š¤ Bite-Sized Knurd: Right-wing extremists have ramped up their targeting of education to avoid the hard truths.
Read on for moreā¦
Ever since right-wing extremism has accelerated its rise in the last few years, its forces have tried to manipulate key areas of society: journalism, science, and education.Ā
The most sinister (IMHO) is education. The idea that these forces have seen Millennials and Gen Z buck tradition by expanding their perceptions on things like race, economics, and gender and the right-wing response is to restrict children from learning about these things feelsā¦deeply menacing. The logic being, if kids donāt learn about systemic racism or the expansiveness of gender, then they wonāt hold these views.
Itās obviously ridiculous and deeply flawed logic. The fact is:
Kids have TikTok at their fingertips
50% of Gen Zers believe traditional gender norms are outdated
90% of Gen Z in the U.S. support the Black Lives Matter movement
60% of Millennials and 57% of Gen Z support āa complete change of our economic system away from capitalism.āĀ
These patterns are clear and generational. Thereās no closing the gate of change.
But boy are they going to try!Ā
And it is having profound impacts not only on teachers, students, and parents but society as a whole. Look at Floridaās Governor Ron DeSantis (and potential 2024 presidential nominee) banning AP African American Studies for ālacking educational value.ā (Sure, Jan š).Ā
Since that announcement, the Advanced Placement program has announced that theyāve revised their curriculum, taking out dozens of Black visionaries particularly women and queer people. (Interesting how it always works out that way) I donāt know where this story is going, but itās deeply disturbing that one extremist governor can influence the entire country.
"One Governor should not have the power to dictate the facts of U.S. history," Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker
The Myth of de facto SegregationĀ
Donāt get me wrong, itās not like our education system has ever properly taught racism in the United States. I had a lot of catching up to do in 2020 during the BLM protests to better understand racism and how its hooks are still ever present across all sectors of society (ask me about my reading list(s)!).Ā
āThe public policies of yesterday still shape the racial landscape of today.ā - The Color of Law
But the fact is that since the first slave ships landed in America, there have been fundamental social, economic, and political decisions that have kept the structures of white supremacy in place even after slavery ended.
It is not and has never been just about individual racism, but the countless decisions and biases that make up larger systems. And each of those decisions has rippling impacts that keep Black Americans at the bottom rungs in the U.S.Ā to this day.
Always Be Learning
Teaching a true version of American history has been challenging because it is difficult for many Americans, particularly white Americans, to fully reconcile the rosy version that weāve heard for so long with reality.
While itās natural to feel discomfort when learning uncomfortable truths, itās an important step in order to grow.
I believe this quote from An Indigenous Peopleāsā History of the United States helps to explain the context.
While living persons are not responsible for what their ancestors did, they are responsible for the society they live in, which is a product of that past.ā
Having a clear and unfiltered view of systemic racism will only help us grow into a new era.
The point is not to feel guilty, but to learn and grow so that we can be better stewards toward a true multiracial democracy.Ā
And thatās why the anti-woke movement is so dangerous. Itās a way to not teach Americans the real, unblemished story of the United States. Itās a way to keep the white, male-centered version of history that we have been spoon-fed for centuries.
The banning of books, canceling AP Black History, and destruction of the public education system is a purposeful attempt to keep people ignorant about the systems that continue to harm marginalized folks.
The Past Shapes the Present
I know many people donāt want to touch the topic of race, but it is fundamental to how we address the issues of today. Mass inequality, climate justice, police militarization, and other themes crop up precisely because of white supremacy. If we do not acknowledge these realities, we will not materially change.Ā
Unfortunately, another murder of a Black man at the hands of the police has brought this to national attention once again. But it should never take a murder of a fellow human being (who was just 80 yards from his home) for this country to wake up to the violence and suppression of our Black brothers and sisters.Ā
We are doomed to repeat ourselves until we reconnect with our past.Ā
There are too many historical events to fully due justice to the conversation around systemic racism, so rather than try, Iām going to offer up some stories. This month weāre going to touch on a few stories to illustrate how racism of the past is still engrained into the present. Specifically, weāre talking about housing and transportation.Ā
See you next week.