Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer is no. But I certainly hope Youngkin spends most of his political capital fighting CRT in schools. That would be a super productive use of it. Better than, say, saving me a penny in grocery tax on an apple.
I guess if he’s spending months banning something that doesn’t exist, he can’t screw up the rest of the state.
You’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.
And some of us don’t have a problem with the topics you listed above.
Lesson plans based on the 1619 Project, which serious historians have criticized as riddled with errors and dubious claims, should not be circulated to Virginia schools. Hannah-Jones isn’t an academic; she’s a bitter, hateful, left-wing polemicist.
Well our current curriculum white-washes history and covers up important facts.
FCPS is minority black if anything we should be more concerned with the Asians and Hispanic, the blacks are fine
And those individuals are not discussed in our history at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer is no. But I certainly hope Youngkin spends most of his political capital fighting CRT in schools. That would be a super productive use of it. Better than, say, saving me a penny in grocery tax on an apple.
I guess if he’s spending months banning something that doesn’t exist, he can’t screw up the rest of the state.
You’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.
And some of us don’t have a problem with the topics you listed above.
Lesson plans based on the 1619 Project, which serious historians have criticized as riddled with errors and dubious claims, should not be circulated to Virginia schools. Hannah-Jones isn’t an academic; she’s a bitter, hateful, left-wing polemicist.
Well our current curriculum white-washes history and covers up important facts.
FCPS is minority black if anything we should be more concerned with the Asians and Hispanic, the blacks are fine
And those individuals are not discussed in our history at all.
Nobody minds more voices in our history curriculum. What they mind is oppressor / oppressed stuff. We Ds need to be able to call out radical left stuff as too much - to get the good changes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer is no. But I certainly hope Youngkin spends most of his political capital fighting CRT in schools. That would be a super productive use of it. Better than, say, saving me a penny in grocery tax on an apple.
I guess if he’s spending months banning something that doesn’t exist, he can’t screw up the rest of the state.
You’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.
And some of us don’t have a problem with the topics you listed above.
Lesson plans based on the 1619 Project, which serious historians have criticized as riddled with errors and dubious claims, should not be circulated to Virginia schools. Hannah-Jones isn’t an academic; she’s a bitter, hateful, left-wing polemicist.
Well our current curriculum white-washes history and covers up important facts.
FCPS is minority black if anything we should be more concerned with the Asians and Hispanic, the blacks are fine
And those individuals are not discussed in our history at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer is no. But I certainly hope Youngkin spends most of his political capital fighting CRT in schools. That would be a super productive use of it. Better than, say, saving me a penny in grocery tax on an apple.
I guess if he’s spending months banning something that doesn’t exist, he can’t screw up the rest of the state.
You’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.
And some of us don’t have a problem with the topics you listed above.
Lesson plans based on the 1619 Project, which serious historians have criticized as riddled with errors and dubious claims, should not be circulated to Virginia schools. Hannah-Jones isn’t an academic; she’s a bitter, hateful, left-wing polemicist.
Well our current curriculum white-washes history and covers up important facts.
FCPS is minority black if anything we should be more concerned with the Asians and Hispanic, the blacks are fine
And those individuals are not discussed in our history at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer is no. But I certainly hope Youngkin spends most of his political capital fighting CRT in schools. That would be a super productive use of it. Better than, say, saving me a penny in grocery tax on an apple.
I guess if he’s spending months banning something that doesn’t exist, he can’t screw up the rest of the state.
You’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.
And some of us don’t have a problem with the topics you listed above.
Lesson plans based on the 1619 Project, which serious historians have criticized as riddled with errors and dubious claims, should not be circulated to Virginia schools. Hannah-Jones isn’t an academic; she’s a bitter, hateful, left-wing polemicist.
Well our current curriculum white-washes history and covers up important facts.
FCPS is minority black if anything we should be more concerned with the Asians and Hispanic, the blacks are fine
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer is no. But I certainly hope Youngkin spends most of his political capital fighting CRT in schools. That would be a super productive use of it. Better than, say, saving me a penny in grocery tax on an apple.
I guess if he’s spending months banning something that doesn’t exist, he can’t screw up the rest of the state.
You’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.
And some of us don’t have a problem with the topics you listed above.
Lesson plans based on the 1619 Project, which serious historians have criticized as riddled with errors and dubious claims, should not be circulated to Virginia schools. Hannah-Jones isn’t an academic; she’s a bitter, hateful, left-wing polemicist.
Well our current curriculum white-washes history and covers up important facts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer is no. But I certainly hope Youngkin spends most of his political capital fighting CRT in schools. That would be a super productive use of it. Better than, say, saving me a penny in grocery tax on an apple.
I guess if he’s spending months banning something that doesn’t exist, he can’t screw up the rest of the state.
You’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.
And some of us don’t have a problem with the topics you listed above.
Lesson plans based on the 1619 Project, which serious historians have criticized as riddled with errors and dubious claims, should not be circulated to Virginia schools. Hannah-Jones isn’t an academic; she’s a bitter, hateful, left-wing polemicist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer is no. But I certainly hope Youngkin spends most of his political capital fighting CRT in schools. That would be a super productive use of it. Better than, say, saving me a penny in grocery tax on an apple.
I guess if he’s spending months banning something that doesn’t exist, he can’t screw up the rest of the state.
You’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.
And some of us don’t have a problem with the topics you listed above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More ribbing of va voters on snl.... Anyone else embarrassed that we elected a guy that was heavily supported by uneducated white women?
https://youtu.be/08zeLYx6j7Y
Why? We’re you embarrassed when McAuliffe got votes from blacks even less likely to have college degrees?
Dems only love the “poorly educated” if they vote blue.
Democrats want everyone to get an education.
Dems want everyone forced to go to government schools that they control, which is why they are so threatened by the idea of vouchers. As long as only the rich (or middle class who can sacrifice enough to scrape up the funds) have a choice in their children’s education, it’s all good.
Yes, I want my tax money to pay for public schools, not subsidize your private school tuition.
By all means. That doesn't prevent me wanting my tax $$ back as school vouchers.. See how that works?
Ok. I want my tax $$ back to hire my own police force. Fire dept. Landscaping for my home. Playground and running track just for my family to use. Etc.
Public funds, contributed by the public, pay for public services. See how that works?
Clearly. If any of those departments don't do their jobs, people want them defunded and it does happen at some places. See how that works?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More ribbing of va voters on snl.... Anyone else embarrassed that we elected a guy that was heavily supported by uneducated white women?
https://youtu.be/08zeLYx6j7Y
Why? We’re you embarrassed when McAuliffe got votes from blacks even less likely to have college degrees?
Dems only love the “poorly educated” if they vote blue.
Democrats want everyone to get an education.
Dems want everyone forced to go to government schools that they control, which is why they are so threatened by the idea of vouchers. As long as only the rich (or middle class who can sacrifice enough to scrape up the funds) have a choice in their children’s education, it’s all good.
Yes, I want my tax money to pay for public schools, not subsidize your private school tuition.
By all means. That doesn't prevent me wanting my tax $$ back as school vouchers.. See how that works?
Ok. I want my tax $$ back to hire my own police force. Fire dept. Landscaping for my home. Playground and running track just for my family to use. Etc.
Public funds, contributed by the public, pay for public services. See how that works?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer is no. But I certainly hope Youngkin spends most of his political capital fighting CRT in schools. That would be a super productive use of it. Better than, say, saving me a penny in grocery tax on an apple.
I guess if he’s spending months banning something that doesn’t exist, he can’t screw up the rest of the state.
You’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, I was totally confused by those posts insisting that Ds should have voted for Sears just because she’s black. WTF?
I don't think anyone should vote for anyone because of their color. However, if you look back that was the "push" for some candidates' supporters. And, Ayala's ad that ran repeatedly, over and over, kept stressing that--even though Sears was running against her.
And, Ayala had that phrase that she is an "Afro Latina." Like that was a selling point. There must surely have been another way to present it without being so blatant.
When she said she was Afro Latina I cackled.
ou’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer is no. But I certainly hope Youngkin spends most of his political capital fighting CRT in schools. That would be a super productive use of it. Better than, say, saving me a penny in grocery tax on an apple.
I guess if he’s spending months banning something that doesn’t exist, he can’t screw up the rest of the state.
You’re partly correct in saying that it doesn’t exist. Critical Race Theory, by name, is not a part of the official VDOE curriculum. You will not find it in so many words on the VDOE website. What you will find, however, are other references and statements to Equity, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusion,etc,…all designed to slip it in under the guise of other parts of the left-wing agenda. Some of the larger school districts in Virginia are implementing CRT in the same, surreptitious manner. Fairfax County hired Ibrahim X. Kendi to give a speech to FCPS teachers regarding “anti racism”…and paid him thousands of taxpayer dollars. It also distributed copies of lesson plans based on the 1619 Project to all high school teachers of US History. These are the inconvenient facts that shouldn’t be ignored.