+ 1000000 There are many people alive with strong memories of segregation. Wasn’t ended all that long ago. |
News for you pal. Black history is also white’s history. Slavery is white history as much as it is black history. Segregation is white history as well as black history. |
Yes, and segregation should be (and is) a huge part of an AA Studies class. "Queer studies," not so much. |
No one is disputing that. You seem to just want to argue. Not interested. |
You didn’t answer the question. Poor writers who are dumb don’t win awards. |
I am a white person who proudly honors MLK for his fight against racial discrimination, but not for all of his opinions. Similarly, I honor Thomas Jefferson for his help in creating a nation dedicated to religious freedom and freedom of the press and of speech. I don't honor him for all his opinions -- and in particular not for his justification for enslaving 600 people during his lifetime. Now I do think that, for example, MLK's arguments against the Vietnam war were -- and remain -- very cogent. But this is not why I honor him on MLK day. I honor him for making the words in the Declaration "all men are created equal" have real meaning. |
Back into the closet you go! |
??? Of course they win awards, by fellow dumb poor writers. What they do not win is a Nobel Prize or a SCOTUS appointment or global recognition. Heck, I hope Clarence Thomas made it. |
Whose “goal” is it? And who is working to achieve it? This is right up there with “all deliberate speed” and “40 acres and a mule”. So you’re astounded that supposed goals that haven’t been achieved despite decades if not centuries of struggling for “Liberty and justice for all” should be maintained indefinitely? That’s beyond pathetic, and probably self-serving. NP |
| What queer theory are they learning? A couple of my graduate level sociology classes in graduate school had queer theory. I can’t imagine any of it being accessible to high school students! |
Students have been reading James Baldwin in upper level HS courses for decades. While literature and, specifically, his books, are only a small part of African American history and culture, a class discussion or paper that does not recognize that he was Black, male, gay, and often writing about urban and religious aspects of culture would be missing quite a lot. It would be unfortunate if all of these aspects of his identity and their influence on his worldview and writing could not be explored as topics of academic interest. This is just one example. I chose Baldwin as an author whose work has been considered classic for many decades. |
And he’s exactly the kind of Black author DeSantis and the rest of the racists want to banish. Too thinky. Too much smart. |
Ooh, now tell us about Thomas Sowell and Shelby Steele. Are they too "thinky" for you?
DP |
| I can't believe how much ignorance about the AP course there is on this thread. |
Yes. Suddenly everyone is an African American Studies scholar. |