Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school still talks about antiracsim. I wish they would stop.
I know it goes against the racism I teach at home. Parents should control their kids education!
Not sure if you are a troll or a simpleton. Antitacism is a fraudulent and divisive “theory” for white liberals who are at once self-congratulatory and self-hating.
I’m someone who isn’t scared of ideas. I’d say go cower in the corner but you’re more likely to call in a bomb threat.
I’m not scared of ideas. Rather, I think his ideas are not very good, and thus, I find it mildly annoying when they are held up as something we should all embrace.
Anonymous wrote:Kendi drew a huge amount of attention to a concept that was largely ignored before and a lot of people learned from it - that doesn't mean its perfect or that his should be the only voice or that you have to agree with him, but the idea that he is out there to attack and hurt white people as a race is really silly if you look at anything he actually says or writes. I also thought the 1776 project was thought provoking and opened a perspective that many of us had never seen. I truly don't understand why this is so threatening to so many people except that they don't like having to confront the way their own mind has glossed over some ugly truths of our collective past. My heritage is Irish and my husband's is English - do you think teaching our kids about English colonization of Ireland is teaching the kids to hate their Dad? Get a grip
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school still talks about antiracsim. I wish they would stop.
I know it goes against the racism I teach at home. Parents should control their kids education!
Not sure if you are a troll or a simpleton. Antitacism is a fraudulent and divisive “theory” for white liberals who are at once self-congratulatory and self-hating.
I’m someone who isn’t scared of ideas. I’d say go cower in the corner but you’re more likely to call in a bomb threat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did any local school have him come in person? My child’s college had him come via zoom, no idea what that cost. Holton did have faculty and students read one of his books but there was no huge cost to that. I’ve read a few and his ideas make for great discussions so don’t think it was a waste of time. The reader doesn’t not need to take it all as fact, just another viewpoint to add to the discussion.
Only if our kids want to get canceled.
Oh your poor children. What victims they are.
Yes, they are. My Asian kids have been horribly treated by this garbage.
So if I were MAGA this is the part I would tell you to go back to China. But sure DEI is the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school still talks about antiracsim. I wish they would stop.
I know it goes against the racism I teach at home. Parents should control their kids education!
Not sure if you are a troll or a simpleton. Antitacism is a fraudulent and divisive “theory” for white liberals who are at once self-congratulatory and self-hating.
Anonymous wrote:What I want answers for is why so many public and private schools threw money at him to come speak for an hour instead of using that money for actual DEI projects. It stinks of performative celebrity-chasing non-work to impress an audience that isn't even impressed by it. Nobody is more inspired to pay tuition because Kendi came to speak.
None of this is a complaint about his work or ideas, which can be debated separately. There are many amazingly contributive people that aren't woth $20K for an hour zoom call.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And how much did they pay him? Sidwell did, and recommended his book. Will there be any sort of mea culpa from the administrators who thought it was a good idea to force our kids to listen to him?
https://www.bu.edu/articles/2023/bu-launches-inquiry-into-center-for-antiracist-research/
I’m confused. This article talks about how the school is looking into his restructuring of his center from a grants-seeking organization to a fellowship-based model, resulting in layoffs of more than half the staff (19 people). It says nothing against his views or book, in fact all the quotes from BU admin specifically recognize the importance of his views and vision and say they look forward to continuing to work with him. How do you se this article as some kind of indictment that would require a mea culpa from schools that read his book or had him speak?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school still talks about antiracsim. I wish they would stop.
I know it goes against the racism I teach at home. Parents should control their kids education!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did any local school have him come in person? My child’s college had him come via zoom, no idea what that cost. Holton did have faculty and students read one of his books but there was no huge cost to that. I’ve read a few and his ideas make for great discussions so don’t think it was a waste of time. The reader doesn’t not need to take it all as fact, just another viewpoint to add to the discussion.
Only if our kids want to get canceled.
Oh your poor children. What victims they are.
Yes, they are. My Asian kids have been horribly treated by this garbage.
Anonymous wrote:Our school still talks about antiracsim. I wish they would stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did any local school have him come in person? My child’s college had him come via zoom, no idea what that cost. Holton did have faculty and students read one of his books but there was no huge cost to that. I’ve read a few and his ideas make for great discussions so don’t think it was a waste of time. The reader doesn’t not need to take it all as fact, just another viewpoint to add to the discussion.
Only if our kids want to get canceled.
Oh your poor children. What victims they are.
Yes, they are. My Asian kids have been horribly treated by this garbage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did any local school have him come in person? My child’s college had him come via zoom, no idea what that cost. Holton did have faculty and students read one of his books but there was no huge cost to that. I’ve read a few and his ideas make for great discussions so don’t think it was a waste of time. The reader doesn’t not need to take it all as fact, just another viewpoint to add to the discussion.
Only if our kids want to get canceled.
Oh your poor children. What victims they are.