Southlake Says No to Woke Education

Southlake Says No to Woke Education

A parent revolt against critical-race theory in the K-12 classroom.

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1 Comment

  1. Leonard S. Feinman

    Most people believe in racial equality. When the Civil Rights Act was signed by President Johnson, it made perfect sense to me as a teenager. Older people may have thought differently, but the racism this was to combat was by then foreign to my age group. We did not understand that there would always be racial intolerance and that no law could prevent it, but not many people wanted to be identified as a hater,
    I went to college in Boca Raton, Fl. While that place is now populated by a wealthier group which includes many Jews, it wasn’t always that way. Once it was the center of KKK life, and our campus was the only refuge. Life pushed the haters aside, but only a fool would think they no longer exist. It wasn’t the law that pushed these people aside, it was their attitude that marginalized them, and continues to diminish their ranks.
    Somebody refreshed the memory of the haters. My opinion is that when somebody accuses me of something I know is wrong, I am going to push back. For many years, I thought we had been working harmoniously, but then I was told I was both misinformed, and that I had to be a hater as well. My reaction was to treat my accuser as being a” s**t-pot-stirrer” who is making a false claim.
    False accusations may be hard to prove, but they also anger those who are falsely accused, and that resentment may be used by the accuser as proof of their claim.

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