Fear of being exiled from elite society - woke prep schools

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ASPartOfMe
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11 Mar 2021, 5:14 pm

The following expose with an agenda written by Christopher Rufo for City Journal was reprinted in full with permission of City Journal by Bari Weiss. I am going to also reprint it in full under the assumption that City Journal wants this to be reprinted as widely as possible.
The Miseducation of America's Elites

Quote:
The dissidents use pseudonyms and turn off their videos when they meet for clandestine Zoom calls. They are usually coordinating soccer practices and carpools, but now they come together to strategize. They say that they could face profound repercussions if anyone knew they were talking.

But the situation of late has become too egregious for emails or complaining on conference calls. So one recent weekend, on a leafy street in West Los Angeles, they gathered in person and invited me to join.

In a backyard behind a four-bedroom home, ten people sat in a circle of plastic Adirondack chairs, eating bags of Skinny Pop. These are the rebels: well-off Los Angeles parents who send their children to Harvard-Westlake, the most prestigious private school in the city.

By normal American standards, they are quite wealthy. By the standards of Harvard-Westlake, they are average. These are two-career couples who credit their own success not to family connections or inherited wealth but to their own education. So it strikes them as something more than ironic that a school that costs more than $40,000 a year — a school with Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett’s right hand, and Sarah Murdoch, wife of Lachlan and Rupert’s daughter-in-law, on its board — is teaching students that capitalism is evil.

For most parents, the demonization of capitalism is the least of it. They say that their children tell them they’re afraid to speak up in class. Most of all, they worry that the school’s new plan to become an “anti-racist institution” — unveiled this July, in a 20-page document — is making their kids fixate on race and attach importance to it in ways that strike them as grotesque.

“I grew up in L.A., and the Harvard School definitely struggled with diversity issues. The stories some have expressed since the summer seem totally legitimate,” says one of the fathers. He says he doesn’t have a problem with the school making greater efforts to redress past wrongs, including by bringing more minority voices into the curriculum. What he has a problem with is a movement that tells his children that America is a bad country and that they bear collective racial guilt.

“They are making my son feel like a racist because of the pigmentation of his skin,” one mother says. Another poses a question to the group: “How does focusing a spotlight on race fix how kids talk to one another? Why can’t they just all be Wolverines?” (Harvard-Westlake has declined to comment.)

If You Publish My Name It Would Ruin My Life
This Harvard-Westlake parents’ group is one of many organizing quietly around the country to fight what it describes as an ideological movement that has taken over their schools. This story is based on interviews with more than two dozen of these dissenters — teachers, parents, and children — at elite prep schools in two of the bluest states in the country: New York and California.

The parents in the backyard say that for every one of them, there are many more, too afraid to speak up. “I’ve talked to at least five couples who say: I get it. I think the way you do. I just don’t want the controversy right now,” related one mother. They are all eager for their story to be told — but not a single one would let me use their name. They worry about losing their jobs or hurting their children if their opposition to this ideology were known.

“The school can ask you to leave for any reason,” said one mother at Brentwood, another Los Angeles prep school. “Then you’ll be blacklisted from all the private schools and you’ll be known as a racist, which is worse than being called a murderer.”

One private school parent, born in a Communist nation, tells me: “I came to this country escaping the very same fear of retaliation that now my own child feels.” Another joked: “We need to feed our families. Oh, and pay $50,000 a year to have our children get indoctrinated.” A teacher in New York City put it most concisely: “To speak against this is to put all of your moral capital at risk.”

Parents who have spoken out against this ideology, even in private ways, say it hasn’t gone over well. “I had a conversation with a friend, and I asked him: ‘Is there anything about this movement we should question?’” said a father with children in two prep schools in Manhattan. “And he said: ‘Dude, that’s dangerous ground you’re on in our friendship.’ I’ve had enough of those conversations to know what happens.”

That fear is shared, deeply, by the children. For them, it’s not just the fear of getting a bad grade or getting turned down for a college recommendation, though that fear is potent. It’s the fear of social shaming. “If you publish my name, it would ruin my life. People would attack me for even questioning this ideology. I don’t even want people knowing I’m a capitalist,” a student at the Fieldston School in New York City told me, in a comment echoed by other students I spoke with. (Fieldston declined to comment for this article.) “The kids are scared of other kids,” says one Harvard-Westlake mother.

The atmosphere is making their children anxious, paranoid, and insecure — and closed off from even their close friends. “My son knew I was talking to you and he begged me not to,” another Harvard-Westlake mother told me. “He wants to go to a great university, and he told me that one bad statement from me will ruin us. This is the United States of America. Are you freaking kidding me?

Woke-Weaning for Harvard
These are America’s elites — the families who can afford to pay some $50,000 a year for their children to be groomed for the eating clubs of Princeton and the secret societies of Yale, the glide path to becoming masters — sorry, masterx — of the universe. The ideas and values instilled in them influence the rest of us.

That is not the only reason this story matters. These schools are called prep schools because they prepare America’s princelings to take their place in what we’re told is our meritocracy. Nothing happens at a top prep school that is not a mirror of what happens at an elite college.

What does it say about the current state of that meritocracy, then, that it wants kids fluent in critical race theory and “white fragility,” even if such knowledge comes at the expense of Shakespeare? “The colleges want children — customers — that are going to be pre-aligned to certain ideologies that originally came out of those colleges,” says a STEM teacher at one of New York’s prestigious prep schools. “I call it woke-weaning. And that’s the product schools like mine are offering.”

The parents I spoke with for this story are savvy and smart: they realize that it’s bizarre — at best — for a school like Harvard-Westlake to hold forth constantly about social justice as it drops more than $40 million on a new off-campus athletic complex. This is a school that sends out an annual report to every Harvard-Westlake family listing parents’ donations. Last year, the “Heritage Circle” group — gifts of $100,000 or more — included Viveca Paulin-Ferrell and Will Ferrell. A red paw next to Jeanne and Tony Pritzker’s names indicated more than a decade of cumulative giving.

Parents say that it is a school where giving more gets you more. Big donors get invitations to special dinners, and, most importantly, time and attention from the people in charge. Meantime, their children are taught radical-chic politics, which, of course, do not involve anything actually substantively radical, like redistributing the endowment.

“These schools are the privilege of the privilege of the privilege. They say nonstop that they are all about inclusion. But they are by definition exclusive. These schools are for the tippity top of society,” a young mother in Manhattan tells me.

Power in America now comes from speaking woke, a highly complex and ever-evolving language. The Grace Church School in Manhattan, for example, offers a 12-page guide to “inclusive language,” which discourages people from using the word “parents” — “folks” is preferred — or from asking questions like “what religion are you?” When asked for comment, Rev. Robert M. Pennoyer II, the assistant head of school, replied: “Grace is an Episcopal school. As part of our Episcopal identity, we recognize the dignity and worth common to humanity.” He added that the guide comes “from our desire to promote a sense of belonging for all of our students.”

A Harvard-Westlake English teacher welcomes students back after summer with: “I am a queer white womxn of European descent. I use [ she | her ] pronouns but also feel comfortable using [ they | them ] pronouns.” She attached a “self-care letter” quoting Audre Lorde: “Caring for myself is not self-indulgence, it is self-preservation, and that is an act of political warfare.”

Woe betide the working-class kid who arrives in college and uses Latino instead of “Latinx,” or who stumbles conjugating verbs because a classmate prefers to use the pronouns they/them. Fluency in woke is an effective class marker and key for these princelings to retain status in university and beyond. The parents know this, and so woke is now the lingua franca of the nation’s best prep schools. As one mother in Los Angeles puts it: “This is what all the colleges are doing, so we have to do it. The thinking is: if Harvard does it, it must be good.”

’ Educated in Resentment and Fear’
“I am in a cult. Well, that’s not exactly right. It’s that the cult is all around me and I am trying to save kids from becoming members.” He sounds like a Scientology defector, but he is a math teacher at one of the most elite high schools in New York City. He is not politically conservative. “I studied critical theory; I saw Derrida speak when I was in college,” he says, “so when this ideology arrived at our school over the past few years, I recognized the language and I knew what it was. But it was in a mutated form.”

This teacher is talking with me because he is alarmed by the toll this ideology is taking on his students. “I started seeing what was happening to the kids. And that’s what I couldn’t take. They are being educated in resentment and fear. It’s extremely dangerous.”

Three thousand miles away, in Los Angeles, another prep-school teacher says something similar. “It teaches people who have so much to see themselves as victims. They think they are suffering oppression at one of the poshest schools in the country.”

It seems to be working. One Los Angeles mother tells me that her son was recently told by his friend, who is black, that he is “inherently oppressed.” She was incredulous. “This kid is a multimillionaire,” she said. “My son said to his friend: ‘Explain it to me. Why do you feel oppressed? What has anyone done to make you feel less?’ And the friend said: ‘The color of my skin.’ This blew my mind.”

’ We Don’t Call Them Newton’s Laws Anymore’
The science program at Fieldston would make any parent swoon. The electives for 11th- and 12th-graders, according to the school’s website, include immunology, astronomy, neuroscience, and pharmacology.

But physics looks different these days. “We don’t call them Newton’s laws anymore,” an upperclassman at the school informs me. “We call them the three fundamental laws of physics. They say we need to ‘decenter whiteness,’ and we need to acknowledge that there’s more than just Newton in physics.”

One of her classmates says that he tries to take “the fact classes, not the identity classes.” But it’s gotten harder to distinguish between the two. “I took U.S. history and I figured when you learn about U.S. history maybe you structure it by time period or what happened under each presidency. We traced different marginalized groups. That was how it was structured. I only heard a handful of the presidents’ names in class.”

Brentwood, a school that costs $45,630 a year, made headlines a few weeks back when it held racially segregated “dialogue and community-building sessions.” But when I speak with a parent of a middle-school student there, they want to talk about their child’s English curriculum. “They replaced all the books with no input or even informing the parents.” The curriculum no longer features classics such as The Scarlet Letter, Little Women, To Kill a Mockingbird, and Lord of the Flies. New books include: Stamped, Dear Martin, Dear Justice, and Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass.

“The dean said to me, basically, it’s important to change with the times,” said the Brentwood parent. In a statement, Brentwood’s director of communications said: “Diversity, equity and inclusion are critical components of our education and our community at Brentwood School. The events of last summer created a call to action for all of us, in our school community and beyond.” Brentwood has announced a late-starting school day on March 10 for the lower school “due to our faculty book study of White Fragility.”

At Fieldston, an elective is offered to high school juniors and seniors called “historicizing whiteness.” At Grace Church School, seniors can take a course called “Allying: Why? Who? and How?” The curriculum includes a ’zine called “Accomplices Not Allies” that declares “the work of an accomplice in anti-colonial struggle is to attack colonial structures & ideas,” alongside a photograph of a burning police car. Harvard-Westlake, in its extensive antiracist plan announced this summer, included “redesigning the 11th grade US History course from a critical race theory perspective,” among many similar goals.

To question any of the curricular changes, parents say, is to make yourself suspect: “Every group chat I’m on with school parents, with the exception of my concerned parents’ group, they have a pattern of shaming anyone who shares anything remotely political or dissents from the group narrative,” one Brentwood mother wrote to me. “Once someone shames one person, many chime in agreement. The times I speak up to defend those they shame, they attempt to shame me.”

In this worldview, complexity itself is a kind of racism, nuance is a phobia, and skepticism merely a type of false consciousness. Ibram Kendi, author of How to Be an Antiracist, plainly spelled out the logic on Twitter recently: “The heartbeat of racism is denial. And too often, the more powerful the racism, the more powerful the denial.”

One teacher told me that he was asked to teach an antiracist curriculum that included a “pyramid” of white supremacy. At the top was genocide. At the bottom was “two sides to every story.”

“‘Two sides to every story,’” he said. “That was on the racist pyramid.”

‘Mom, I Just Found Out I’m Racist’
But the most important consequence of the woke ideology isn’t a lesser English curriculum. It’s that the ideology, which seems to touch every aspect of schooling now, has changed children’s self-conception.

Consider this story, from Chapin, the tony all-girls school on the Upper East Side, involving a white girl in the lower grades who came home one day and told her father: “All people with lighter skin don’t like people with darker skin and are mean to them.” He was horrified as she explained that that was what she had been taught by her teachers. “I said to her: that’s not how we feel in this family.” It’s worth taking a look at Chapin’s various affinity groups, which have become de rigueur at all of these schools. (Chapin did not respond to a request for comment.)

For high schoolers, the message is more explicit. A Fieldston student says that students are often told “if you are white and male, you are second in line to speak.” This is considered a normal and necessary redistribution of power.

At Harvard-Westlake, the school recently administered the debunked implicit-bias test to tenth-graders. It was technically optional, but several parents I spoke with said that their children felt compelled to take it. One mother confided that her son said to her, “Mom, I just found out I’m a racist and I prefer White Europeans.” Her child is mixed race. “For my kid to come home and be told by his school you are a racist—I was aghast. I was so, so angry.”

A Brentwood parent says that she has tried, in small ways, to stand up to this. “They say I don’t understand because my skin is white.” Children like hers are being taught to give up ambition and yield positions that they might earn through hard work to others who are more marginalized. “My child is asking me obvious questions like: If I work really hard, shouldn’t I get rewarded?”

Double in American High Schools
All of this “has made me think about race more,” said one teen boy in Manhattan. The curriculum, he explained, was trying to teach him to feel obsessed with his whiteness, the opposite of what his parents had taught him to do. Making students separate out by race in affinity groups is racist, he said. “MLK would condemn my school.”

Some students are rebelling, which, in this case, looks like becoming a Republican. But others go all-in on the ideology, which has created conflicts with parents who don’t. “The school has taken over as the moral guide, with me being the irritating person in the background who doesn’t really get it,” says one Harvard-Westlake mother.

So children learn how the new rules of woke work. The idea of lying in order to please a teacher seems like a phenomenon from the Soviet Union. But the high schoolers I spoke with said that they do versions of this, including parroting views they don’t believe in assignments so that their grades don’t suffer.

In Brooklyn, a STEM teacher known to be friendly among skeptical students laughed when he told me the latest absurdity: students told him that their history class had a unit on Beyoncé, and they felt compelled to say that they loved her music, even if they did not. “I thought: they aren’t even entitled to their own musical preferences,” he said. “What does it mean when you can’t even tell the truth about how music affects you?” One English teacher in Los Angeles tacitly acknowledges the problem: she has the class turn off their videos on Zoom and asks each student to make their name anonymous so that they can have uninhibited discussions.

No reliable survey data exist on free expression among high schoolers, but last week, Heterodox Academy published its annual Campus Expression Survey Report, which found that, in 2020, 62 percent of college students surveyed “agreed the climate on their campus prevents students from saying things they believe.”

Relying on word of mouth, parents are trying to suss out which, if any, of the private schools in their city avoid this ideology. They ask me what I know. “I don’t know where to move him to. I yank him and it’s the same thing. But I have a pit in my stomach about sending him back for third grade,” says a mother at Riverdale Country Day School in the Bronx, in a concern echoed by many parents. (Riverdale declined to comment.)

A Conspiracy of Silence
When I began working on this story, I didn’t feel that much sympathy for these parents. Some 18 million public school children have not set foot in a school in the past year. A study released in early December by McKinsey and Co. found that virtual learning hurt all students, but students of color the most: remote school set them back by three to five months in math, for example. Such numbers do not begin to capture the crippling effects, including suicidal ideation, that this past year has had on what experts are already calling a lost generation.

The parents in this story are not parents with no other options. Most have the capital — social and literal — to pull their kids out and hire private tutors. That they weren’t speaking out seemed to me cowardly, or worse.

The cynical answer for their silence is two words: Ivy League. “There are definitively rumors that the school has like, say, three picks for Duke and that if you stand up against this your kid will get blackballed,” says one mother.

Another explanation is groupthink and social pressure. “Sometimes the smartest people are the easiest ones to fool,” says a father who recently moved his son from one school to another that he judges to be marginally better. “If you made a decision to go on the board of Dalton having espoused all these leftist views forever and you want your kid to get into Harvard, you are not going to stand up and say, ‘wait a second, guys.’ You’re just not going to do it. Most people want to be members of the club.”

I think it’s true that many people would rather violate their stated principles than be iced out of their social network. But this is a situation that goes beyond getting shunted to a bad table at the Robin Hood gala. To resist this ideology is to go against the entire institutional world.

It’s not just Dalton, a school that has committed to being “visibly, vocally and structurally antiracist.” Bain & Company is tweeting about “Womxn’s History Month.” The Cartoon Network is imploring children to “see color.” Coca-Cola employees were recently instructed to “be less white.” You cannot buy or sell the newly problematic Dr. Seuss titles on eBay.

This ideology isn’t speaking truth to power. It is the power.

Most alarmingly, the ideology is increasingly prevalent at the local public school. The incoming New York City schools chancellor is a vocal proponent of critical race theory. In Burbank, the school district just told middle- and high school teachers to stop teaching To Kill a Mockingbird and Of Mice and Men. The Sacramento school district is promoting racial segregation by way of “racial affinity groups,” where students can “cultivate racial solidarity and compassion and support each other in sitting with the discomfort, confusion, and numbness that often accompany white racial awakening.” The San Diego school district recently held a training in which white teachers were told that they “spirit murder” black children.

“I don’t mean to get emotional, I just feel helpless,” said one mother through tears. “I look at the public school and I am equally mortified. I can’t believe what they are doing to everybody. I’m too afraid. I’m too afraid to speak too loudly. I feel cowardly. I just make little waves.” Another tells me: “It’s fear of retribution. Would it cause our daughter to be ostracized? Would it cause people to ostracize us? It already has.”

I have a friend in New York who is the mother to a four-year-old. She seems exactly the kind of parent these schools would want to attract: a successful entrepreneur, a feminist, and a diehard Manhattanite. She’d dreamed of sending her daughter to a school like Dalton. One day at home, in the midst of the application process, she was drawing with her daughter, who said offhandedly: “I need to draw in my own skin color.” Skin color, she told her mother, is “really important.” She said that’s what she learned in school.


Some of this is obvious hyperbole. If this were Red China during the cultural revolution or the old Soviet Union this article would never see the light of day and the “dissidents” would be be exiled or worse. This is pretty much true for current China.

Meandering stream of conscious follows:
The article is spot on in pointing out that in America prep school grads pretty much control the place. Yet with the lightning speed this agenda has taken control of these elite institutions and the language we use I have to wonder of all the claims that they are smarter then those of us opposed is not their delusion but my delusion born out of denial that they are smarter ie “resistance is futile”. One has to wonder if in a few years anti wokes will be allowed their “free speech” for pure appearances sake. I am aware that bullies want their victims to think that way but opposing woke sure feels like the cliched Dutch boy putting his fingers on the dike.


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Last edited by ASPartOfMe on 11 Mar 2021, 6:04 pm, edited 5 times in total.

KT67
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11 Mar 2021, 5:16 pm

Why is this site so ridiculously anti 'woke' it's pathetic...

If something is elitist it probably shouldn't exist.

If it does exist then it should probably be letting in as many people as it can do.

Oxford uni is still Oxford Uni but it's been a long time since it didn't let women in.


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shlaifu
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11 Mar 2021, 9:46 pm

Wait, we're afraid of not getting into the global elite schools now because we use "traditional" pronouns?
I'd be happy to change mine in exchange for a full scholarship to Harvard.
Can we talk about class now?


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roronoa79
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11 Mar 2021, 11:57 pm

These policies don't sound like 'woke' leftism so much as they sound like the result of upper class school board members who don't know what they're talking about but desperately want to over-compensate to show they're not 'un-woke'. It's just trying to teach kids how to fit in with the other over-compensating ivory tower virtue signalers. Prep schools and the Ivy League are built around gaining social capital. Always have been. Parents want their kids to go there so they can have a better life, but also so they can gain the social clout that comes with being able to say "My child is attending Elite Snob College. You should conclude that they're smarter than your kid and I'm a better parent". The people who can afford to send their kids to these places are privileged enough that they can't tell what's fake woke liberal virtue signaling and what's genuine leftism.

They're also bemoaning their kids being taught that capitalism isn't so great? And America isn't so great? It sounds better than the old days (read: the present day, in most places) where schools indoctrinated kids that America is better than all the other countries, racism isn't a real problem, and capitalism is the One True Religion Economic System.

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Woe betide the working-class kid who arrives in college and uses Latino instead of “Latinx,” or who stumbles conjugating verbs because a classmate prefers to use the pronouns they/them.

I just had to chuckle at this. English verb conjugation is so tame compared to so many other languages. Does this person know that 'they' uses 'are' and a zero verb ending ('run' not 'runs')? Then they know all they need to know. Spanish verb conjugation makes English verb conjugation look like baby stuff.


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12 Mar 2021, 2:02 am

These people are anxious over nothing. Unless you are already racist.

Quote:
“They are making my son feel like a racist because of the pigmentation of his skin,” one mother says. Another poses a question to the group: “How does focusing a spotlight on race fix how kids talk to one another? Why can’t they just all be Wolverines?” (Harvard-Westlake has declined to comment.)


As my mom told me, you can be naive and say something that is insensitive towards another race that is racist but that doesn't make you a bad person. It just means you were naive. She also disagrees that makes you a racist. I told her that is what they mean by racial color blindness, being naive to other cultures and race and refusing to be educated about it and being all willful.

But really, there is nothing to be ashamed about. You live and learn. Apologize and move on. I bet lot of POS would accept and they move on too just as long as you don't get defensive and go in denial.


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12 Mar 2021, 6:51 am

roronoa79 wrote:
These policies don't sound like 'woke' leftism so much as they sound like the result of upper class school board members who don't know what they're talking about but desperately want to over-compensate to show they're not 'un-woke'. It's just trying to teach kids how to fit in with the other over-compensating ivory tower virtue signalers. Prep schools and the Ivy League are built around gaining social capital. Always have been. Parents want their kids to go there so they can have a better life, but also so they can gain the social clout that comes with being able to say "My child is attending Elite Snob College. You should conclude that they're smarter than your kid and I'm a better parent". The people who can afford to send their kids to these places are privileged enough that they can't tell what's fake woke liberal virtue signaling and what's genuine leftism.

They're also bemoaning their kids being taught that capitalism isn't so great? And America isn't so great? It sounds better than the old days (read: the present day, in most places) where schools indoctrinated kids that America is better than all the other countries, racism isn't a real problem, and capitalism is the One True Religion Economic System.

Quote:
Woe betide the working-class kid who arrives in college and uses Latino instead of “Latinx,” or who stumbles conjugating verbs because a classmate prefers to use the pronouns they/them.

I just had to chuckle at this. English verb conjugation is so tame compared to so many other languages. Does this person know that 'they' uses 'are' and a zero verb ending ('run' not 'runs')? Then they know all they need to know. Spanish verb conjugation makes English verb conjugation look like baby stuff.

You are right about overcompensation. The rush to overcompensate racism with “Critical Race Theory” as is being taught in these schools is overcompensation. Seditious Trumpism is overcompensation for political correctness. America is more the land of overcorrection the land of opportunity especially these days. Overcorrection driven by zero sum thinking is probably the biggest reason for America’s meltdown.


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12 Mar 2021, 7:29 am

Let’s get this straight I don’t have any sympathy for these parents, I blame them. I blame them for creating and going along with the conditions that made reacting with woke seem rational. I blame them for enabling this illiberal racist ideology.

I think I can understand why readers of this thread think I feel sorry these parents, I am anti woke, I often post opinionated articles I largely agree with. I posted it because as far as consequences go what these parents do and do not do matters the most. If they withheld money from these institutions and did not allow the HR departments in the companies to run Critical Race Theory seminars and stopped hiring and firing based on this even if it is only tokenism virtue signaling this ideology would go back to the fringes of academia from whence it came. But it has not happened and probably won’t because being part of the elite social circles is priority number 1 and always has been. I am not saying that the money and goodies that comes with is unimportant but the social status that those bring is the driving force. If not why would they enable or cower to an “anti capitalist” ideology?


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12 Mar 2021, 12:38 pm

Quote:
I think I can understand why readers of this thread think I feel sorry these parents, I am anti woke,


This seems to contradict

ASPartOfMe wrote:
Let’s get this straight I don’t have any sympathy for these parents, I blame them. I blame them for creating and going along with the conditions that made reacting with woke seem rational. I blame them for enabling this illiberal racist ideology.


Unless we both have a different view on what woke is. :chin:

To me being woke is being aware of racism and their issues they face and understanding their history and not being naive and willful ignorant about it.


Quote:
I often post opinionated articles I largely agree with.


Wait, does this mean you believe in autism defense against crimes they commit so they get off easily or get a soft sentence?


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roronoa79
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12 Mar 2021, 4:33 pm

ASPartOfMe wrote:
You are right about overcompensation. The rush to overcompensate racism with “Critical Race Theory” as is being taught in these schools is overcompensation. Seditious Trumpism is overcompensation for political correctness. America is more the land of overcorrection the land of opportunity especially these days. Overcorrection driven by zero sum thinking is probably the biggest reason for America’s meltdown.

Critical Race Theory is a valid theory that has developed over the last half-century after rigorous academic study. It is not overcompensation. Liberals desperate for good PR might cite it in rationalizing their overcompensation, but it remains based in fact. Suggesting that race and racism are reflected in the law is not a crazy theoretical concept--it is the logical result of centuries of racist governance. Laws enacted with racist intent did not vanish in the 1960's when most conservatives seem to think racism (well, against non-whites lol) ended.

Trying to dismantle racism is not racist. It only seems racist to whites who are made uncomfortable acknowledging the legacy of their ancestors' actions. This is not blaming the son for the sins of the father. This is blaming the son for refusing to undo or even acknowledge the sins of the father.


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ASPartOfMe
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12 Mar 2021, 7:57 pm

League_Girl wrote:
Quote:
I think I can understand why readers of this thread think I feel sorry these parents, I am anti woke,


This seems to contradict

ASPartOfMe wrote:
Let’s get this straight I don’t have any sympathy for these parents, I blame them. I blame them for creating and going along with the conditions that made reacting with woke seem rational. I blame them for enabling this illiberal racist ideology.


Unless we both have a different view on what woke is. :chin:

To me being woke is being aware of racism and their issues they face and understanding their history and not being naive and willful ignorant about it.

Yes we do. It is supposed to be me the ok boomer who is using the original or older version of terms :)


ASPartOfMe wrote:
I often post opinionated articles I largely agree with.


League_Girl wrote:
Wait, does this mean you believe in autism defense against crimes they commit so they get off easily or get a soft sentence?

Often is not every time, but yeah you got me there.


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12 Mar 2021, 8:26 pm

roronoa79 wrote:
ASPartOfMe wrote:
You are right about overcompensation. The rush to overcompensate racism with “Critical Race Theory” as is being taught in these schools is overcompensation. Seditious Trumpism is overcompensation for political correctness. America is more the land of overcorrection the land of opportunity especially these days. Overcorrection driven by zero sum thinking is probably the biggest reason for America’s meltdown.

Critical Race Theory is a valid theory that has developed over the last half-century after rigorous academic study. It is not overcompensation. Liberals desperate for good PR might cite it in rationalizing their overcompensation, but it remains based in fact. Suggesting that race and racism are reflected in the law is not a crazy theoretical concept--it is the logical result of centuries of racist governance. Laws enacted with racist intent did not vanish in the 1960's when most conservatives seem to think racism (well, against non-whites lol) ended.

Trying to dismantle racism is not racist. It only seems racist to whites who are made uncomfortable acknowledging the legacy of their ancestors' actions. This is not blaming the son for the sins of the father. This is blaming the son for refusing to undo or even acknowledge the sins of the father.

Are you saying that most of what was described in the OP and other articles I have posted is not Critical Race Theory, not the original intent of Critical Race Theory but misuse of critical race theory?

I would not describe what was quoted in the OP as liberal.


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shlaifu
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12 Mar 2021, 9:10 pm

roronoa79 wrote:
ASPartOfMe wrote:
You are right about overcompensation. The rush to overcompensate racism with “Critical Race Theory” as is being taught in these schools is overcompensation. Seditious Trumpism is overcompensation for political correctness. America is more the land of overcorrection the land of opportunity especially these days. Overcorrection driven by zero sum thinking is probably the biggest reason for America’s meltdown.

Critical Race Theory is a valid theory that has developed over the last half-century after rigorous academic study. It is not overcompensation. Liberals desperate for good PR might cite it in rationalizing their overcompensation, but it remains based in fact. Suggesting that race and racism are reflected in the law is not a crazy theoretical concept--it is the logical result of centuries of racist governance. Laws enacted with racist intent did not vanish in the 1960's when most conservatives seem to think racism (well, against non-whites lol) ended.

Trying to dismantle racism is not racist. It only seems racist to whites who are made uncomfortable acknowledging the legacy of their ancestors' actions. This is not blaming the son for the sins of the father. This is blaming the son for refusing to undo or even acknowledge the sins of the father.


In the nineties, there eas a big exhibition in Berlin, examining war crimes committed by the Wehrmacht, i.e., The army of Nazi Germany. Not the SS, the elite squad, but the regular army, which basically any German man or boy who could hold a gun was forced to join, particularly towards the end of the war. (Both my grandfathers were in the Wehrmacht, as teenagers).

The uproar over the exhibition was huge, because even in the ninetoes, the German population wanted to believe that most Germans were innocent and unknowing, and were just raised in a totalitarian system so they couldn't have known any better, but at their core they were good and honest people etc.
Well, it turned out they weren't, and it's only my Generation, the grandchildren of the Nazis, who can comfortably accept what happened.
Except some German businesses, which profitted from the war and slave labour during wartime. They still would prefer not to mention their history.
It is really hard and painful to work through this - and the Nazi regime only lasted for fifteen years. But in the US, most of its history is in some way stained by slavery and racism. Thinking of the Germans that were upset by the Wehrmacht exhibition, I can't imagine the revision of American history is going to go down without a serious, violent fight.


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19 Apr 2021, 2:06 pm

Elite NYC private school tells whistleblowing teacher to stay home

Quote:
A math teacher who publicly accused his elite Manhattan private school of “indoctrinating” students and choking off free speech has been ordered to stay away from campus.

Paul Rossi penned a scathing essay last week that cast Grace Church School as a pricey progressive preserve that punished those with unauthorized ideas.

The school initially said that Rossi, a math teacher, would not be disciplined for his piece on writer Bari Weiss’s substack account.

But he has since been told to keep his distance.

Grace community threatened him after the essay appeared online and that he reported it to the head of the school George Davison.

The teacher said Davison then used that as a pretext to bar him from the school beginning next week — purportedly for his own safety.

In his essay, Rossi accused the school of “indoctrinating” kids with an obsessive emphasis on race and stanching dissenting viewpoints.

The essay in question



NYC Private School Head Exits Dalton After Tumultuous Year
Quote:
Jim Best, the head of school at Dalton, is leaving the New York private institution after a tumultuous year dealing with the impact of the Covid pandemic and backlash from parents and faculty over its diversity efforts.

“Spencer Stuart will help us identify candidates that embody Dalton’s commitment to progressive education, academic excellence and meeting the needs of the whole child, and who are equally committed to advancing our diversity, equity and inclusion work,” she wrote in the note, referring to the executive recruitment firm.

It’s also found itself in the middle of a cultural battle over how it’s responding to racial inequalities after the Black Lives Matter protests rocked the U.S. last summer. A group of faculty and staff wrote an eight-page document that suggested a radical framework to overhaul Dalton’s approach to diversity and inclusion. Ideas included donating 50% of fundraising dollars to New York’s public schools if Dalton fails to meet diversity metrics and the teaching of classes centered on “race, identity, difference, and social justice.”

The New York Post described it as an anti-racist manifesto, noting how it included courses on black liberation and highlighted the opposition of some parents. Vanity Fair on Friday reported on the “power struggle” between those demanding change and those wanting the status quo.

Besides, the "woke" agenda parents were critical over his decision to go to remote learning.


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19 Jun 2021, 9:04 pm

Sorry I realised I created a mirror thread (apologies AS)

I want to make one comment here about the parents who are campaigning against their curriculum being supposedly infliltrated by BLM and communists :roll:

These are the same parents who voted with their feet when school segregation and housing segregation (redlining) was mandated to be illegal back in the 1960s and 1970s (I can assure you 99% of white parents (democrat or republican) wouldn't have been jumping up and down with glee at the prospect of black kids living next door to their precious darlings or going to the same schools)

A well known phenomena took place (it also happened in Australia) called white flight. As non-white people moved into white neighborhoods those whitefolk with money were the first to flee further away from the city centres. Other later joined them. Areas that were desegregated became segregated again. The same thing happened in schools.

White parents took loans to remove their children from public schools and move them to private/fee paying schools with predominately white schools. In Australia they did it to avoid Asian/immigrant kids, In the US it was to avoid blacks (that's the only distinction).

I find it amusing therefore these same parent groups are now fighting against social inclusion in a covert sneaky manner by attacking the teaching of black history. Why? They claim their "little darlings" are such snowflakes they will have self-esteem problems if they hear about what black people experienced at the hands of their ancestors. Of course that's not true. The real reason is that it might make their kids want to be friends with black people. The ultimate fear of every white parent, they might make friends, mix and date them. This is undesirable for most white parents (whether rebublican or democrat). Except for republicans who are more socially conservative its likely unthinkable.

I'm sorry I know people don't want to hear this stuff but its the real reason i) 99% don't have any idea what's in their chidren's school curriculum (I do) ii) school subjects (whether in Australia or the US) are divided by discipline.

If a child is learning STEM subjects (Science, technology, engineering or math) there is zero (I repeat) zero content that's related to race/social justice

If they are studying medicine/health/biology then there is zero content related to race/social justice

If the children are learning business law in college/university there is zero content related to race/social justice

If they are learning arts/design there is zero content related to race/social justice

If they are learnings vocational trades/skills there is zero content related to race/social justice

The one topic in school that is mandatory where race is mentioned is history. Every one of these obnoxious dumb parents probably know that regardless of the content of this topic that virtually no child learning this topic is going to end up working or getting a job as a historian except for the handful who end up being history teachers or who work in a museum. History lessons fill in the same amount of time for kids regardless of CRT or the 1619 project or any other black history content. The percentage of black history doesn't change. If white kids want to focus on English literature, European renaissance, arts, languages, European history they can both in school and college. There is zero chance that black history curriculum will converted white kids to join BLM or become crack addicted single mothers with multiple black babies which is I think the secret fear of these parents.

If anything CRT/black history is sucking in smart black kids who pick social justice/African American studies as majors when their parents probably wished they picked Law. engineering or medicine. ironically less competition for white and Asian kids.



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20 Jun 2021, 7:10 am

cyberdad wrote:
These are the same parents who voted with their feet when school segregation and housing segregation (redlining) was mandated to be illegal back in the 1960s and 1970s (I can assure you 99% of white parents (democrat or republican) wouldn't have been jumping up and down with glee at the prospect of black kids living next door to their precious darlings or going to the same schools).

A well known phenomena took place (it also happened in Australia) called white flight. As non-white people moved into white neighborhoods those whitefolk with money were the first to flee further away from the city centres. Other later joined them. Areas that were desegregated became segregated again. The same thing happened in schools.

Actually, at least here in NYC, "white flight" involved mainly the white middle class and the white working class, not the elite.

The people discussed in the article are the rich folks who retained their luxury apartments in the better parts of the city, and who also own vacation homes out in the more distant suburbs, but who spend most of their time in the city. These people did not move.

Moreover, here in NYC and other major coastal cities, the era of white flight was followed by the era of gentrification, in which more and more rich people moved into the city, making more and more parts of the city unaffordable for anyone else.

cyberdad wrote:
White parents took loans to remove their children from public schools and move them to private/fee paying schools with predominately white schools. In Australia they did it to avoid Asian/immigrant kids, In the US it was to avoid blacks (that's the only distinction).

Here in the U.S.A., the above is certainly true for many white middle-class parents, but not the elite.

cyberdad wrote:
I find it amusing therefore these same parent groups are now fighting against social inclusion in a covert sneaky manner by attacking the teaching of black history. Why? They claim their "little darlings" are such snowflakes they will have self-esteem problems if they hear about what black people experienced at the hands of their ancestors. Of course that's not true. The real reason is that it might make their kids want to be friends with black people. The ultimate fear of every white parent, they might make friends, mix and date them. This is undesirable for most white parents (whether rebublican or democrat). Except for republicans who are more socially conservative its likely unthinkable.

Again you're confusing the elite with the middle class. For many decades, here in the U.S.A at least, the elite schools, although very much predominantly white, have tried to be racially inclusive in at least a tokenistic way, as a way to assure themselves of being "meritocratic."

Perhaps things are different in Australia?


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ArtsyFarsty
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20 Jun 2021, 8:59 am

Won’t somebody pleeeeaaaase think of the 1% ! !??

Seriously. I have zero sympathy for people who can buy their way out of most of their problems.