
aren't simply everyday people suddenly concerned
with their kids' education.
Like this Florida mom named Keisha King,
who was in that montage I showed.
Well, she made a bunch of headlines
for being a black woman standing up
against the evils of critical race theory.
But when you just sorta scroll down,
most of these articles end up noting
that she's the co-founder of one chapter
of a group called Moms for Liberty,
an organization that has branches
fucking everywhere in the country.
And if you Google the words moms for liberty
and critical race theory,
you'll soon discover that pretty much every article
about a concerned parent will eventually note
that they are a member of this group.
A group that, before they were so worried
about critical race theory,
were out protesting mask mandates in schools back in April.
A group that was founded by two ex-school board members,
one of whom has been accused
of physically disrupting classrooms,
and the other was voted out
after opposing pro-LGBT guidelines
and then getting shit mailed to her,
like literal actual shit.
They're just bitter, ousted, and toxic people
trying to re-involve themselves in schools.
And yay, they succeeded.
But we're getting ahead of ourselves.
The question is, what is critical race theory?
And is it being taught to our children?
Very briefly, the basic tenets of critical race theory,
or CRT, emerged out of a framework for legal analysis
in the late 1970s and early 1980s,
created by legal scholars, Derek Bell, Kimberly Crenshaw,
and Richard Delgado, among others.
Less briefly, critical race theory argues
that racism is not just a matter of personal prejudice
or explicit legal discrimination,
but can be found in everyday social practices
and is embedded in our legal system.
It places specific emphasis on history and context
with the relation to discussion of race in legal discourse
and seeks to understand how white supremacy was created
and how it is maintained,
and to examine its relationship to professed ideals
such as the rule of law and equal protection.
It argues their race is not only a social construct
but a legal construct,
and that while the biological reality of race is false,
there is a very real material dimension to being raced
in the United States of American society,
and that this dynamic has been both produced
and sustained by law.
It finds fault with the ideal of colorblindness,
which ignores effects of centuries of documented racism,
and instead embraces the notion of race consciousness.
It uses concepts such as white privilege
and intersectionality to better understand the dynamics
of the social, material, and legal inequalities
throughout our society.
It aims to expose the racial dimensions
to the meritocracy mythology.
It is a political practice,
a progressive activist movement,
and an intellectual identity for scholars of color
that takes the form of left intervention
into race discourse and race intervention
into left discourse that addresses the law's treatment
of race from a self-consciously critical perspective.
It believes that reform is required
within the legal system itself, law schools and courtrooms.
Critical race theory is not only concerned
with understanding the ways in which our history
of racist laws and social practices
have created racial inequality
and how white supremacy is maintained within our society
and through our legal system,
but critical race theory is an intentional
and explicit effort to change this dynamic.
So is this being taught to our elementary,
middle school and high school students?
The short answer is, nah.
And if you are skeptical of this claim and are a parent,
ask your child to watch this clip and then get back to me.
Critical race theory has certainly connections
to any kind of critical intellectual discourse,
but it's also connected to critical legal studies, which was not committed
to sort of inheriting all of the kind of
Gramscian and Marxian sort of ideas
that you're talking about.
And again, even the type of Marxism you're talking about
is a very narrow, thin sort of crude Marxism,
or even what we call vulgar Marxism,
which alleges a relationship between economic base
and cultural superstructure that is one-to-one, when in fact what most Marxists have argued,
and what certainly most Marxists post the mid-part of the 20th century have argued,
is that it's a much more complicated dynamic than even Gramsci himself argues at in The
Prison Notebooks about this idea of hegemony and how it happens along a compromised equilibrium,
whereby some people, or whereby on the one hand we absolutely are
hostage to the economic conditions around us, but on the other hand, structures and
states and institutions also appeal to our own desires and our own interests and our
own needs.
It's a much more dynamic and complicated relationship than you're talking about.
And as far as sort of structures, again, you're making a connection between structures in
terms of institutional structures that I was talking about and the particular type of structures that, again, you're making a connection between structures in terms of institutional structures
that I was talking about and the particular type
of structures that, say, a saussure will be talking about
in terms of structuralism.
That's not actually what I was talking about.
And that's not what most people are talking about
when they talk about systems and structures.
Again, that's a very tight correlation you draw.
But if we were to accept that correlation, then sure.
But it's not only that we're not accepting it,
it's actually not what we're talking about.
And postmodernism, again, plays upon a range of things.
I'm sorry?
I said you know a lot about this actually.
That you know a very-
So did your kid get all that?
Did you get all that?
Did James Lindsay get all that?
This is not light reading, folks.
This shit is highly sophisticated
and intellectually rigorous.
It's the kind of thing you study
with a dictionary
at the ready.
Saying that children are learning critical race theory
in our schools is like saying kids are learning
quantum physics because they started learning
about atoms and molecules.
Critical race theory is something that is being taught
in college, primarily in law school,
and involves critical thinking and debate,
where students are encouraged to examine the ideas involved
and ask whether or not they hold up to scrutiny,
something critics of critical race theory
and proponents of debate should like.
So as I said, the short answer to,
is this being taught in our public schools?
No.
The longer answer to this question, it's longer,
but before we get to that longer answer,
we should take a moment to examine
where this moral panic came from in the first place.
How is it that a decades old obscure academic term
suddenly does this in the Google search results?
And it really all starts with a man named Christopher Ruffo,
not to be confused with-
Rufia!
Rufi!
Rufi! Rufi! Rufio! Rufio!
Rufio!
Rufio!
Rufio!
Rufio!
Obviously, this critical race theory boogeyman
wasn't started by the fictional Peter Pan foil
Rufio from Hook.
That would be silly.
Christopher Rufo is a right-wing reactionary activist,
failed politician,
and self-proclaimed investigative reporter
who rapidly found himself rise to prominence
as a countervailing force to the nationwide protests
that took place in response to the public lynching
of George Floyd and so many others in the summer of 2020
by sensationalizing, misleading, and outright lying
about what was happening in diversity training programs
across the country.
He described the diversity training program
conducted in the city of Seattle as cult programming
and claimed that critical race theory has become,
in essence, the default ideology of the federal bureaucracy
and is now being weaponized against the American people.
To prove this point, he asserted that the Treasury Department
had hired a diversity consultant who told
Treasury employees essentially that America
was a fundamentally white supremacist country
and I quote,
virtually all white people uphold the system of racism
and white superiority.
Now it turns out these claims were not entirely accurate.
I mean, it sounds like something I might say
and probably will say before the end of this episode,
but according to the 33 page document
that Rufo provided to support his claims,
it's clear that at best,
he was recklessly distorting the nature of the program.
But more likely, he was outright lying about it.
So of course, he quickly found himself
on Tucker Carlson's show.
You know, Tucker, this is something I've been investigating
for the last six months,
and it's absolutely astonishing how critical race theory
has pervaded every institution in the federal government.
And what I've discovered is that critical race theory
has become, in essence, the default ideology
of the federal bureaucracy,
and is now being weaponized against the American people.
The morning after this appearance,
Ruffo was called by Donald Trump's Chief of Staff,
Mark Meadows, who told Ruffo that the President
saw your segment on Tucker last night,
and he's instructed me to take action.
According to the Washington Post,
the reaction to Ruffo's appearance that evening
on Fox News was swift.
The next day, Trump demanded action.
Two days later, his budget chief issued a memo
laying the groundwork for the federal government
to cancel all diversity trainings.
An executive order followed,
and Ruffo was invited to the White House
a few months later for a meeting. Now, the funny thing is that even though Ruffo was invited to the White House a few months later for a meeting.
Now, the funny thing is that even though Ruffo
set in motion the rage-filled delirium
over critical race theory that would eventually
entirely envelop our political discourse
and advise hundreds of leaders throughout the country
on the issue, Ruffo had only recently learned
of the term himself by reviewing the footnotes
of popular anti-racism books by Robin DiAngelo
and Ibram X. Kendi.
Far from being an investigative reporter,
the truth is that Rufo is a right-wing reactionary activist
with an explicit agenda,
and Rufo himself has not shied away
from stating this agenda explicitly, tweeting,
"'We have successfully frozen their brand,
"'critical race theory, into the public conversation
"'and are steadily driving up negative perceptions.
We will eventually turn it toxic
as we put all of the various cultural insanities
under that brand category.
The goal is to have the public read something crazy
in the newspaper and immediately think
critical race theory.
We have decodified the term and will recodify it
to annex the entire range of cultural constructions
that are unpopular with Americans.
So, Major League Baseball moves the all-star game
because of racist voting laws in Georgia?
Critical race theory.
Juneteenth becomes a federal holiday.
Critical race theory.
Vanessa Williams sings the black national anthem
on Independence Day.
Critical race theory.
Your roommate walks in on you while masturbating, hot.
What was I talking about?
Critical race theory has essentially become a stand in
for any discussion of racial inequality
or the history of racism in America.
Which is why it is not at all surprising
that Rufo's claims about critical race theory
are either entirely misrepresentative or outright lies.
In his explicit effort to drive up negative perceptions
of critical race theory, Rufo created a CRT briefing book.
And if we spent the necessary time it would take
to adequately debunk every aspect
of this sacred tome of garbage,
this episode would last an entire semester.
And you might have to take on student loans to do so,
which would disproportionately impact you
if you happen to be black, critical race theory.
So I'm not going to do that,
but it's worth taking a look
at a particularly egregious claim
that he makes about critical race theory
to give you a sense of the kind of nonsense
Ruffo is peddling.
In a section of his CRT briefing book called,
Race Essentialism, Ruffo claims that,
critical race theory reduces individuals
to the quasi-metaphysical categories
of blackness and whiteness,
then loads those categories with value connotations.
Positive traits are attributed to blackness
and negative traits are attributed to whiteness.
This claim is literally the exact opposite
of what critical race theory contends.
Race Essentialism is a belief in a genetic
or biological essence that defines all members
of a racial category.
In fact, as I previously noted,
critical race theorists explicitly argue
that the concept of race is not a biological reality,
but in fact, a social construct.
And even more than that, a legal construct.
That is to say that the very existence of race
as a concept in America was actually created in part by our legal construct. That is to say that the very existence of race as a concept in America was actually created
in part by our legal system.
And frankly, it's hard to argue with that assertion
considering the fact that in the infamous
Dred Scott decision regarding runaway slaves,
the chief justice of the US Supreme Court, an asshole,
stated that African Americans had no rights
which the white man was bound to respect.
There may not be any inherent biological differences
between the races beyond the superficial characteristics
of skin color in reality,
but the system of laws and their enforcement in our nation
created a very real legal difference
between white people and black people
that carries a very real and material legacy to this day.
The very fact that this country had laws
against interracial marriage until 1967
is an example of this legal construction of race.
And that legal construction helped create
and reinforce the social construction of race in America,
which is the only reason we are even fucking talking
about any of this at all right now.
Also, wOKENESS!
And this little detour into our history
of the longstanding impact of our racist laws
gives us some insight into what this grift is all about.
And considering the fact that Rufo has made Ibram X. Kendi
one of the primary villains in this manufactured hysteria
about critical race theory,
I think it's only fair and balanced DMCR
to ask Kendi himself what he thinks this is all about.
I think what's being described as critical race theory
is any analysis, critical analysis of race or racism
in this country that does not position this country as post-racial.
Any attempt to hold people who are being racist accountable, any attempt to have a clear and
complex and multivariate approach to American history whereby we actually document and talk about
and teach about the history of racism in this country.
Now, I think Kendi might be onto something here
because it's pretty clear that the focus
of the anti-critical race theory phenomenon
has been largely centered around the teaching
of our history,
specifically with regards to the history
of racism in America.
And speaking of history, it's worth reiterating
that all of this anti-critical race theory mania
is unambiguously a backlash to the Black Lives Matter movement
that coalesced into the largest sustained protest movement
in American history over the summer of 2020.
Animated by the fact that the entire nation watched in horror
as a white police officer pressed his knee
onto George Floyd's neck for nine minutes and 29 seconds,
amidst a crowd of people begging the officer
to spare Floyd's life.
With his hands casually placed in his pockets,
it was clear that this police officer believed
that George Floyd had no rights,
which the white man was bound to respect.
And one of the most significant aspects to this movement
that was different from other black liberation movements bound to respect. And one of the most significant aspects to this movement
that was different from other black liberation movements
of the past was that this movement included
a whole lot of white people,
including a lot of white people who grew up
in the era of color blindness and were learning
about the devastating impact of racism in our society
for the first time in their lives.
And so in addition to the increased awareness
of systemic racism that took place as a result of this movement throughout our society,
it's not that surprising that this moment
has also included some misguided excesses
and cynical efforts of appropriation.
Clumsy conversations about race in school board meetings,
efforts by corporations or the military
to adopt anti-racist language
or make symbolic gestures in hopes of deflecting
from the structural critiques
of racism and capitalism that implicate them.
And some cringey virtue signaling
by people that may have taken the writings
of Robin DiAngelo a bit too far.
Side note, it's pretty funny that one of the things
that set this off is a book called White Fragility,
which led a bunch of white people to flip out
and try to ban any discussion of race.
For all the book's flaws, maybe at the very least,
the title was onto something.
And so part of the enormous backlash
to the Black Lives Matter movement,
as Ruffo explicitly stated,
was to put all of the various cultural insanities
under the brand category of critical race theory.
It didn't matter that Robin DiAngelo
was not a critical race theorist,
or that her emphasis on the racist beliefs
held by individuals was actually at odds
with critical race theory's focus
on more systemic and legal critiques,
or that her participation in diversity training programs
for corporations restricted her from leveling
an honest assessment of capitalism's role
in systemic racism.
The fact is that this reactionary backlash
was not interested in a conversation
about actual critical race theory.
The goal was to label any effort to examine
the impact of racism in our society as critical race theory
and make sure that when people heard that term,
they had a negative association with it.
To put it more simply, by cutting out the middle man,
they wanted people to have a negative association
with any examination of racism in our society,
and particularly throughout our history.
Which is why one of this reactionary effort's main targets
has been the 1619 Project,
which I can't wait to talk to you about,
but while we wait out this storm, here's an ad. The 1619 Project! Which I can't wait to talk to you about,
but while we wait out this storm, here's an ad.
Storm's clearing up.
What were we talking about?
Ah yes, the 1619 Project, Thunderbolt.
According to the creators of this endeavor,
the 1619 Project is an ongoing initiative
from the New York Times Magazine that began in August 2019,
the 400th anniversary of the beginning of American slavery.
It aims to reframe the country's history
of placing the consequences of slavery
and the contributions of black Americans
at the very center of our national narrative.
Considering the fact that the central role
and lasting impact of slavery has typically been minimized
in the way our history has been taught in this country.
I mean, this is why we had so many statues
and had to be torn down in the first place.
Maybe this effort is a good thing.
But of course, conservatives reacted to this undertaking
by acting like the creator of this project,
Nicole Hannah Jones, just cut off Uncle Sam's dick
and fed it to communists in front of children.
Newt Gingrich called it brainwashing.
Ted Cruz called it Marxist indoctrination.
And Senator Tom Cotton even introduced a bill
to ban it from being taught in public schools,
retorting that, as the founding fathers thought,
slavery was the necessary evil
upon which the Union was built.
And very smart best friends of mine, like Ben Shabips,
called it pseudo-history,
because some historians argued that one of the essays
exaggerated a claim about the role
that the preservation of slavery played
and the motivations of colonists in the American Revolution.
This sentence was later amended by adding two words,
changing the statement from the claim
that protecting the institution of slavery
was one of the primary reasons
the colonists decided to declare their independence
to one of the primary reasons
that some of the colonists decided
to declare their independence.
Because, you know, a lot of them did.
The states, they wrote it down.
Conservatives used this arguably slightly exaggerated claim
to try and discredit the entire endeavor
as revisionist history.
Yet for some reason,
they seem to have no problem with this exchange.
You said our children are taught in school to hate our country.
Where do you see that?
I just look at school, I watch, I read. Look at the stuff.
Now they want a change. 1492, Columbus discovered America.
You know, we grew up, you grew up, we all did, that's what we learned.
Now they want to make it the 1619 Project.
Where did that come from?
What does it represent?
I don't even know.
So that's what they're saying, but they don't even know.
Look at the stuff.
As this clip proves, conservatives honestly believe
that the teaching of history should not include
any political agenda or propaganda
and should be taught accurately and truthfully.
And so in direct response to the 1619 project,
the Trump administration launched a commission
to create the 1776 Report,
an effort undertaken by an 18 member panel
that included famed historian Charlie Kirk.
In fact, as the Guardian reported at the time,
most of the authors listed at the commission
lacked credentials as historians,
and scholars noted the report was missing citations,
bibliographies, and scholarly references.
By the way, have you read this thing?
You gotta read this thing.
It's not that long and it's truly pathetic.
Get this, the 1776 report removed any mention of slavery
from its section of our nation's founding
and instead relegated the topic to its own subsection
under a broader category called
challenges to American principles.
A section which also happened to include fascism
and communism as if slavery were some sort of foreign threat
and not an American institution
practiced by many of our founding fathers,
and was a reason a lot of states changed countries.
And in this short section on slavery,
the report makes all sorts of excuses for it,
like everyone was doing it,
which is a weird argument to make
when you're trying to claim that America
is a uniquely exceptional nation.
Also, that's what children say.
Other excuses included, but, but, but, but,
but George Washington freed his slaves,
even though in fact he made private efforts
to prevent his slaves from claiming their freedom.
It also argues that the compromise of slavery
was necessary for a durable union,
despite the fact that a quick study of American history
shows that these compromises were in fact,
far from durable.
Just a real quick history lesson for you.
America had a pretty bad,
what do you call it?
Like a civil war, I guess, would be the term.
It was kind of a big deal at the time.
About one in every 10 men in this country
died from this war.
And I don't wanna say anything too controversial here.
Please don't cancel me.
But the civil war was caused by the issue of slavery.
Specifically, people liking it.
So I think it's fair to say that the Civil War
was a somewhat important thing that happened
in terms of our national narrative or whatever.
Yet the 1776 project hardly mentions it.
The only times it's brought up at all is as a lead in
to how progressivism created a shadow government intent on taking away your rights
and how identity politics is the same as the beliefs
of racist slave holder John C. Calhoun.
Incidentally, progressivism and a category
that conflates racism and identity politics
called racism and identity politics
are also listed as challenges to American principles
alongside slavery, fascism, and communism.
Progressivism, fascism, and slavery.
Yep, yeah.
But despite these partisan opinions
and obvious activist propaganda,
the 1776 report also argues that states
and school districts should reject any curriculum
that promotes one-sided partisan opinions,
activist propaganda, or factional ideologies
that demean America's heritage,
dishonor our heroes, or deny our principles.
Any time teachers or administrators promote
political agendas in the classroom,
they abuse their platform and dishonor every family who trusts them with their children's education
and moral development.
These conservatives are so concerned-ive about propaganda, so concerned that the report also
argues that educators must convey a sense of enlightened patriotism that equips each
generation with the knowledge
of America's founding principles,
a deep reverence for their liberties
and a profound love of their country.
Totally normal freedom stuff.
Hey, remember that viral story about the girl
from North Korea who went to college in America
and was like, wow, wokeness is worse
than living in North Korea?
One of the things she cites is that in North Korea,
they hate America, and in North Korea, they hate America.
And in America, they also hate America.
And I feel like there's maybe a disconnect there
about how we're free to do that,
and allegedly aren't fed nationalist propaganda
about how we're a perfect nation
and all others are bad and inferior.
Just something to consider.
But why is lying about our history
considered more patriotic
than owning up to our mistakes?
Don't ask me to love the fact that America
enslaved black people for nearly 250 years.
Don't ask me to love the fact that America committed genocide
against the native inhabitants of this land.
Don't ask me to be an enabler of America's addiction
to committing atrocities.
Yes, I love what America could be,
a borderless beacon of hope
that rid the world of nationalism
by evolving beyond the need for nations.
But maybe America needs some tough love.
Maybe America needs an intervention.
And while the incoming Biden administration
removed the 1776 project from its website
and disbanded the effort,
this has not stopped local and state governments
from following through on the 1776 report's stated goals
with regards to education.
In a matter of months, Republican lawmakers
in nearly half of the states have proposed legislation
to limit the teaching of concepts
such as racial equity and white privilege.
Florida has banned the teaching of the theory
that racism is not merely the product of prejudice,
but that racism is embedded in American society
and its legal systems in order to uphold
the supremacy of white persons.
Senator Josh Hawley has introduced the Love America Act
to combat critical race theory
and teach kids to love America
because he believes it is a lie to teach students
that America is systematically racist.
A teacher in Tennessee was fired, or canceled if you will,
for teaching an essay about white privilege
written by Ta-Nehisi Coates.
A new law in Texas removes the requirement
to teach the history of white supremacy,
including slavery, the Ku Klux Klan,
and ways in which the white supremacist hate group
was morally wrong.
The law also makes other changes
that would drop the teaching of some of the most
prominent civil rights leaders in our history,
which actually is something worth loving.
Among the figures whose works would be dropped,
Susan B. Anthony, Cesar Chavez,
and Martin Luther King Jr., whose I Have a Dream speech
and Letter from a Birmingham Jail
would no longer make the curriculum cut.
And in a way, if you truly do oppose critical race theory,
cutting out Martin Luther King Jr. makes a lot of sense.
Because despite the claims of historian Donald John President
that critical race theory is a Marxist doctrine
that rejects the vision of Martin Luther King Jr.,
a line that he definitely wrote and definitely understands, in reality, the vision of Martin Luther King Jr. A line that he definitely wrote and definitely understands.
In reality, the work of Martin Luther King
was actually one of the major influences
for the development of critical race theory
in the first place.
And just a quick reminder, won't keep you long.
MLK was a radical leftist
who opposed US imperialism, criticized capitalism,
called for a federal jobs guarantee and made the case for reparations.
It's no wonder the FBI saw him as a communist threat
and even spied on him and blackmailed him
and urged him to commit suicide.
In fact, recently released FBI documents reveal
that the FBI believed that King is a wholehearted Marxist
who has studied it, Marxism, believes in it
and agrees with it.
And while this may or may not be true, why should it matter?
I still contend that the most frightening thing
about Karl Marx was actually his hair,
which I gotta say, it's out of control, man.
But more importantly, this red baiting to make movements
for racial equality seem really super scary is as American
as saying something's as American as apple pie,
a dessert invented in England.
Here's a photo taken at a protest
against school integration in Little Rock, Arkansas
in 1959 of a little white boy holding a sign that reads,
race mixing is communism.
And here's the modern day version
of Senator Joseph McCarthy, Senator Rafael Edward Cruz
on his podcast in 2021.
Yes, this Senator has a podcast,
talking with none other than Christopher Ruffo
using the exact same Red Scare playbook.
All of this originated in Marxism.
What's interesting is it didn't just originate in Marxism.
The end point that this curriculum is designed to teach the kids to go to is
Marxism itself. It is designed to tear down capitalism and replace it with
communism, replace it with Marxism, with government power, although on
racial lines. Is that a fair characterization?
Yeah, I think it is.
In fact, critical race theory, as these people present it,
is just the newest iteration of the anti-Semitic trope
of cultural Marxism, but with a little more mainstream appeal
because anti-blackness has a bit more oomph
in the context of America.
And maybe this history should be taught in our schools.
Maybe the problem is not that we are teaching too much
about the history of slavery and racism,
but that we haven't been teaching this history enough.
The Southern Poverty Law Center
did a study on 12 popular US history books,
surveyed more than 1,700 social studies teachers
and 1,000 high school seniors
to try and determine how much history schools are teaching
about race and slavery.
Their depressing results found that only eight
motherfucking percent of high school seniors
can identify slavery as the central cause of the Civil War.
Two thirds didn't know that it took a constitutional
amendment to end slavery, and only 22% were able
to identify how provisions in the constitution gave advantages
to slave owners.
And I just can't stress this enough,
8% were able to identify that slavery
was the primary cause of the Civil War,
which I guess isn't surprising considering
that Texas only just decided to teach that fact in 2018.
Because it turns out that different states
are allowed to teach about slavery
as much or as little as they want.
And you know, usually it's the latter.
While Massachusetts mentions slavery 104 times
in its social studies framework,
Louisiana only mentions it four times,
as in four times total for K through 12th grade,
which is still twice as much as they mention it in Idaho.
This might be why 85% of teachers said
that their textbooks were inadequate
in teaching black history, also known as history.
This is backed up by the fact that out of all the books
the Southern Poverty Law Center went over,
not a single textbook addressed how white supremacy
factored into the justification of slavery
or how depressingly essential slavery was
to the American economy.
And this is just the one study.
If you look for it, you can find a wide and dizzying array
of schools routinely fucking up the way they teach
about slavery in America.
This fourth grade class asks students
to name three good things about slavery.
Then there's the school in upstate New York
that just this year, the year 2021,
in homework for elementary school kids,
described slavery as African-Americans
agreeing to work for colonists in exchange for a trip
to America, literally just not teaching slavery as slavery.
So that's totally normal.
Hey, speaking of things that were totally normal,
did you know that there were nearly eight million KKK members
in the 1920s or that Georgetown University was funded
by the selling of 272 slaves?
Hey, did you know that Bank of America,
Citibank, Wells Fargo, and JP Morgan all accepted slaves
as deposits?
Have you ever considered or been taught in school
about just how many American companies and institutions gained their power from the suffering of others? And wouldn't
that perhaps be a good thing to know? Also, geez, I'm not sure if you know this
because you may have gone to an American school, but black history isn't entirely
just the slavery and civil rights eras. Like, obviously those are important to
teach,
but as a few have pointed out,
most schools pretty much stop there and call it a day.
And in fact, the United States history content standards
for grades five through 12 only require schools
to teach the baseline subjects of slavery and civil rights.
And then nothing else about black history or culture.
You know, stuff like the Reconstruction Era,
which most schools don't teach,
nor do they teach about the Great Migration,
or how about the fact that over 60% of Americans
know nothing about Juneteenth,
which is probably why the Tulsa Race Massacre
and countless other massacres has been strangely absent
from history textbooks for decades, even in fucking Tulsa.
An event where a white mob attacked
and killed hundreds of black residents,
injured even more, and raised over 35 city blocks,
was just completely absent from our history
until a fucking HBO show about fictional superheroes
brought it up.
How goddamn weird and sad is that?
And this is just black history I'm talking about
and not like native American history,
but heck, I'm sure the way schools teach that is
very thorough.
Boy, fuck howdy.
It sure seems like most Americans don't know shit
about our history with racism and slavery.
I don't know. Perhaps if
we would have fewer peopl
nonsense like this. Americ
racism. Don't get me wrong
going on. But slavery itse
a racist thing. It never
So to sit there and take
founded on racism is a co
was slavery going on. But
on in all the world.
It never was a race thing.
So why are we making it a race thing now?
Now, I'm hoping that I don't need to defend the idea
that slavery in America was very much a race thing.
Yes, the institution of slavery existed in the world
before the transatlantic slave trade,
and there were indentured servants from Europe for a time in America. But it's also true that slavery in the world before the transatlantic slave trade, and there were indentured servants from Europe for a time in America.
But it's also true that slavery in the New World
was a uniquely brutal institution,
and that after uprisings like Bacon's Rebellion
that saw European and African servants
join forces against the ruling elite,
lawmakers began to make legal distinctions
between white and black inhabitants.
By permanently enslaving Virginians of African descent
and giving poor white indentured servants and farmers
some new rights and status.
And that this dynamic metastasized over time
and is actually why we have the socially
and illegally constructed categories
of race in America in the first place.
And that the laws and social dynamics continue to,
you know what, actually, I'm not gonna do this right now.
Frankly, this is something that this guy and everyone
should have been taught in middle school.
And speaking of this guy, do you recognize this guy?
That's right, he is one of the people
from the concerned parents montage
that we played earlier in the video.
And you guessed it, just like all the others,
he's actually a conservative activist
with his own conservative radio show and YouTube channel.
And so I think it's worth reiterating
that far from a grassroots movement of concerned parents
who spontaneously became concerned
about the little known academic concept
of critical race theory,
this backlash has been a coordinated effort
from reactionary activists, politicians,
media figures, and right-wing think tanks.
Many, incidentally, are funded
by the Thomas W. Smith Foundation,
whose trustee and director is James Pearson,
who explicitly opposes teaching classes
about women, black people, or the LGBTQ community.
The Thomas W. Smith Foundation funds many groups
currently going all in on the anti-CRT train.
Fun groups we love, like the American Enterprise Institute,
the Daily Caller, the Federalist, the Heritage Foundation,
the Federalist Society, Turning Point USA,
Prager University, and others,
including the Manhattan Institute,
which is the top recipient from this foundation,
and incidentally, a place where Christopher Ruffo now works.
The Manhattan Institute simply wants to develop
and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice
and individual responsibility.
And speaking of places where Christopher Ruffo has worked,
the Discovery Institute, a right-wing think tank,
also pushing the anti-CRT issue,
although the Discovery Institute is perhaps best known
for their efforts in the early 2000s
to encourage schools to teach the controversy
between Darwinian evolution
and faith-based intelligent design,
also known as backdoor creationism.
Interesting, they have no interest
in teaching the controversy this time.
Which is why it is not at all surprising
that one of the authors of the 1776 report,
Charlie Kirk, tweeted that,
"'It's not enough to just oppose critical race theory.
"'Republican governors, legislators,
"'school board members, and parents need to play offense.
"'Push for the Bible to be taught in schools.
Push for prayer in schools.
Push for pro-America curriculums.
Put Marxists on defense.
I now understand why the 1776 report
promoted the idea that when families pray together,
they acknowledge together the providence
of the almighty God who gave them their sacred liberty.
This is all really just Christian nationalism
and in support of American myths.
And I know this is a lot to take in,
but we can't give up.
Let's try to get to the bottom of it if we can.
So remember how I told you that the short answer
to whether or not critical race theory
is being taught to our children is, nah.
But that the longer answer was longer.
It's time for that longer answer
because while it's true that critical race theory
in the academic and legal and activist sense
is not being taught to kids in elementary school,
it is also true that many of the basic ideas
and assumptions that critical race theorists make
have actually found their way
into the mainstream understanding
of the history of racism in America.
And conservatives actually do have good reason
to be afraid of these ideas
because they have the potential
to completely decimate their ideology.
Because as Kimberlé Crenshaw,
one of the pioneering scholars
of critical race theory has said,
critical race theory just says,
let's pay attention to what has happened in this country
and how what has happened in this country
is continuing to create differential outcomes
so we can become that country that we say we are.
And while this statement may first appear innocuous
and uncontroversial,
because it's mostly pointing out
how the concept of time works,
if you take this statement to its logical conclusion,
it tears holes in conservative ideology
and the myths about America
that they are desperately trying to maintain
in order to preserve their ideology.
Because if we actually examine how our history impacts
the inequalities of our present
and how those inequalities are maintained
through our current system of social practices and laws,
we might discover that the idea that America
is a land of equal opportunity is a myth.
We might discover that the notion of meritocracy is a myth.
We might discover that a person's success or failure
is not just a function of their individual choices in life,
but also a result of a broader social,
economic and legal system that produces
and perpetuates
inequalities across generations.
And if we learn that, we might become skeptical
of the ideas of individualism and in turn, capitalism,
and may become more receptive to the idea
that our collective fates are intertwined.
The awareness that the contours of our history
play a substantial role in determining the nature of the opportunities
of our present, has the potential to entirely upend
the status quo of our current social, economic,
and legal construction of white supremacy
and capitalism within our society.
Dispelling these American fairy tales threatens
the foundational principles of conservative ideology.
The architect of this attack on critical race theory,
Christopher Ruffo, recently tweeted that we should
teach honestly about the history of racism and injustice,
but place it in the context of America's highest ideals
and our steady progress towards achieving them.
Cultivate a sense of agency and common purpose
in children of all racial backgrounds.
But the steady progress towards our highest ideals
is another American myth.
A myth that actually removes agency
and obscures the role that reactionary movements
have played throughout our history.
Because if teaching the history of racism is limited
by its adherence with this myth,
then you are requiring that we teach a lie.
Because the history of racism in America
is not that of steady progress towards equality,
but that of progress and backlash.
We made progress during Reconstruction
and that was met by the backlash
of white supremacist domestic terrorism and Jim Crow.
We made progress during the civil rights era
and that was met by neoliberal austerity
that weaponized the ideal of color blindness
and by the era of mass incarceration.
And today, these same reactionary forces
are rolling back the enfranchisement of black people
yet again and passing laws to restrict the way
that the history of racism is taught in our country.
And this is where the real danger comes
for those of us who actually do believe in equality.
Because if you don't teach children the truth
about how our history has produced
and perpetuated racial inequality,
eventually those kids will grow up
and take a look at the world around them
and notice that black people have a lot less wealth
and are more likely to live in areas
of concentrated poverty and are more likely
to have violence in their communities.
And without the knowledge of how these inequalities were created and perpetuated, live in areas of concentrated poverty and are more likely to have violence in their communities.
And without the knowledge of how these inequalities
were created and perpetuated through our social practices
and laws throughout our history,
these kids will be left with no other explanation
for the racial inequality they see around them
other than to conclude that there must be something
deficient within the population of black people themselves.
Maybe it's their culture, maybe it's their genetics,
but there must be something wrong with them
because I've been taught that all you have to do
is work hard by your bootstraps and you will be just fine.
So in conclusion,
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