Biden wants Critical Race Theory as requirement for K-12 grants

5/4/21
 
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from Heritage Action,
5/3/21:

Critical Race Theory (CRT) is a worldview that believes all events and ideas in society, from politics, to education, to society, can only be understood through the lens of racial identities and the discrimination that stems from that. CRT sees America not as a nation, but as a collection of tribes competing for power. Marxism is embedded in its view.

Critical Race Theory is a descendent of Critical Theory, a school of philosophy that began in Frankfurt, Germany, in the 1920s and 1930s at the University of Frankfurt’s Institute for Social Research. It became known as “the Frankfurt School.” It’s scholars fled Nazi Germany in 1934 to Columbia University’s Teachers College in New York. Based on the idea that classes struggled against each other based on economic disparity, CRT goes further, pitting groups against each other based on race.

There are three things critical race theory holds:

1. There is no absolute truth—only competing narratives. It sees “lived experiences” as mattering more than facts.
Individuals are either an oppressor or victim. You are predetermined by immutable characteristics such as race to fall into either category. Culture is defined by groups exercising power over each other.

2. America is systematically racist and must be dismantled. It sees America as having been founded on the system of capitalism, which is racist, and therefore must be disrupted.

3. In CRT’s view, the only remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination, and the only remedy to present discrimination is future discrimination. It is radically different from all that the Civil Rights Era aimed to achieve.

Proposed rule: On April 19, 2021, the Biden Administration proposed a rule that would allow the Department of Education to prioritize recipients to receive K-12 grants if they include critical race theory in their curriculum. While the size of the grants is a small portion of the amount of money the federal government spends on education, these priorities would infuse critical race theory into the United States’ largest education law—the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.

… this could be only the first of future attempts to use grants to infuse CRT into civics curriculum. The Civics Secures Democracy Act (H.R.1814/S.879) would provide $1 billion each year for six years in federal grants for civics education. While the legislation is bipartisan, it has been supported by a number of left-leaning groups such as iCivics, and a broader coalition called CivXNow. This strategy, similar to that used to implement Common Core, would use grants to drive curriculum, and raises concern that once implemented, could develop into in-effect national standards for civics education.

State legislatures have rightly begun to reject adopting CRT-driven policies. Recent legislation passed by Idaho could serve as a model for other states. Texas, Louisiana, New Hampshire, and Oklahoma are considering similar proposals.

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