Critical Race Theory Megathread

Wokeness may have a lot of French ideas baked into it, and may be a largely Jewish political creation, but it was forged and applies to the racial situation in the US. It doesn't apply to India, or China or Africa, it can only be transported to Europe or the Anglosphere and even there are issues-hence it needs to rely on anti Colonial and really general anti European sentiment to function.
 
Not sure if this should go here or in the riot thread, but Indiana might have at least a few level headed people in charge.

Indiana AG Todd Rokita says BLM propaganda is politically based and shouldn't be in schools.



Dare I hope that sanity might be restored in America?
 
This asshole in Texas is just asking for trouble...a "thousand soldiers" in his dreams....





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This asshole in Texas is just asking for trouble...a "thousand soldiers" in his dreams....



He should be careful for what he asked, one soldier could be one of the parents in question.
 
First woman and first person of colour was elected as the mayor of Boston, but the wrong shade, so some people are upset and blame mUh RaCiSm

Why Boston will need to wait longer for its 1st elected Black mayor​

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For the first time in its history, Boston is inaugurating a newly-elected mayor on Tuesday who is not a white man. Michelle Wu – who's Asian American, is the first woman and first person of color elected to lead the city. While many are hailing it as a major turning point, others see it as more of a disappointment that the three Black candidates in the race couldn't even come close.

Many in Boston were hopeful that this would be the year, in this time of racial reckoning, that Boston might elect its first Black mayor, as most of the nation's 30 largest cities have already done.

Three Black candidates were in the race, and one even had the advantage of running as an incumbent, after automatically inheriting the job – as an interim- when former Mayor Marty Walsh left to become Secretary of Labor in the Biden administration. And yet, neither Acting Mayor Kim Janey, nor the others, even made it to the final run-off election this month.

"I got home, and I cried," says Danny Rivera, an artist and civil rights activist in Boston. "I cried my eyes out because I don't know the next time we'll see a Black mayor in our city."

"It is lived experience that matters most"​

At Janey's farewell address in Boston last week, Rivera says he was especially disappointed because of how poignant and relatable he found Janey's personal history in Boston. As a girl, in the 1970s, she was among those bussed into white neighborhood schools where Blacks were pelted with insults and rocks. Later, as a teenage mom, she struggled to make it when she was all but written off.

"I believe that it is lived experience that matters most, and what separated [Janey] from every other candidate," he says. "That's all super powerful, and I thought we missed the moment."

Twenty-year-old Nia Ashleigh, a student at the Berklee School of Music, also felt let down that none of the Black candidates had enough support to be ultimately viable, but she says, she was not surprised.

"It's just one of those things where it feels like what else is new?" she quipped.

Indeed, in the preliminary election, the three Black candidates combined got about three quarters of the vote in areas of the city with the highest concentrations of people of color. But in the whitest areas, they won only about one quarter of the votes, according to an analysis of election results and Census data conducted by The MassINC Polling Group.

"I mean the data speaks for itself, and it's troubling," says former Massachusetts State Rep. Marie St. Fleur. Especially, she says, for a city still straining under a longtime reputation as racist.

"For those of us born or raised in Boston, and who lived through some of the darker days, the fact that we blinked at this moment is sadness," she says. "At what point in the city of Boston will we be able to vote — and I'm going to be very clear here — for a Black person in that corner office?"

"We can only play race card for so many occasions"​

To be sure, there were other factors, and fault, at play in the way the race turned out.

"We can only play race card for so many occasions," asserts Rev. Eugene Rivers, a longtime Black community leader. "I mean Black leadership failed to produce success even with an incumbent. We failed. Now that's not on white people."

Black leaders are already talking about taking lessons from incoming Mayor Wu's successful campaign to improve their own political organizing and messaging, and to increase Black turnout in future races. Some are also calling for a more coordinated strategy to coalesce behind a single black candidate, to avoid splitting the vote as happened this year. But others bristle at the idea of expecting any Black candidate to drop out of a race because there are too many of them.

Imari Paris Jeffries, executive director of King Boston, the group building a memorial on Boston Common to honor Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Paris Jeffries says he also feels "grief" that a Black candidate didn't make the cut this year. But while important symbolically and psychically, he says, a candidate's race should not be the determinant in any race.

"In this anti-racist discourse, I don't think we're going to find identical twins of our experience in order for [candidates] to empathize," he says. "I think we have to start creating a larger tent and find common ground together."

It's a theme incoming Mayor Wu has struck throughout her campaign, and again, when she was asked about it as she attended Janey's farewell address.

"I expect that the Black community, will hold her accountable"​

"I have heard and want to continue acknowledging the disappointment of many in our community who wish to see representatives of the Black community," she said. "We will continue working to meet this moment to take on systemic racism and the barriers that have been perpetuated for far too long."

Boston voters, like Pam Cannon of Roxbury, will be watching.

"I'm going to hold her to it," Cannon says. "I'll make sure she comes to my neighborhood. I'll be calling her up. I'm going to be checking in with her."

So will Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley, (D-MA), who endorsed Wu in the final election, after all three of the Black candidates had been eliminated.

"I don't give anyone anything," Pressley said, as she also attended Janey's farewell address. "[Wu] earned my endorsement, but she earned it because she is prepared to be honest about the disparate outcomes across every issue, and I expect that the Black community, will hold her accountable. Because this is about changing the legacy of the city of Boston."

Former Boston City Council member and Janey supporter, Tito Jackson, agrees. He too made a bid to become Boston's first elected Black mayor four years ago, and also fell short. But he says Janey's short, but historic tenure has helped move the conversation forward.

"We're not going to put our head down and we're not going to walk around like we lost," Jackson says. "[Janey] advanced the issues that I brought up four years ago, that no one wanted to touch" before the death of George Floyd put new focus on racial equity and justice in America. "But those issues were in the forefront this go-around."

For her part, outgoing Acting Mayor Janey struck a similar message, insisting her time in the corner office did push Boston forward, and left the city better off than it had been, largely because she approached every issue —from housing to schools and health care — "through a lens of racial equity."

Still, she adds, "There's a lot more work to do, when it comes to all our '-isms," in Boston and around the country.



Nigga y'all already stated a big reason why, which is that y'all put 3 Black candidates out
 
I wonder how big the chances then Boston will vote one day for a Hispanic mayor?

Meanwhile in Dearborn.

City of Dearborn elects its first Arab American mayor

In a historic victory, a 31-year-old state legislator born to immigrants from Lebanon defeated a 66-year-old veteran politician to become the first mayor of Arab descent of Dearborn, a city long known for its sizable population with roots in the Middle East. Taking the stage at a community center named after one of the founders of the Islamic Center of America, state Rep. Abdullah Hammoud, D-Dearborn, declared: “There is a new era in Dearborn.”

Hammoud defeated Gary Woronchak, a former state representative and former Wayne County commissioner, with 54.6% of the vote to Woronchak's 45.2%, according to results from the city of Dearborn.

“Throughout this campaign, we said that together we can and together we will bring change,” Hammoud said. “Well tonight, together, we did it.” Hammoud then thanked God.

“Allah ... has all the glory,” he said. “He plans. ... He is the ultimate of planners.”

Hammoud said his victory should inspire young minorities.

“To the young girls and boys who have ever been ridiculed for their faith or ethnicity, to those of you who were ever made to feel that their names were unwelcome, and to our parents and to our elders and to others who were humiliated for their broken English and yet still persisted, today is proof that you are as American as anyone else. And there is a new era in Dearborn.

Btw, Merrick Garland used some "secret weapons" to go against anti-CRT parents.

Internal FBI emails published by a whistleblower within the powerful federal agency reveal that Attorney General Merrick Garland authorized the use of counterterrorism tools to surveil, track and spy on parents who oppose the teaching of extremist Critical Race Theory in schools.

House Republicans obtained and published the internal emails on Tuesday afternoon.

The Counterterrorism and Criminal Divisions created a threat tag, EDUOFFICIALS, to track instances of related threats. We ask that your offices apply the threat tag to investigations and assessments of threats specifically directed against school board administrators, board members, teachers and staff.

A federal investigation into parents opposed to CRT followed a set of demands from the National School Boards Administration, which tarred parents who protest extremist school board officials as domestic terrorists in a letter to the White House. Internal NSBA documents reveal the letter in question had been drafted with the full cooperation of the Biden administration, in what amounts to a privatized allegation of terroristic crimes on the part of the federal government.

The NSBA would later apologize for the letter, admitting that allegations of domestic terrorism amounted to little more than slander of parents who protest at school board meetings. There’s no indication that the DOJ has halted its investigation into CRT critics, which Garland has admitted began at the behest of the NSBA.
 
The Indianapolis school administrator who exposed CRT in the Indianapolis public schools has been basically locked out of his job and must work from home. The butthurt is apparently nuclear with the Indianapolis public schools. Bet a bunch of parents get pissed off and tell the school board to clean up their act.


 
This asshole in Texas is just asking for trouble...a "thousand soldiers" in his dreams....
I hear they want Usopp to be a black guy in the Netflix One Piece..I think this man may have a shot.

The joke here is that Usopp's first act in story was to lie about having "A THOUSAND PIRATES" in his crew
 
The Indianapolis school administrator who exposed CRT in the Indianapolis public schools has been basically locked out of his job and must work from home. The butthurt is apparently nuclear with the Indianapolis public schools. Bet a bunch of parents get pissed off and tell the school board to clean up their act.


God bless the noble teacher.

Examples like this are why actually teachers are indeed good and necessary. For each generation.
 
I hear they want Usopp to be a black guy in the Netflix One Piece..I think this man may have a shot.

The joke here is that Usopp's first act in story was to lie about having "A THOUSAND PIRATES" in his crew
tbf, Oda has more or less stated that Usopp is canonically black (e.g. if One Piece was set in the real world, he would be from Africa) and I've always seen him as a relatively light-skinned black person. One Piece in general isn't an anime where you're supposed to automatically assume that all the characters are Japanese unless specified otherwise.
 
More (or same article in different publication, it's late and I'm tired) about Indianapolis vs CRT.
Indianapolis is about equal parts black and white with maybe 4% Hispanic, Asian, Whatever mixed in. Anything race related might get interesting.



twitter thing about it, plus editorial cartoon
 
tbf, Oda has more or less stated that Usopp is canonically black (e.g. if One Piece was set in the real world, he would be from Africa) and I've always seen him as a relatively light-skinned black person. One Piece in general isn't an anime where you're supposed to automatically assume that all the characters are Japanese unless specified otherwise.
Ussopp is blatantly jewfrican rather than blackfrican. There are black people in one piece and they do not look anything like usopp.

However, blackbeard kinda looks like an older fatter usopp, make theories on that if you feel like it.
 

What a retard, no one can even agree what CRT is, apart from a cancer that seeks to divide, judging from the relevant reddit post



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From commiefornia, figures.
 
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