Durch das Klicken auf „Fein“ klicken, stimmst der Speicherung von Cookies auf deinem Gerät zu, um die Navigation auf der Website zu verbessern, die Nutzung der Website zu analysieren und unsere Marketingbemühungen zu unterstützen.
I am not trying to trigger anyone, but I'm sure this will. I never knew color when I was growing up. My children didn't know it either, but my grandchildren are being taught CRT, prejudice, white privilege. What the hell?
It's really saturated and I will say that awareness is the first key. You know, we have to acknowledge it to admit that there's a problem. And I feel like that's what's happening right now. We're having some serious tower moments and it will be a lot of fun.
I completely agree with you and I am a white woman of privilege. I think my children should learn that our forefathers and ancestors were racist in some ways and brilliant in other ways and that humans can be both.
CRT is a university level concept. I sincerely doubt that unless your children are at university, in which case they opted into it, that they're being taught that.
Every time I ask people what they mean, they move the goalposts, because actually CRT requires a basis in legal understanding, so unless you've studied law, you couldn't possibly be studying CRT. I'll ask, and people will suddenly change the subject to anti-racism or something completely different.
children on these topics, we can help them better understand how systemic racism has shaped our society today and they develop more empathy as a result.
For Tina and the others like us who don't see color and we see the person as they are, it's very difficult to grasp and understand this recent concept because I just don't see it.
All this hyper focusing on race and ethnicity that's happening currently, all it's doing is bringing the wrong attention to something that was never an issue to begin with.
I completely agree. The way to abolish the dividing of people is to stop caring about race and the color of the skin, stop talking about it. That's how you abolish it. The more you talk about it, the more you divide, the more you get people the reason to hate each other.
If someone were to walk up to me and call me a effing N-word with an E-R at the end, I'd simply stare at them and walk away. I have enough self-control to do that and they would be even madder that I did that rather than entertain them.
Imagine a world where there were a few thousand racist people and nobody ever responded to them to the racist remarks Nobody ever cared. Nobody ever called them out. Nobody gave them any attention They would simply disappear.
Yes, Joshua, that makes a lot of sense, but with all due respect, if they said something about your child or your sibling or somebody that you loved, I would get angry and speak up.
Everybody sees color. But back in the day, people didn't care. Nobody cared about no color. And it's good to know about cultures, but what if there's a white person in Africa?
You say back in the day, no one cared about no color. How far back are we talking about? Are we talking about past the social elements that created black culture and the whole color cast system?
Culture in my book doesn't have to do anything with color. It has to do with your environment. You could be a black guy from Mexico, you could be a black guy from America. It's going to be different.
I'm not asking a question, I'm making a statement. I'm simply stating that critical race theory should not be taught to children when they don't understand the concept. Adults teaching college is fine.
I thought it was the science of analyzing race and class. You're not really looking at people, you're looking at systems. Don't children have to be taught systems?
And furthermore, if the children have to learn all this twisted gender perspective, then for them to learn the history between race and class is not a bad thing, especially if it would help to adjust the value of citizen perspective.
I think what you guys are failing to see what I'm trying to say is that I think that children should not be learning any of that at an age they cannot conceive or understand what's happening.
Hey, I totally applaud anyone that can say that they don't see color and that they have, you know, pretty much been unscathed in this crazy world that we live in. I can honestly say that it is now, you know, as far as racial injustice is much more saturated.
Quite unfortunate about the skin color thing but those of us with the color we don't set none of the social parameters and as far as CRT is concerned it is the intersectionality between law and race and who speaks up on behalf of the law hmm very
Now, but real talk, when it comes to the CRT thing, it's the intersectionality between law and race, right? Well, race is those who are colored, if you will. But who speaks up on behalf of the law as if the law is to represent them in negative? Hmm.