Culture Yes, Things Are Really As Bad As You've Heard - A Leftist Schoolteacher Struggles To Say Aloud the Things He Regularly Witnesses That Are So Outlandish They Sound Made Up By Right-Wing Provocateurs

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I spoke with the anon poster below, a public school teacher in a Blue city in a Blue state, and examined correspondence from his colleagues and supervisors that left no doubt that his personal account is authentic. He is indeed the sort of committed left-wing partisan who uses terms like “systems of oppression” unironically and who regards “anti-woke” polemicists as cynical hacks and grifters. He also happens to be witness to absurd school policies justified under the guise of “racial equity” that are doing harm to the very kinds of students on whose ostensible behalf they are being implemented. This is of course a familiar dynamic with all of the policies embraced as part of the ideological succession in schools: they enact a brazen form of neo-racism rooted in a fundamental contempt for the ability of black students to meet the same standards as other students and act as if the gutting of the most basic standards for all students will somehow help black students rather than harm all students — with the harm disproportionately being visited on the very students the policies claim to help. There is something poignant about the dilemma he describes, about being unable to communicate to his fellow leftist peers the awful magnitude of the moral abdication to which he is witness and party precisely because it is so extreme that all will dismiss it as right-wing propaganda. It is a dilemma widely shared across a range of liberal institutions in which conscientious actors see destructive practices being entrenched and immunized against critique by the same dynamics which they find powerless to resist because the specter of right-wing reaction makes any self-criticism impossible.

The summer program where I'm currently teaching enrolls about seventy students between the ages of six and twelve. Classes are technically open to any child in the district, but only a few parents actually sign their children up themselves; instead, the vast majority of kids are registered for the program by a teacher who was concerned with their academic performance the previous year. Parents can choose to accept or reject the enrollment, but the acceptance rate is something like 90% – it's free, after all, and plenty of these parents are already looking for a safe place to send their children while they work during the day.

This "enroll first, ask questions later" approach removes many of the obstacles that keep struggling students from engaging with other summer programs, many of which have complicated application processes and require children to meet certain academic standards. However, it also means many families aren’t particularly invested in the program itself and, as a consequence, both parent and student engagement is lower than it might otherwise be.

Early on, an administrator confessed that this sort of setup could lead to "attendance issues," which I took to mean some kids showing up late or even skipping class once in a while. Nine of the eleven students in my grade level were absent the first day. The next day, it was ten. By the end of the week, I had one student consistently attending and a few who had been officially withdrawn by their parents – but there were still eight children on my roster who were technically enrolled while having never once shown up.

At this point, I took a look at the waitlist to see if there were any students I could bring in to replace them; the games and activities I’d planned needed more kids anyway, and I knew the waitlist was where families who actually wanted their children to attend usually ended up (students who were just referred by teachers had priority placement). On my lunch break, I walked into the administrator’s office and asked them when I could expect the half-dozen or so children on my grade’s waitlist to be let in.

Immediately, I was informed of something truly absurd: The district is not allowed to remove any student from the program on the basis of non-attendance. A child remains enrolled in my classes until a parent explicitly states they’d like them removed, even if they have never once actually shown up.

Now, when I say the district is “not allowed” to do so, I don’t mean they’re forbidden by some state law or local ordinance. Rather, the district actively embraced this policy as part of their larger equity and racial justice overhaul, and even bragged about doing so in public-facing materials. Their explicit position is that requiring attendance for any district program unfairly victimizes children of color, as does factoring in attendance to any student’s grades during the regular school year. The administrator I spoke to seemed baffled that I would even ask. “I’ll let you know if any parents pull their kids out,” he told me, “but otherwise, your class is technically full.”

As an extra dose of insanity, we can’t even request that the parents of a non-attending student remove their child from the program; doing so, I was told, could “make them feel disrespected” and “communicate to them that their children are not welcome.” We just have to wait and hope they make that decision on their own, risking the occasional hint on a daily absence call that most don’t even pick up.

Over the past week or so, some of the chronically absent have finally been unenrolled. But as the program reaches its halfway point, the number of students who have never once attended but remain on the roster is still larger than the number of students on the waitlist. Today, as I write this, more than a dozen children whose families have actively sought out our help are still sitting at home, unable to attend “full classrooms” of four or five students - who are themselves struggling without peers to work with!

To most people, this sort of policy is absolutely inexplicable. How could it possibly benefit racial justice or equity to keep classrooms half-empty, excluding students who want to attend in deference to those who don't? The whole thing sounds like the sort of outrageous Kafkaesque fantasy a conservative would invent to satirize the ultra-woke and their bigotry of low expectations. But that’s precisely the problem. After all, what options do you have when so many of the people in charge of our schools have priorities so disordered that merely describing them, no matter how dispassionately, will earn you accusations of strawmanning?

I've had liberal friends of mine dispute (to my face!) straightforward accounts of what my colleagues have said. They’ll tell me school districts could never embrace such obviously unworkable policies; what else can I do except shrug my shoulders and say, "I'm sorry, but yes, they can?" They’ll tell me I sound like one of those right-wing grifter types; what else can I do except sigh and tell them the grifters have a point?

This is where I have to stop and make one thing very clear: I’m a leftist. Like, a big one. I hate capitalism, I support abortion on demand, and I unironically use phrases like “systems of oppression” and “the dominant culture.” The last big paper I put together for my undergraduate degree was on critical race theory, for the love of God! I’m not the sort of person who can be easily dismissed as a conservative crank. But plenty of my fellow leftists are still willing to try, on the grounds that anyone who thinks there might be any problem with DEI policies must necessarily be a slack-jawed MAGA troll.

In my short career as an educator, I’ve had countless experiences like this – encounters with colleagues and administrators so surreal that even close friends chided me for exaggerating or “playing into right-wing tropes” when I repeat them. And there’s a sense in which I don’t blame them, because things really are that crazy out here. Let me rattle off two quick examples for now, in case the summer program wasn’t bizarre enough:

1) I once attended a meeting where we brainstormed strategies to increase AP enrollment. When we moved to discuss the gap in enrollment between Black and white students, a senior teacher said that trying to register more children of color for AP classes is inherently racist and that putting greater value on AP classes at all is an expression of white supremacy. To clarify: I don't mean that a senior teacher expressed a complex set of ideas regarding racial justice that could be uncharitably reduced to those claims. I mean I sat in a room where a senior teacher literally spoke the words Trying to register more students of color for AP classes is inherently racist and Putting greater value on AP classes at all is an expression of white supremacy, to an audience of other teachers who nodded along or otherwise kept quiet.

2) I once attended another meeting - lots of meetings when you’re a teacher! - where we were working to approve a new weekly schedule for students. When I said I was concerned that it would require leaving some sections of the curriculum untaught, a colleague said that might actually be a good thing, because most of our students are white and their test scores dropping slightly would help shrink the racial achievement gap in our state. Again, to clarify: I don’t mean my colleague had a a more nuanced approach to testing that a dishonest interlocutor could twist to sound like that. I mean my colleague literally spoke those words. (To be fair, one other teacher did speak up and challenge them this time, albeit very politely.)

Now, do those two anecdotes, no matter how explicitly I describe them, sound like something out of James Lindsay's fever dreams? Yes! Are these things that did, in fact, happen? Also yes! And I just don't know how to get both of those facts across to the fairly large segment of the American population who believes it could only ever be one or the other. (Honestly, if I were more conspiratorial, I would think progressives were engineering this dynamic on purpose; in reality, I think they just organically stumbled on a level of craziness perfectly calibrated to make their critics seem like loons. Lucky them!)

Like I said before, I’m a leftist myself; I have a real and abiding commitment to racial justice in education,. Do I like having to make the same points as pundits who want me kicked out of the classroom too? Of course not. But it's precisely because I think racism and poverty are so rampant in this nation, and our obligation to respond so overwhelming, that I can’t keep pretending these ridiculous DEI schemes aren’t hurting the children we owe so much to. They are. It’s happening, right now.

So that's why I’m writing about these issues – not to dunk on the woke or trigger the libs or “launder my white anxiety” (as a friend recently suggested on social media). I’m writing about these issues because I want to grab anyone who might listen and tell them yes, things really are as bad as you've heard, even if the people you heard it from can be absolutely nuts. These stories sound crazy because they are crazy. It’s not my fault a bunch of cynical hacks noticed that first while all my supposed allies were training themselves to look the other way.

https://wesleyyang.substack.com/p/yes-things-are-really-as-bad-as-youve?r=4bqhe&s=r (A)
 
Tl'dr even though I've realized conservatives were 100% right about everything I'm going to continue hurting people and being an sjw because "racism bad."

There's no hope for these people is there?"
You have to realize that a lot of people on social media have no worldview other than "whatever my enemy likes must be bad." That's why there can never be any "unity": the moment Fox News says something is good, Twitter/Reddit will immediately claim its racist/sexist/phobic.
 
Tl'dr even though I've realized conservatives were 100% right about everything I'm going to continue hurting people and being an sjw because "racism bad."

There's no hope for these people is there?"

"I'm too stupid to learn from my experiences and reconsider ideas that have been proven bad in practice; I'm a teacher."
 
You have to realize that a lot of people on social media have no worldview other than "whatever my enemy likes must be bad." That's why there can never be any "unity": the moment Fox News says something is good, Twitter/Reddit will immediately claim its racist/sexist/phobic.
You're right.

The elite class have successfully convinced a huge percentage of the population that there is a definitive good and evil, which they thankfully have labeled for ease of identification.

They completely play into the hero complex so that these people look at this as a crusade for good and the ends justify the means.

I completely understand the human aspect of wanting to be the hero and righteous, but modern society has tainted it so horribly and so far to the point of what we see now.

The lizard brained populace isolates key events and milestones, but doesn't have the capacity to understand the why and how, which is infinitely the damn point.

Ex. "Nazis and Hitler bad guys!! WW2 evil" but don't take into account (or even care) how a person, much less an entire society gets to that point. Mostly because they've been told "Germans evil, that's all you need to know" and that's the extent of their knowledge.
 
When I said I was concerned that it would require leaving some sections of the curriculum untaught, a colleague said that might actually be a good thing, because most of our students are white and their test scores dropping slightly would help shrink the racial achievement gap in our state.
If thisdoes not awaken those in denail, I do not know what will.
The indoctrination about race is powerful, in that we are going on sixty years of hard experiences that articulate hard truths...and yet people go to all lengths to try and explain away the obvious.
 
You have to realize that a lot of people on social media have no worldview other than "whatever my enemy likes must be bad." That's why there can never be any "unity": the moment Fox News says something is good, Twitter/Reddit will immediately claim its racist/sexist/phobic.
People think most NPCs are programmed to obey the establishment, but that's only partially true. The most powerful part of their programming isn't obedience, it's hate. They have, above all else, been programmed to hate white people. That's why you have Twitter NPCs turning against their masters and going after Hollywood and the left for being "too white".

Their programmers made the mistake of getting the Laws of Robotics out of order when they were creating their drones. If "white bad" supersedes all else, then they're not going to listen to a white person even if they're on the Correct Side.

As much as I hate linking to a cuckfest like XKCD, this is a good way to demonstrate what's happening:

the_three_laws_of_robotics.png

Except instead of the normal laws, NPC laws go like this:

1) Hate white people
2) Obey DNC orders
3) Blacks are the master race

2 being above 3 ensures that they only love the correct black people, as seen by their insanity surrounding Clarence Thomas, but 1 being above 2 means nobody can control them once they see white skin and go into a berserker rage. There is no kill switch.
 
Except instead of the normal laws, NPC laws go like this:

1) Hate white people
2) Obey DNC orders
3) Blacks are the master race

2 being above 3 ensures that they only love the correct black people, as seen by their insanity surrounding Clarence Thomas, but 1 being above 2 means nobody can control them once they see white skin and go into a berserker rage. There is no kill switch.
I mean, we saw two different examples over the weekend, with BLM literally supporting the criminals and mocking the actual victims, including a single mother and child, because ALL COPS ARE BAD and kill black people literally supercedes police protect black woman from criminal.

Maybe this woman is Latina; I can't tell. But still, BLM is literally supporting the criminal that terrorized her. In fact, this is the case where the Go Fund Me for the criminal was higher than the victim at one point. But I've been mixing up cases lately.

 
If thisdoes not awaken those in denail, I do not know what will.
The indoctrination about race is powerful, in that we are going on sixty years of hard experiences that articulate hard truths...and yet people go to all lengths to try and explain away the obvious.

To them its just meeting numbers for the bosses, in sort of a weird maebe fuenke "toss a banana in the trash to cover the stolen money" mentality.
 
It's 100% hate that drives the Democrats and you only need to listen to the audio of them murdering that black kid in Seattle.

These Democrats were pumping round after round into this black kid who was driving around in a stolen jeep and they were letting out the most horrific cries of ecstasy the entire time!

They did it because Kamala Harris told them to kill Republicans and they were so eager to carry out her commands they started murdering black children by mistake.
 
TL;DR - Author doesn't realize that the left wingers spouting crazy shit aren't just hamming it up to 4d chess the right wing into lampooning them- they actually think and believe the oversimplified inflammatory things they are saying.

Ironically, just making this observation, and thinking that black kids should be held accountable for their school attendance is enough to classify the author as an "ZOMG ALT-RIGHT NAZI!!!!! BASICALLY HITLER!!!!!" in the eyes of the other leftists.

Ironically, despite realizing this, the author still identifies with the loonies.

TL;DR - Author doesn't realize that the left wingers spouting crazy shit aren't just hamming it up to 4d chess the right wing into lampooning them- they actually think and believe the oversimplified inflammatory things they are saying.

Ironically, just making this observation, and thinking that black kids should be held accountable for their school attendance is enough to classify the author as an "ZOMG ALT-RIGHT NAZI!!!!! BASICALLY HITLER!!!!!" in the eyes of the other leftists.

Ironically, despite realizing this, the author still identifies with the loonies.
Better yet, it all boils down to the author saying "I realized that the right is right about everything, but I'm still a leftist"
 
Tl'dr even though I've realized conservatives were 100% right about everything I'm going to continue hurting people and being an sjw because "racism bad."

There's no hope for these people is there?"
There's the reason I started calling these people "Soulless Mannequins." They'll like/hate what they're programmed to like/hate; when confronted with irrevocable proof of the opposite, they can't think, reason, or adjust their values. Yuri Bezemov called them... actually I forget the wors he used, but he had a word for them. The internet caused a shit storm by calling them NPCs.

But to me, Soulless Mannequins; because they can never attack your logic process, but you, by calling you an evil Nazi/Bigot/Etc. Like there's something systematically wrong inside of you. So to me, they're empty. When they try to convince themselves of something, they don't hear themselves, they hear whoever is on TV. They're empty husks pretending to be human, and they know they're pretending, which is why they get all fire and brimstone about morality. Their shell knows it's empty, that they're pretending, and is angered by it.
 
Why is he surprised about the AP thing? They've been wanting to get rid of AP classes since it's mostly White and Asians in them. The easiest way to achieve racial equity isn't bringing people up but putting others down, the same way communist reach class equity. He honestly deserves to be fired and it's only a matter of time before he brings up a problematic truth that he will be accused of the worst.
 
yes, things really are as bad as you've heard, even if the people you heard it from can be absolutely nuts.
So you’ve seen it first hand.
You still think the people who point it out are nuts
The people who you point it out to now say you’re nuts
And you still think people who believe it are nuts?
Well ok then. And you teach, you say? Gosh.
 
And you teach, you say? Gosh.
"Teach" is a generous term anymore. It's more like repeat and drill certain material in hope the younger minds soak it up. Any teaching that's actually done is because the teacher may actually have a drive to impart wisdom and all that other feel-good shit... Those people are also a minority.
 
On the one hand, it's good that there's at least one of them out there. The two other teachers he quoted aren't going to realise they're crazy any time soon.

On the other, while I get he's trying to persuade his fellow leftists that, no, it's not right wing propaganda, things really are this insane - well, the reaction of his 'friends' should have been enough. These are the people who ostensibly know him and trust him, but the moment his experiences stopped supporting their world-view the insults and accusations began.

He thinks these people can listen. He thinks they actually care. He's finding out that it's not true, and is coping hard. This is an idealist discovering he's far more alone than other people have led him to believe, and I'm betting his belief in anything like CRT, equity, really any leftist dogma, is going out the window.

He's anonymous, so we likely won't find out whether he asks himself some hard questions about his beliefs, or just sticks with, 'Teaching is as bad as the baddies say, but they're still wrong about everything else.' But considering how teaching has become one of the biggest cultural battlegrounds, I suspect he'll have to confront that the vast majority of his political motivations are based on lies.

He's in the process of breaking his programming. It's funny how dumb that makes him sound when trying to point out the crazy, but I'm not going to say he won't continue coming to his senses. He's going to lose a lot of friends and potentially his job if he keeps this up, after all - that's a challenge for most people.

Tl;dr: I have sympathy for someone breaking out of a cult to not have shaken it all off yet. It might be misplaced, but I can see both that he might stop at only doubting the message when he had personal experience, or that he's going to start questioning everything now.
 
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