Critical race theory (CRT) continues to be in the news. Former Attorney General William Barr recently made his first public address since leaving the Trump administration. He criticized the “secular progressive orthodoxy through government-run schools,” and he suggested public funding of such education may be unconstitutional.
According to Fox News, Barr said, “The
time has come to admit that the approach of giving militantly secularist
government schools a monopoly over publicly funded education has become a
disaster.” He touched on the fact that CRT is being taught in American
classrooms as part of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) curricula. He called the
curricula, “Marxism substituting race for class antagonism.”
Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also spoke about the CRT as well as the “1619 Project” created by The
New York Times. In a radio appearance on July 4th, Pompeo said the
following:
If we teach that that somehow this
founding of the United States of America was somehow flawed, it was corrupt, it
was racist, that’s really dangerous. It strikes at the … very foundations of
our country. I certainly worry about that.
It’s called critical race theory or the
1619 Project. … But at the end, they’re attacking the central understandings
that we have shared together for 245 years and attempt to divide the country.
Christopher F. Rufo also spoke about
CRT about three months ago at Hillsdale College. He defined critical race
theory and explained how it works. He also shared some steps that we can take
to destroy its effect in our nation. He said that we need to understand the
history of Marxism to understand critical race theory. Critical Race
Theory: What It Is and How to Fight It - Imprimis (hillsdale.edu)
Originally, the Marxist Left built its
political program on the theory of class conflict. Marx believed that the
primary characteristic of industrial societies was the imbalance of power
between capitalists and workers. The solution to that imbalance, according to
Marx, was revolution: the workers would eventually gain consciousness of their
plight, seize the means of production, overthrow the capitalist class, and
usher in a new socialist society.
Rufo reminded his listeners that
there were “a number of regimes underwent Marxist-style revolutions, and each
ended in disaster.” These socialist governments included the Soviet Union, China,
Cambodia, Cuba, and others. These nations “racked up a body count of nearly 100
million of their own people.” These governments “are remembered for their
gulags, show trials, executions, and mass starvations.” Rufo called said that “man’s
darkest brutalities” were unleashed by Marx’s ideas.
The Marxist intellectuals realized
that Americans “had never developed a sense of class consciousness or class
divisions.” This is true because most “Americans believed in the American dream
– the idea that they could transcend their origins through education, hard
work, and good citizenship.” This realization did not deter the Marxist movement. They merely “adapted their
revolutionary theory to the social and racial unrest of the 1960s.” They abandoned
the idea of dividing capitalists and workers, and “they substituted race for
class and sought to create a revolutionary coalition of the dispossessed based
on racial and ethnic categories.”
America was fortunate in that Martin
Luther King, Jr. had a vision that was more attractive. In addition, President
Lyndon B. Johnson pursued the Great Society, and Richard Nixon campaigned on a promised
to restore law and order. These actions delayed the Marxist ideas, but “the
radical Left has proved resilient and enduring – which is where critical race
theory comes in.”
Critical race theory is an academic
discipline, formulated in the 1990s, built on the intellectual framework of
identity-based Marxism. Relegated for many years to universities and obscure
academic journals, over the past decade it has increasingly become the default
ideology in our public institutions. It has been injected into government
agencies, public school systems, teacher training programs, and corporate human
resources departments in the form of diversity training programs, human
resources modules, public policy frameworks, and school curricula.
The Marxist movement uses a “series
of euphemisms … to describe critical race theory, including “equity,” “social
justice,” “diversity and inclusion,” and “culturally responsive teaching.”
Knowing that Americans would reject “neo-Marxism,” the movement chose innocent
sounding words. “Equity … sounds non-threatening and is easily confused
with the American principle of equality.” However, there is a “vast and
important” distinction between them.
Indeed, equality – the principle
proclaimed in the Declaration of Independence, defended in the Civil War, and
codified into law with the 14th and 15th Amendments, the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 – is explicitly
rejected by critical race theorists. To them, equality represents “mere
nondiscrimination” and provides “camouflage” for white supremacy, patriarchy,
and oppression.
In contrast to equality, equity as defined
and promoted by critical race theorists is little more than reformulated Marxism.
In the name of equity, UCLA Law Professor and critical race theorist Cheryl
Harris has proposed suspending private property rights, seizing land and wealth
and redistributing them along racial lines. Critical race guru Ibram X. Kendi,
who directs the Center for Antiracist Research at Boston University, has
proposed the creation of a federal Department of Antiracism. This department
would be independent of (i.e., unaccountable to) the elected branches of
government, and would have the power to nullify, veto, or abolish any law at
any level of government and curtail the speech of political leaders and others
who are deemed insufficiently “antiracist.”
One practical result of the creation of
such a department would be the overthrow of capitalism, since according to
Kendi, “In order to truly be antiracist, you also have to truly be
anti-capitalist.” In other words, identity is the means and Marxism is the end.
An equity-based form of government would
mean the end not only of private property, but also of individual rights,
equality under the law, federalism, and freedom of speech. These would be
replaced by race-based redistribution of wealth, group-based rights, active
discrimination, and omnipotent bureaucratic authority. Historically, the
accusation of “anti-Americanism” has been overused. But in this case, it’s not
a matter of interpretation – critical race theory prescribes a revolutionary
program that would overturn the principles of the Declaration and destroy the
remaining structure of the Constitution.
The above description does not sound
like an America where most Americans would want to live. Anything that overturns
the principles found in the Declaration of Independence or destroys the
Constitution in any way is not good for America.
Rufo is an investigative journalist,
and he has “developed a database of more than 1,000” stories of how critical
race theory is being applied at the highest levels of the federal government.
Employees are “forced to renounce their ‘white male privilege’ and write
letters of apology to fictitious women and people of color.” First grade
children in Cupertino, California, were forced “to deconstruct their racial and
sexual identities, and rank themselves according to their ‘power and privilege.’”
Middle school teachers in Springfield,
Missouri, were forced “to locate themselves on an ‘oppression matrix,’ based on
the idea that straight, white, English-speaking, Christian males are members of
the oppressor class and must atone for their privilege and ‘covert white
supremacy.’ Fifth graders in Philadelphia were forced “to celebrate ‘Black
communism’ and simulate a Black Power rally to free 1960s radical Angela David from
prison, where she had once been held on charges of murder.” A school district
in Seattle “told white teachers that they are guilty of ‘spirit murder’ against
black children and must ‘bankrupt [their] privilege in acknowledgement of
[their] thieved inheritance.”
Rufo knows from his investigations that “critical
race theory is becoming the operating ideology of our public institutions.” He
wrote, “it is not an exaggeration – from the universities to bureaucracies to
k-12 school systems, critical race theory has permeated the collective
intelligence and decision-making process of American government, with no sign
of slowing down.” He called the movement “a revolutionary change” that is “turned
against the American people.” The ideology will not stop on its own, and
attempts to halt its encroachment have not worked for a number of reasons.
First, too many Americans have developed
an acute fear of speaking up about social and political issues, especially those
involving race. …
Second, critical race theorists have
constructed their argument like a mousetrap. Disagreement with their program
becomes irrefutable evidence of a dissenter’s “white fragility,” “unconscious
bias,” or “internalized white supremacy.” …
Third, Americans across the political
spectrum have failed to separate the premise of critical race theory from its
conclusion. Its premise – that American history includes slavery and other
injustices, and that we should examine and learn from that history -- is
undeniable. But its conclusion – that America was founded on and defined by
racism and that our founding principles, our Constitution, and our way of life
should be overthrown – does not rightly, much less necessarily, follow.
Fourth and finally, the writers and
activists who have had the courage to speak out against critical race theory
have tended to address it on the theoretical level, pointing out the theory’s
logical contradictions and dishonest account of history. These criticisms are worthy
and good, but they move the debate into the academic realm, which is friendly
terrain for proponents of critical race theory.
Rufo explained that critical race
theory was “No longer simply an academic matter” because it has become “a tool
of political power.” Therefore, the only way to successfully oppose it is “address
it politically at every level.” He wrote, “Critical race theorists must be
confronted with and forced to speak to the facts.” He explained that this can
be done by forcing them to answer questions, such as: “Do they support public
schools separating first-graders into groups of ‘oppressors’ and ‘oppressed’?
Do they support mandatory curricula teaching that ‘all white people play a part
in perpetuating systemic racism? Do they support public schools instructing
white parents to become ‘white traitors’ and advocate for ‘white abolition’? Do
they want those who work in government to be required to undergo this kind of
reeducation? How about managers and workers in corporate America? How about the
men and women in our military? How about every one of us?”
Laying out a strategy to combat critical race theory, Rufo wrote that a successful strategy would be threefold: “governmental action, grass-roots mobilization, and an appeal to principle. He reminded his listeners that President Donald Trump signed executive orders that banned critical race theory in the federal government, but President Joe Biden rescinded that order. However, Trump’s executive order provided “a model for governors and municipal leaders to follow.” Several states have passed laws banning CRT. In fact, Rufo “organized a coalition of attorneys to file lawsuits against schools and government agencies that impose critical race theory-based programs on ground of the First Amendment (which protects citizens from compelled speech), the Fourteenth Amendment (which provides equal protection under the law), and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (which prohibits public institutions from discriminating on the basis of race).
The second way to combat CRT
is at the grassroots level. There is “a multiracial and bipartisan coalition”
emerging across the nation. Parents and teachers are speaking out against CRT
in the schools, and employees are speaking out about the demands being made in
the workplace. When Americans realize what is being forced upon the nation, they
are standing up and demanding that it be stopped.
The third way to combat CRT is with
principles. Americans must use moral language instead of being confined by the
CRT categories. “For example, we often find ourselves debating ‘diversity.’
Diversity as most of us understand it is generally good, all things being
equal, but it is of secondary value. We should be talking about and aiming at excellence,
a common standard that challenges people of all backgrounds to achieve their
potential. On the scale of desirable ends, excellence beats diversity every time.”
Americans should point out “the dishonesty
of the historical narrative on which critical race theory is predicated.” In
addition, we “must promote the true story of America – a story that is honest
about injustices in American history, but that places them in the context of our
nation’s high ideals and the progress we have made towards realizing them.
Genuine American history is rich with stories of achievements and sacrifices
that will move the hearts of Americans – in stark contrast to the grim and
pessimistic narrative pressed by critical race theorists.”
The most important thing is that “we
must have courage – the fundamental virtue required in our time. Courage to
stand and speak the truth. Courage to withstand epithets. Courage to face the
mob. Courage to shrug off the score of the elites.” We must overcome the fear
and stand together because CRT will not be able to stand in the face of such courage.
Besides, “courage begets courage,” and “Truth and justice are on our side.” If
we stand together with courage, we will win.
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