Gotdammit, I'm sick of these fragile ass CAC's regarding critical race theory

This fool.

It's sad but it's a shit load of idiots just like him believing CRT really exist in grade school.

They just don't want truthfull race discussions in class so they had to give it a boogie man name so they can lump anything regarding race under it.

Beware. The big bad CRT is going to take the minds of your precious little white kids.
 
damn I know what I write is shaking up muthafuckas paradigms

how the fuck my IP gonna be banned for my factual

OPINIONS..

I was replying to a post and message came up said my I.P was banned...

some of folks in this world are WEAK AS FUCK!!


products of pussy ass parenting...
 
Join the parents group, local council, voter registration board and KEEP FIGHTING. These white folks got the message and are attacking at the small local level. We better do the same shit. No matter how hard.
some ppl think we shouldnt VOTE but just stay complaining on twitter & join online cults & cause hatred & division and somehow that will force these crakkaz hands to give us EVERYTHING
 
Revisiting this again?

Pay attention y’all this is how you control people.

This is how the right uses people to attack marginalized groups through proxy straw men indirectly by having them attack a progressive idea. Everyone who attacks the idea we can identify as racist and everyone that supports the idea they can identify.
 
It's sad but it's a shit load of idiots just like him believing CRT really exist in grade school.

They just don't want truthfull race discussions in class so they had to give it a boogie man name so they can lump anything regarding race under it.

Beware. The big bad CRT is going to take the minds of your precious little white kids.
Follow-up
 

For the paywall ppl........

Fight over teaching ‘Beloved’ book in schools becomes hot topic in Virginia governor’s race

RICHMOND — A Pulitzer Prize-winning novel from 1987 has suddenly become the hottest topic in the Virginia governor’s race, as Republican Glenn Youngkin charged that Democrat Terry McAuliffe blocked parents from protecting their children from explicit classroom material, while McAuliffe responded by raising the specter of book-banning.

At the heart of the issue: “Beloved,” the novel by Nobel laureate Toni Morrison about a Civil War-era Black woman who kills her own 2-year-old daughter to spare her from the evils of slavery.

The novel, inspired by a true story, contains graphic depictions of sex, violence and bestiality as it portrays the horrors of slavery but was praised by New York Times critic Michiko Kakutani for having “the heightened power and resonance of myth.”

With only a week to go until Election Day, Youngkin released an ad Monday featuring Fairfax County resident Laura Murphy, who waged a battle against “Beloved” in schools beginning in 2013 after her son — a high school senior at the time — said it gave him nightmares while reading it for an advanced placement literature class.

Murphy eventually took her fight to the Republican-led General Assembly, which in 2016 passed a bill with bipartisan support to give parents the right to opt their children out of sexually explicit reading assignments.

At the time, about half of Virginia school districts already followed that practice, but the bill would have enshrined that in state law. The “Beloved bill,” as it was known, would have made Virginia the first state in the nation to give parents that opt-out power. McAuliffe vetoed it as well as a similar bill in 2017.

McAuliffe on Monday condemned the ad, saying Youngkin was using “our schools and children as political pawns.”

“In the final week of this race, Glenn Youngkin has doubled down on the same divisive culture wars that have fueled his campaign from the very beginning,” McAuliffe said in a written statement. “Youngkin’s closing message of book banning and silencing esteemed Black authors is a racist dog whistle designed to gin up support from the most extreme elements of his party--mainly his top endorser and surrogate, Donald Trump.”

Youngkin’s campaign released a statement saying the bills “would simply have notified parents of sexually explicit reading assignments and given them the choice of having their child receive an alternative. McAuliffe continues to confirm every day that he wants to silence parents because he doesn’t believe they should have a say in their child’s education.”
In the 60-second video, Murphy speaks directly into the camera.

“When my son showed me his reading material, my heart sunk,” she says. “It was some of the most explicit reading material you can imagine.”

McAuliffe’s vetoes show that “he doesn’t think parents should have a say,” she says. “He shut us out.”

The ad was viewed more than 200,000 times and shared on Twitter more than 1,000 times in the first few hours it was up.
Youngkin has increasingly built his campaign’s momentum on issues of parental grievance, as conservatives nationwide accuse local school boards of pursuing a liberal cultural agenda. The tactic seems to be working; polls show that Youngkin has gained on McAuliffe, and the race is a dead heat.


Youngkin routinely gets his loudest applause at rallies when he promises to ban the teaching of critical race theory in Virginia, referring to a set of academic theories about teaching racial history that are not actually on the state’s public school curriculums.

He has also tapped into parental outrage in Loudoun County over a case in which a student was accused of committing sexual assault at one high school several months after being accused of a similar incident at another school.

The issue of books started gaining ground earlier this month when Youngkin raised it in the second and final gubernatorial debate, accusing McAuliffe of vetoing the “Beloved” bill in an effort to impose the will of the state on parents. McAuliffe defended it and said, “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.”

Republicans seized on that quote, using it to appeal to voters in crucial suburban swing districts.

McAuliffe eventually released a TV ad in which he emphasized his respect for parents.
 
its good to discuss these things

but please my good people dont

give these satanist your energy,

look listen, take what works for you,

throw the rest back in their face..

dont let these demons zap your energy..

end of the day,

we are responsible for teaching OUR CHILDREN

we leave them in the hands of the enemy

then we get what we get...

this energy should be spent on finding ways,

to use todays technology to teach our chldren


no reason why we cant create our own...

learning facilities..

We just need to know we can..

Its a known FACT we spent BILLIONS

and I mean FUCKIN BILLIONS per year

on SODA alone...

thats just SODA...

imagine if we manufactured our own bevearges and used

the money to create real erudition amongst our youth...

all I need you to do MY GOOD RIGHTEOUS BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE

right NOW is

IMAGINE that visual!!!!!!
 
This fool.


The video Zero that he is talking about doesn't even have ANYTHING he is talking about. The video seemed more about the Holocaust than people of color and the video isn't by Pixar. The news caster seemed to be of the same mind as well.
 
For the paywall ppl........

Fight over teaching ‘Beloved’ book in schools becomes hot topic in Virginia governor’s race

RICHMOND — A Pulitzer Prize-winning novel from 1987 has suddenly become the hottest topic in the Virginia governor’s race, as Republican Glenn Youngkin charged that Democrat Terry McAuliffe blocked parents from protecting their children from explicit classroom material, while McAuliffe responded by raising the specter of book-banning.

At the heart of the issue: “Beloved,” the novel by Nobel laureate Toni Morrison about a Civil War-era Black woman who kills her own 2-year-old daughter to spare her from the evils of slavery.

The novel, inspired by a true story, contains graphic depictions of sex, violence and bestiality as it portrays the horrors of slavery but was praised by New York Times critic Michiko Kakutani for having “the heightened power and resonance of myth.”

With only a week to go until Election Day, Youngkin released an ad Monday featuring Fairfax County resident Laura Murphy, who waged a battle against “Beloved” in schools beginning in 2013 after her son — a high school senior at the time — said it gave him nightmares while reading it for an advanced placement literature class.

Murphy eventually took her fight to the Republican-led General Assembly, which in 2016 passed a bill with bipartisan support to give parents the right to opt their children out of sexually explicit reading assignments.

At the time, about half of Virginia school districts already followed that practice, but the bill would have enshrined that in state law. The “Beloved bill,” as it was known, would have made Virginia the first state in the nation to give parents that opt-out power. McAuliffe vetoed it as well as a similar bill in 2017.

McAuliffe on Monday condemned the ad, saying Youngkin was using “our schools and children as political pawns.”

“In the final week of this race, Glenn Youngkin has doubled down on the same divisive culture wars that have fueled his campaign from the very beginning,” McAuliffe said in a written statement. “Youngkin’s closing message of book banning and silencing esteemed Black authors is a racist dog whistle designed to gin up support from the most extreme elements of his party--mainly his top endorser and surrogate, Donald Trump.”

Youngkin’s campaign released a statement saying the bills “would simply have notified parents of sexually explicit reading assignments and given them the choice of having their child receive an alternative. McAuliffe continues to confirm every day that he wants to silence parents because he doesn’t believe they should have a say in their child’s education.”
In the 60-second video, Murphy speaks directly into the camera.

“When my son showed me his reading material, my heart sunk,” she says. “It was some of the most explicit reading material you can imagine.”

McAuliffe’s vetoes show that “he doesn’t think parents should have a say,” she says. “He shut us out.”

The ad was viewed more than 200,000 times and shared on Twitter more than 1,000 times in the first few hours it was up.
Youngkin has increasingly built his campaign’s momentum on issues of parental grievance, as conservatives nationwide accuse local school boards of pursuing a liberal cultural agenda. The tactic seems to be working; polls show that Youngkin has gained on McAuliffe, and the race is a dead heat.


Youngkin routinely gets his loudest applause at rallies when he promises to ban the teaching of critical race theory in Virginia, referring to a set of academic theories about teaching racial history that are not actually on the state’s public school curriculums.

He has also tapped into parental outrage in Loudoun County over a case in which a student was accused of committing sexual assault at one high school several months after being accused of a similar incident at another school.

The issue of books started gaining ground earlier this month when Youngkin raised it in the second and final gubernatorial debate, accusing McAuliffe of vetoing the “Beloved” bill in an effort to impose the will of the state on parents. McAuliffe defended it and said, “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.”

Republicans seized on that quote, using it to appeal to voters in crucial suburban swing districts.

McAuliffe eventually released a TV ad in which he emphasized his respect for parents.

Thank you
 
Why be upset with white folks doing what white folks do? Instead you should be upset at negroes like Condoleeza RIce and Barack Obama and these other so called black clowns who have a problem with CRT. Condoleeza supposedly was friends with the five Black girls that was caught in that church bombing in Alabama during the 60s. She experienced racism in Alabama and conducts herself as a handkerchief head clown.
 
Why be upset with white folks doing what white folks do? Instead you should be upset at negroes like Condoleeza RIce and Barack Obama and these other so called black clowns who have a problem with CRT. Condoleeza supposedly was friends with the five Black girls that was caught in that church bombing in Alabama during the 60s. She experienced racism in Alabama and conducts herself as a handkerchief head clown.
A negro sent to watch you die isn’t a noble negro.

Do you remember Baghdad Bob? He didn’t die with a missile up his ass. He’s alive and well in one of those awful places I would never visit.
 
A negro sent to watch you die isn’t a noble negro.

Do you remember Baghdad Bob? He didn’t die with a missile up his ass. He’s alive and well in one of those awful places I would never visit.
I'll give her the benefit of the doubt that she wasn't a coon at 9 or 10. But I will say this we as Black people will be a million times ahead of the ballgame if we can ever get rid of these turncoats and coons.
 
I'll give her the benefit of the doubt that she wasn't a coon at 9 or 10. But I will say this we as Black people will be a million times ahead of the ballgame if we can ever get rid of these turncoats and coons.
This is capitalism: what do you have to offer them? A black paradise isn’t going entice them. What position of power can you provide to them?
 
The problem is all the dirty little Cacs secrets and abominations are coming to light and they don't want their children to know about their dark history that for years the have either changed the narrative of or just flat out hide it. They are guilt of genocide way before the Germans were during WW2.
 
CRT is not History, and History is not CRT. CRT is a method of examining US laws in light of the concept of "race." CRT is not "in our schools" unless you're in graduate or law school. We do ourselves no favors when they conflate the two. That's what Republicans want you to do so they can turn out their troops. Know the difference.:yes:
 
This dude tweeted out that his wife is a teacher, and when a parent asked her if she was going to teach CRT, his wife said, "I don't know. Tell me what it is, and I'll tell you." He said the parent stood there speechless for about 20 seconds, and then walked away.
 
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Stupid bitch!!

PNOkp8.jpg
 
I wonder how many of those books are in school libraries? If he's trying to ban those books from the state overall, then he may as well hold an actual book burning to go along with his desire for a virtual one.
Right! I scanned the list quickly... I highly doubt a school library has The Handmade's Tail... I could be wrong
 
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