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Originally Posted by rockdogg
Teachers have been required to turn in their lesson plans for the next week (and some districts require months) for decades. Teachers have nothing to hide. Teachers are required to follow the curriculum benchmarks that were established when GWB enacted No Child Left Behind. Teachers are also required to maintain a continuing education plan, paying for college credits, to qualify for renewing their licenses to teach. The current attack on education by the radicalized right wing "parents", most of whom don't even have kids in the district, is all about making the teaching occupation untenable. Conservatives hate public education and are all about using our tax dollars to pay for "conservative values" indoctrinating charter schools.

Oh boohoo. The extremist is you. There is no reason that parents shouldn't be able to check on their children in the classroom. More states are adopting this stance and it's one well worth doing.

It's a sad reach that you would compare parents to radicals just because they want to see how their child is doing. You and all your libtard ilk are disgusting that you put politics ahead of families. I don't know how you live with yourself.


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Originally Posted by PitDAWG
Originally Posted by EveDawg
What do teachers have to hide? If nothing, then they should be happy with the level of transparency.

So this only applies to some people and when I point out you don't seem to feel the same way with consistency it's me changing the subject? It sounds to me like you are refusing to address the fact you only expect such accountability for some people when you choose to do so. The question you brought up was transparency and if people did nothing wrong they have nothing to hide. I addresssed that it only matters to you sometimes. I understand how that's not convenient for you.

The current topic is teachers and children and parents. If you can't handle that then kick rocks lwl.


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Until you decided to change it to accountability and not having anything to hide. So much for that personal accountability.


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Originally Posted by PitDAWG
Until you decided to change it to accountability and not having anything to hide. So much for that personal accountability.

No dude, you're trying to change the subject and twist things because you have nothing. You do this every time you lose a debate and basically everyone on the forum knows it. So crawl back under your bridge.


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Originally Posted by EveDawg
Originally Posted by PitDAWG
Originally Posted by EveDawg
What do teachers have to hide? If nothing, then they should be happy with the level of transparency.

So this only applies to some people and when I point out you don't seem to feel the same way with consistency it's me changing the subject? It sounds to me like you are refusing to address the fact you only expect such accountability for some people when you choose to do so. The question you brought up was transparency and if people did nothing wrong they have nothing to hide. I addresssed that it only matters to you sometimes. I understand how that's not convenient for you.

The current topic is teachers and children and parents. If you can't handle that then kick rocks lwl.
That's not changing the topic - it's making an accurate and valid point that you clearly can't answer. You arbitrarily decide Teachers should having nothing to hide so monitor them? And you can't even see how messed up and ignorant that is. Wow.


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Originally Posted by mgh888
Originally Posted by EveDawg
Originally Posted by PitDAWG
Originally Posted by EveDawg
What do teachers have to hide? If nothing, then they should be happy with the level of transparency.

So this only applies to some people and when I point out you don't seem to feel the same way with consistency it's me changing the subject? It sounds to me like you are refusing to address the fact you only expect such accountability for some people when you choose to do so. The question you brought up was transparency and if people did nothing wrong they have nothing to hide. I addresssed that it only matters to you sometimes. I understand how that's not convenient for you.

The current topic is teachers and children and parents. If you can't handle that then kick rocks lwl.
That's not changing the topic - it's making an accurate and valid point that you clearly can't answer. You arbitrarily decide Teachers should having nothing to hide so monitor them? And you can't even see how messed up and ignorant that is. Wow.

How do you live with yourself? You can't handle that parents want to see what their children are up to? What are you scared of? I can't believe how the libtard left is so vile in putting politics ahead of families.

The day is coming soon that your ilk will be squashed like a bug under a heel, because people and PARENTS see how you behave. And how you have no consideration for parents or children's welfare. This is a moment for all of America to take notice.

SHAME.


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So the libertarian is calling for bigger government? Creating a 1984s Big Brother style surveillance state won't fix the stupid GOPers are bringing upon us. Hell, the right has already dumbed down the whole country with its education policies pushing a corporate-political agenda turning out worker drones. About half the country is illiterate and YOU think parental control is somehow going to improve that. Nope, the bible thumpers will expect religious schools. The gravy militias will want gun toting 2A courses. Right-wing racists will want to rewrite history courses to empower white people. The rest of the cult of Trump will want their pound of flesh by insisting children believe the cults lies.

I can see it now, all the young ladies in their red capes walking around the streets of New Gilead all prim and proper like. Living in a state of constant fear, GOPers want to trade up to puritanical fascist authoritarianism. They do this because they would rather be controlled by jackbooted thugs than lead by “libtards” in an actual democracy. Nope, shove a camera up teachers asses, so they can snoop, bitch and complain about every little thing their mini mes get taught. And of course Keith will be along to tell me how “dumb” I am because I used the words fascist, jackbooted thugs, etc. Well Keith, why don't you tell us what GOPers have become? I'd ask Eve, but all I would get is a sassy brain-dead quip that adds nothing but more idiocy to the conversation.

Last edited by OldColdDawg; 02/05/22 05:03 PM.

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Originally Posted by EveDawg
Originally Posted by mgh888
Originally Posted by EveDawg
I'm not a parent but if I were one it would be pretty cool to log in and see what was going on in my kids classroom.

I have security cameras on my house to check on my home and dogs while I'm away. It would be great to be able to keep an eye on my kids.

Imagine if your kid was being bullied or has behavioral issues. Of course you want to check on them.

If libtards have something to hide then thats an even bigger reason to make this available to parents.

That's as good as Throw Long's post from the other day. You've out done yourself. Cameras in school rooms so you can check in the same way you do to monitor your home and dogs. Awesome.

Meanwhile still using an insult derived from the word Retard and think it's big, clever or funny somehow.

It would actually be more important to check on my kids more than my house or dogs. You're kind of clueless. You do realize there are cameras on you whereever you go in society right? Every gas station, restaurant, and store? I know that might frighten you and your safe space bubble you live in. But it's the truth.

One of us lives in a bubble that is for sure - that'd be the one who thinks it's randomly cool to decide a segment of society have done nothing wrong, but should be cool with being monitored full time. And then wants to compare that action/thought process to security cameras as justification. Congrats for not going the retard catchphrase.


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I stopped reading after "bigger government" because I know you and all the verbal diarreah you produce is a bunch of dramatic hyperbole and nothing of merit. Maybe someday you will learn how to have a normal conversation.


Giving parents the ability to check on their children has nothing to do with "bigger government". What a dumbass.


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Originally Posted by EveDawg
How do you live with yourself? You can't handle that parents want to see what their children are up to? What are you scared of? I can't believe how the libtard left is so vile in putting politics ahead of families.

The day is coming soon that your ilk will be squashed like a bug under a heel, because people and PARENTS see how you behave. And how you have no consideration for parents or children's welfare. This is a moment for all of America to take notice.

SHAME.

One of - if not the most - dumbest, idiotic and ignorant posts I have ever seen. Well done going back to the retard catchphrase. That's always a sure sign of a winning and well thought out argument.


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Originally Posted by EveDawg
I stopped reading after "bigger government" because I know you and all the verbal diarreah you produce is a bunch of dramatic hyperbole and nothing of merit. Maybe someday you will learn how to have a normal conversation.


Giving parents the ability to check on their children has nothing to do with "bigger government". What a dumbass.

Mandating cameras in government run schools has nothing to do with the government.

rofl

Quit now while you only look like a total asshat.


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Originally Posted by mgh888
Originally Posted by EveDawg
How do you live with yourself? You can't handle that parents want to see what their children are up to? What are you scared of? I can't believe how the libtard left is so vile in putting politics ahead of families.

The day is coming soon that your ilk will be squashed like a bug under a heel, because people and PARENTS see how you behave. And how you have no consideration for parents or children's welfare. This is a moment for all of America to take notice.

SHAME.

One of - if not the most - dumbest, idiotic and ignorant posts I have ever seen. Well done going back to the retard catchphrase. That's always a sure sign of a winning and well thought out argument.
Originally Posted by mgh888
Originally Posted by EveDawg
How do you live with yourself? You can't handle that parents want to see what their children are up to? What are you scared of? I can't believe how the libtard left is so vile in putting politics ahead of families.

The day is coming soon that your ilk will be squashed like a bug under a heel, because people and PARENTS see how you behave. And how you have no consideration for parents or children's welfare. This is a moment for all of America to take notice.

SHAME.

One of - if not the most - dumbest, idiotic and ignorant posts I have ever seen. Well done going back to the retard catchphrase. That's always a sure sign of a winning and well thought out argument.

How do you live with yourself? Like seriously? Do you even believe what you post? Maybe should do some self reflection because trying to keep parents out of their childrens lives is disgusting.


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Originally Posted by mgh888
Originally Posted by EveDawg
I stopped reading after "bigger government" because I know you and all the verbal diarreah you produce is a bunch of dramatic hyperbole and nothing of merit. Maybe someday you will learn how to have a normal conversation.


Giving parents the ability to check on their children has nothing to do with "bigger government". What a dumbass.

Mandating cameras in government run schools has nothing to do with the government.

rofl

Quit now while you only look like a total asshat.

It has nothing to do with govt because the govt has no role. The govt isn't spying on anyone. It's enabled for the parents to check on their children. Sorry you aren't bright enough to know the difference.


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Originally Posted by EveDawg
I stopped reading after "bigger government" because I know you and all the verbal diarreah you produce is a bunch of dramatic hyperbole and nothing of merit. Maybe someday you will learn how to have a normal conversation.


Giving parents the ability to check on their children has nothing to do with "bigger government". What a dumbass.

I have normal conversations all the time, just with NORMAL people. Not the dregs of society.


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Originally Posted by OldColdDawg
Originally Posted by EveDawg
I stopped reading after "bigger government" because I know you and all the verbal diarreah you produce is a bunch of dramatic hyperbole and nothing of merit. Maybe someday you will learn how to have a normal conversation.


Giving parents the ability to check on their children has nothing to do with "bigger government". What a dumbass.

I have normal conversations all the time, just with NORMAL people. Not the dregs of society.

No you don't. You spew hate all day every day on here.


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Originally Posted by EveDawg
Oh boohoo. The extremist is you. There is no reason that parents shouldn't be able to check on their children in the classroom. More states are adopting this stance and it's one well worth doing.

It's a sad reach that you would compare parents to radicals just because they want to see how their child is doing. You and all your libtard ilk are disgusting that you put politics ahead of families. I don't know how you live with yourself.
States with legislatures that have been filled with Tea Party extremists, like Ohio, have been, and are, attempting to adopt this "stance". No Child left behind was far from a "libtard" legislation and teachers have not only met it, but embraced it. The imaginary CRT public school curriculum is the current right wing extremist bogeyman attempt to make teaching an occupation that nobody wants to do. It's really not a sad reach at all to compare "parents" who literally DON'T HAVE KIDS IN THE DISTRICT in my county to radicalized extremists. They have threatened board members and other parents. They carry signs that have no basis in reality. These same "parents" are demanding to have access to every classroom that our tax dollars are supporting. Again, the worst of them DON'T HAVE KIDS IN OUR DISTRICT. Should I assume your "ilk" is all about fascistic observation of specific conservative values?

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Originally Posted by rockdogg
Originally Posted by EveDawg
Oh boohoo. The extremist is you. There is no reason that parents shouldn't be able to check on their children in the classroom. More states are adopting this stance and it's one well worth doing.

It's a sad reach that you would compare parents to radicals just because they want to see how their child is doing. You and all your libtard ilk are disgusting that you put politics ahead of families. I don't know how you live with yourself.
States with legislatures that have been filled with Tea Party extremists, like Ohio, have been, and are, attempting to adopt this "stance". No Child left behind was far from a "libtard" legislation and teachers have not only met it, but embraced it. The imaginary CRT public school curriculum is the current right wing extremist bogeyman attempt to make teaching an occupation that nobody wants to do. It's really not a sad reach at all to compare "parents" who literally DON'T HAVE KIDS IN THE DISTRICT in my county to radicalized extremists. They have threatened board members and other parents. They carry signs that have no basis in reality. These same "parents" are demanding to have access to every classroom that our tax dollars are supporting. Again, the worst of them DON'T HAVE KIDS IN OUR DISTRICT. Should I assume your "ilk" is all about fascistic observation of specific conservative values?

It's a sad day when the libtard left puts politics above children and parents. You are crazy if you think parents are "radicals" because they want to see what their children are up to at school. How do you live with yourself? Do you not see how crazy you sound?


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I have to go now. Yall are lucky. I'll slay you later.


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Quote
EveDawg

Do you even believe what you post? Maybe should do some self reflection because trying to keep parents out of their childrens lives is disgusting.

So .... You aren't a parent. And parents have never had cameras in schools to watch (you could say Spy) on the teachers. And you think this is a discussion about keeping parents out of their kids lives? And you don't think it's about government control. It's not an authoritarian, scared "right" wing knee jerk reaction that grossly infringes on the rights of teachers. You don't think 99% of teachers wouldn't turn round and tell you and every other moron that proposed this to go F yourself?


And you ask if I believe what I post !


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I have children still in elementary school and the e-learning was definitely eye opening. I would say that we could definitely see more clearly which teachers were fully engaged and which ones were just doing enough to get by. That being said, I think there has to be a balance. One thing that I am very certain of is that I would not work for a company that thought that I needed to be under constant surveillance, so I am certain that highly qualified teachers are not going to tolerate being treated this way either. So, if you want to attract good teachers,you have to treat them right. Also, the teachers still have to be careful with what they say, because kids will talk. I also do not want my kids under surveillance. That also invites all sorts of security risks and other problems. I think there are better ways to promote transparency.

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No… you won't. But go ahead and run, because rockdogg just destroyed any glimmer of argument you had. Bye Felicia.


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Originally Posted by EveDawg
The day is coming soon that your ilk will be squashed like a bug under a heel.

Yep, January 6th was only the beginning. We already know and a lot of us are ready for it.


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Good thing there are no Nazis in America, huh, Keith?



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Originally Posted by PitDAWG
The total reversal on January 6th by Republicans.

We all hear what the RNC is saying now.

Quote
Their behavior “has been destructive to the institution of the U.S. House of Representatives, the Republican Party and our republic, and is inconsistent with the position of the Conference,” it said.

The resolution claimed Cheney and Kinzinger, the only Republicans on the nine-member select committee investigating the Capitol riot, “are participating in a Democrat-led persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse, and they are both utilizing their past professed political affiliation to mask Democrat abuse of prosecutorial power for partisan purposes.”

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/02/04/rnc...-investigating-jan-6-pro-trump-riot.html

They used this as the reasoning to censure both Cheney and Kinzinger. So let's look at the total 180 they have done over the past year. Let's see what they said and thought about the insurrection when it happened.

Here is what the RNC themselves said just after the insurrection.

Quote
“These violent scenes we have witnessed do not represent acts of patriotism, but an attack on our country and its founding principles,” RNC members said in a statement at that time.

Here are the comments made right after the January 6th insurrection by some leading Republicans right after the insurrection.



Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas)

Today, the people's House was attacked, which is an attack on the Republic itself. There is no excuse for it. A women died. And people need to go to jail. And the President should never have spun up certain Americans to believe something that simply cannot be.
Rep. Chip Roy, January 6, 2021





Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.)

Chaos, anarchy. The violence today was wrong and un-American.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.)

When it comes to accountability, the President needs to understand that his actions were the problem, not the solution, that the rally yesterday was unseemly, it got out of hand... I said on the floor of the Senate, I cast my vote accordingly, that Joe Biden is the legitimate president-elect of the United States.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, January 7, 2021



Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.)

This has been a truly tragic day for America. We all join together in fully condemning the dangerous violence and destruction that occurred today in our Nation's Capitol. Americans will always have their freedom of speech and the constitutional right to protest, but violence in any form is absolutely unacceptable. It is anti-America, and must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
Rep. Elise Stefanik, January 6, 2021

Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas)

On Wednesday the Capitol of the most powerful nation the world has ever known was stormed by an angry mob. Americans surely never thought they’d see such a scene: members of Congress barricaded inside the House chamber, Capitol Police trampled, and four Americans dead. A woman was shot near the elevator I use every day to enter the House floor. It was a display not of patriotism but of frenzy and anarchy.
Rep. Dan Crenshaw, January 11, 2021

House Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.)

Let me be clear: Last week’s violent attack on the Capitol was undemocratic, un-American and criminal…And make no mistake: Those who are responsible for Wednesday’s chaos will be brought to justice…The president bears responsibility for Wednesday’s attack on Congress by mob rioters.
House Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy, January 13, 2021

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.)

January 6th was a disgrace... American citizens attacked their own government. They used terrorism to try to stop a specific piece of democratic business they did not like... Fellow Americans beat and bloodied our own police. They stormed the Senate floor. They tried to hunt down the Speaker of the House. They built a gallows and chanted about murdering the Vice President...

They did this because they had been fed wild falsehoods by the most powerful man on Earth — because he was angry he’d lost an election.
Senate Minority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell, February 13, 2021

Other statements:

Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.): "This violence and destruction have no place in our republic. It must end now." – January 6, 2021

Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.): "These actions at the U.S. Capitol by protestors are truly despicable and unacceptable. While I am safe and sheltering in place, these protests are prohibiting us from doing our constitutional duty. I condemn them in the strongest possible terms." – January 6, 2021

Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Miss.): "The events unfolding at the Capitol are shameful. There is no justification for violence and destruction. It has to stop now. This is not who we are as a nation. Thank you to the Capitol Police who are keeping us safe." – January 6, 2021

Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.): "Today is a sad day for our country. The destruction and violence we saw at our Capitol today is an assault on our democracy, our Constitution and the rule of law, and must not be tolerated. As Americans, we believe in the right to peaceful protest. We must rise above the violence. We must stand together. We will not let today’s violence deter Congress from certifying the election. We must restore confidence in our electoral process. We must, and we will, have a peaceful and orderly transition of power." – January 6, 2021

Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wisc.): "Mr. President. You have got to stop this. You are the only person who can call this off. Call it off. The election is over. Call it off. This is bigger than you. It is bigger than any member of Congress. It is about the United States of America." – January 6, 2021

Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.): "Call it what it is: An attack on the Capitol is an attack on democracy Today we are trying to use the democratic process to address grievances. This violence inhibits our ability to do that. Violent protests were unacceptable this summer and are unacceptable now." – January 6, 2021

Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio): "I condemn the violent and criminal acts that took place at the U.S. Capitol today. These shameful actions to disrupt a session of Congress and vandalize the Capitol building should never happen in our great republic. The U.S. Capitol belongs to every American and is a symbol of the citadel of democracy. An attack on the Capitol building is an attack on every American...

It is time for President Trump to embrace the peaceful transfer of power, which is mandated under the Constitution and a hallmark of our democracy." – January 6, 2021

Rep. Tom Reed (R-N.Y.): "Today, we saw an assault on our democracy. I love this institution. I love the United States Congress, and I love the United States of America. And what I saw today was mob rule that spat upon the blood of my father that is in the soil of Europe and in the soil of Korea, and who gave us through that blood this sacred Constitution and the sacred ability to lead this world as a power that says we settle our differences not with mob rule; we settle our difference through elections. And when those elections are over, we have a peaceful transition of power." – January 6, 2021

Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.): "What we have seen today is unlawful and unacceptable…I have decided I will vote to uphold the Electoral College results and I encourage Donald Trump to condemn and put an end to this madness." – January 6, 2021

Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.): "This building has been desecrated, blood has been spilled in the hallways…This isn't what America is. What happened today isn’t what America is." – January 6, 2021

Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.): "Everyone has a right to peacefully protest. No one has a right to commit violence. What happened today at the Capitol is disgraceful and un-American. It is not what our country stands for." – January 6, 2021

Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.): "I hope that the types of people who stormed the Capitol today got a clear message that they will not stop our democracy from moving forward…We need to get our work done and this kind of thuggery would not keep us from doing the people’s work" – January 6, 2021

https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/...eres-what-they-said-at-the-time/2929779/

And now? The RNC calls them "ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse".

Anyone trying to rewrite the history of what happened, just remember that they are lying and they know better.

Oh what a difference a year makes.


Great article. Thank you for posting. Quoted the whole thing so it shows up again.


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Originally Posted by EveDawg
Originally Posted by rockdogg
Originally Posted by EveDawg
Oh boohoo. The extremist is you. There is no reason that parents shouldn't be able to check on their children in the classroom. More states are adopting this stance and it's one well worth doing.

It's a sad reach that you would compare parents to radicals just because they want to see how their child is doing. You and all your libtard ilk are disgusting that you put politics ahead of families. I don't know how you live with yourself.
States with legislatures that have been filled with Tea Party extremists, like Ohio, have been, and are, attempting to adopt this "stance". No Child left behind was far from a "libtard" legislation and teachers have not only met it, but embraced it. The imaginary CRT public school curriculum is the current right wing extremist bogeyman attempt to make teaching an occupation that nobody wants to do. It's really not a sad reach at all to compare "parents" who literally DON'T HAVE KIDS IN THE DISTRICT in my county to radicalized extremists. They have threatened board members and other parents. They carry signs that have no basis in reality. These same "parents" are demanding to have access to every classroom that our tax dollars are supporting. Again, the worst of them DON'T HAVE KIDS IN OUR DISTRICT. Should I assume your "ilk" is all about fascistic observation of specific conservative values?

It's a sad day when the libtard left puts politics above children and parents. You are crazy if you think parents are "radicals" because they want to see what their children are up to at school. How do you live with yourself? Do you not see how crazy you sound?

you are full of crap. Bannon himself said that he was taking it down to the school board level. CRT, taking books out of school, cameras in school, etc


Who’s behind the nationwide attacks on local school boards over Critical Race Theory?
NEWSMARK WINGFIELD | OCTOBER 19, 2021

School boards across America are under attack by conservative parents whose fears of woke liberalism are being stoked by national organizations affiliated with Donald Trump and the Republican Party, as well as Fox News and other conservative media outlets.

The result is chaos at school board meetings, physical violence, shouting and other behavior that would not be allowed in a classroom. In short, angry parents are behaving in ways they would not tolerate with their own children — all under the banner of protecting those children from being taught about America’s original sin of racism.


On Aug. 25, 2021, people hold signs and chant during a meeting of the North Allegheny School District school board regarding the district’s mask policy, at at North Allegheny Senior High School in McCandless, Pa. The nation’s school boards are asking President Joe Biden for federal assistance to investigate and stop a growing number of threats made against their members, on Thursday, Sept. 30. (Alexandra Wimley/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via AP)

The catch-all label for these ills is Critical Race Theory, a law school construct for understanding systemic racism that public school administrators say is not being taught in elementary, middle or high schools. Concerned parents counter that this embodiment of liberal wokeness takes many forms and is shaping public school curricula and personnel, who may not realize they have been infected by Critical Race Theory.

One conservative group has gone so far as to suggest that public school teachers should be equipped with body cams so that parents can monitor every word their children hear and be ready to counter perceived liberal indoctrination.

This is one reason among many that some observers believe the endgame for those stoking the current parent protests is to dismantle public education — or at least cripple it further by lack of funding.

Such a tactic is nothing new for conservative Christian parents in America, who were at the forefront of starting private Christian schools in the 1960s and ’70s to counter the forced integration of public schools. The racist motivations of starting these church-based schools have been well documented.

Those documenting the current conflagration cite three sparks for its rapid deployment: Hatred for the New York Times’ 1619 Project, the racial reckoning set off by the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and Trump’s defeat in the 2020 presidential election. Amid this storm of resentment — capped by loss of the White House but despite conservative control of many state governments — a few parents, egged on by national figures, have zeroed in on nonpartisan school boards as the latest perpetrators of liberalism.


Steve Bannon (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Steve Bannon, Trump’s former White House adviser, told them so. On his podcast in May, Bannon explained: “The path to save the nation is very simple — it’s going to go through the school boards.”

Bannon later told Politico that Republicans are leveraging fears about Critical Race Theory because it could help them win elections. “This is the Tea Party to the 10th power,” he said. “This isn’t Q, this is mainstream suburban moms — and a lot of these people aren’t Trump voters.”

Same song, different location
NBC News has been at the forefront of reporting on and analyzing the current protests about Critical Race Theory. It has documented at least 165 organizations operating across the nation to coalesce parents and other concerned citizens into action. Some of those are authentically grassroots groups launched by one or two parents. But others are well-oiled and well-funded political machines — almost always with ties to Trumpism.

One example is Citizens for Renewing America, which has published a slick 34-page toolkit on how to identity and oppose Critical Race Theory in your public school system.

“This guide is meant for anyone of any knowledge and experience level who is concerned about what children are being taught and how they are being treated, with an emphasis on making the banning of Critical Race Theory the central theme by which you reclaim your schools,” the booklet’s introductions states.

The group’s site offers resources for a range of issues common to Trumpism, including Critical Race Theory, big tech, COVID, secure borders and election integrity. Its president and executive director both have deep ties to Trump and his Congressional supporters.

President Russ Vought served as director the Office of Management and Budget and was a member of Trump’s cabinet. Executive Director Wade Miller is a former Marine who served as political director for Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and as chief of staff for his “good friend,” Rep. Chip Roy of Texas.

Quoting MLK as an ally against Critical Race Theory
The booklet on how to combat Critical Race Theory in public schools begins with a full-page pull-out quote from Martin Luther King Jr.: “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”

Words King famously uttered in his quest to raise acceptance of Black children to the same privileges as white children are turned back to make this white-led advocacy group’s case that white children should not be considered inferior to non-white children.


A group of protesters wave signs at traffic outside The Charles C. Manson Education Service Center in Tulsa, Okla., on Monday, June 7, 2021, as the Tulsa County Republican Party rallies against Tulsa School Board’s bond proposals. (Tanner Laws/Tulsa World via AP)

A key talking point of the anti-Critical Race Theory movement is that liberals are making white children feel inferior to other children by teaching that their ancestors were enslavers and abusers of Black people. The idea of any inherent or systemic racism is anathema to these parents.

The guide for parents addressing their school boards explains Critical Race Theory, in part, as teaching that “straight white people, children included, are inherently and irredeemably racist, and benefit from — as well as systematically rig — all the social institutions, rules, laws, and norms that white people invented and keep in place for their own disproportionate success and in order to maintain their own stranglehold on power.”

That is a distortion of what Critical Race Theory actually teaches — at the graduate-school level — which is, indeed, about the systemic influence of racism but not in a way that condemns all white people.

The guide continues its alarming description: “In other words, because people of color were discriminated against in the past, white people, including children in schools, need to be discriminated against now in order to make up for it and let African Americans catch up.”

And again, referring back to the Civil Rights Movement, the guide declares: “CRT theorists reject the civil rights movement. The civil rights movement wanted to make sure there were equal rights in America for everyone. That means equal treatment of individuals regardless of race.”

‘Prepare to be attacked’
The group that is fueling attacks — including violent attacks — on school board members and administrators and teachers warns that those who stand up against Critical Race Theory should be prepared to be attacked by the liberals.

Critical Race Theory and Critical Social Justice are “take-over ideologies,” the guidebook warns. “CRT proponents do not care how they win as long as they win. They are not trying to win an academic debate, they are attempting to socially replace you. Read that line again: they are not trying to win an academic debate, they are trying to socially replace you.

“As such, almost any action stemming from CRT activists is designed to shut you up, diminish your standing in the community, undercut your authority to speak on an issue, alienate you from whichever group you are a part of so that others ignore you, pretend like there really isn’t any problem at all, or tear down your reputation so people don’t listen to you. Anything that they can do to win they will do.”


A teachers’ aide in special education holds a sign. Students, teachers, and parents rallied on Sept. 28, 2021 in Newberg, Ore., to oppose an imminent vote by the Newberg School Board that will prohibit Black Lives Matter and Pride flags or banners in their schools. The new rule, which is supported by a newly elected conservative majority of the board, is the target of a lawsuit by the Newberg Education Association. (Photo by John Rudoff/Sipa USA)(Sipa via AP Images)

But there is a way around this unjust treatment of good white people, the guidebook continues: “The good news is that these tactics can be countered, and if you counter them effectively they will backfire on CRT activists. This is not like boxing — this is like social jiu-jitsu where you use their own tactics against them to expose them.”

Tips for how to investigate your child’s school
The guidebook offers tips for parents to determine if Critical Race Theory has infiltrated their schools. If it has, “there is no time to waste: it’s time to get to work.” But even if it hasn’t, “now would be a good time to get involved in your local school board and community before radical CRT activists take it over and you have a real mess on your hands.”

Then the booklet explains where to look for telltale signs of Critical Race Theory by closely examining everything your child brings home from school, examining the materials teachers use to prepare their lessons, by scouring school websites and being on the lookout for any hint of diversity, equity and inclusion materials or offices. And then, the guide continues, “learn how to make public records requests through either the Freedom of Information Act for federal documents, or through the public information request process required by your local government entities and school boards, regarding all training, curriculum, programs, materials, school system budgets, and emails promoting CRT, whether named explicitly or not (remember sometimes they hide it by using it without calling it that.)”

Parents are advised to catalogue and document everything they find and to enlist help from friends and family if the task gets too big.

“Perhaps most importantly, find and identify sympathetic teachers, perhaps provide them a completely confidential and anonymous reporting tool, or communicate by word of mouth,” the guidebook adds. “Depending on how radicalized the school system is, their careers could be in jeopardy by speaking out, so you have a duty to help protect their anonymity if they desire to remain unnamed as a source of information.”

The guidebook then goes on to explain how to run candidates for election against sitting school board members, how to demand recall elections to remove duly elected school board members and how to work the system up to the state level once you’ve gained a foothold locally.

A school watchlist
Citizens for Renewing America is one of several well-funded national organizations calling conservative parents to action against liberal ideology in the form of Critical Race Theory. Another prominent group is Turning Point USA, which prominently offers a School Board Watchlist on its website.

“The School Board Watchlist is America’s only national grassroots initiative dedicated to protecting our children by exposing radical and false ideologies endorsed by school boards and pushed in the classroom,” the site says. “SBWL finds and exposes school board leadership that supports anti-American, radical, hateful, immoral, and racist teachings in their districts, such as Critical Race Theory, the 1619 Project, sexual/gender ideology, and more. SBWL also provides information on how parents and students can get involved in their local school board and put an end to the racialization of the classroom.”


Charlie Kirk

Turning Point USA is a nonprofit organization founded by conservative commentator and Trump promoter Charlie Kirk. It bills itself as promoting “principles of freedom, free markets, and limited government” and says it believes “every young person can be enlightened to true free market values.”

In 2019, Kirk joined with Jerry Falwell Jr., who at the time was president of Liberty University, to create the Falkirk Center at Liberty, a conservative evangelical think tank. Earlier this year, after Falwell had been removed as president, the university declined to renew its contract with Kirk.

Turning Point USA lists three things it believes: “The United States of America is the greatest country in the history of the world. The U.S. Constitution is the most exceptional political document ever written. Capitalism is the most moral and proven economic system ever discovered.”

The organization’s website includes a section on Critical Race Theory that is filled with stories of oppression of white people, warnings about Marxism and other alarmist headlines. The site also includes testimonies by Black people about the dangers of Critical Race Theory.

Blacks against CRT
That is a common thread among the anti-Critical Race Theory groups — highlighting Black people who believe like good Christian white people do. Just as Citizens for Renewing America coopts Martin Luther King’s words to their cause, groups like Turning Point USA use the testimony of Black conservatives to make the case that they aren’t racist.

Donald Trump received 12% of the Black vote in the 2020 presidential election, indication that there is a small segment of the nation’s Black population that embraces Trumpism, which correlates to some Black support for the anti-Critical Race Theory movement.


Robert Woodson

An indication of this is another group called 1776 Unites, which is predominantly led by Black “independent scholars, counselors and role models,” its website explains. It was founded by Robert Woodson, a civil rights activist who favors telling positive stories of Black success rather than negative stories about Black oppression.

In February 2020, his Woodson Center launched 1776 Unites to counter what Woodson called the “lethal” narratives of the 1619 Project. “This garbage that is coming down from the scholars and writers from 1619 is most hypocritical because they don’t live in communities (that are) suffering,” he said.

Woodson later went on Fox News to call the 1619 Project “one of the most diabolical, self-destructive ideas that I’ve ever heard” and to say the Pulitzer Prize-winning report was itself a form of “white supremacy” that denies Black Americans agency and sees them as being incapable of overcoming adverse circumstances.


An engraving depicting the arrival of enslaved Africans at Jamestown, Va., in 1619. (Wikimedia Commons)

To counter this, 1776 Unites draws its name not from the year the first enslaved Black persons arrived in colonial Virginia (1619) but the year of the colonies’ Declaration of Independence from England. The Woodson project offers a high-school-level curriculum that tells “authentic, inspiring stories from American history that show what is best in our national character and what our freedom makes possible even in the most difficult circumstances.”

The group’s website says these stories “celebrate Black excellence, reject victimhood culture, and showcase African Americans who have prospered by embracing America’s founding ideals.”

Even though Black persons in early America were enslaved, their ancestors benefit today from a nation built upon “a set of virtues and values that would create a truly free society, the freest the world had ever seen. They even knew at the time it was falling short of truly delivering on that promise for all, but they knew what they were working toward.”

Thus, 1776 Unites declares that it is “essential that children learn they are agents of their own uplift, knowing their possibilities, responsibilities, and what it means to be an American.”

Another 1776 approach
Woodson’s kinder, gentler adoption of 1776 as a counter to 1619 is not shared by another organization battling the 1619 Project and Critical Race Theory. The first thing to greet visitors to the website of the 1776 Project PAC is a pop-up box to “report” school districts promoting Critical Race Theory.

This group bills itself as “promoting patriotism and pride in American history” as a political action committee “dedicated to electing school board members nationwide who want to reform our public education system by promoting patriotism and pride in American history. We are committed to abolishing Critical Race Theory and The 1619 Project from the public school curriculum.”


Jennifer Feucht, right, candidate for Olentangy Local Board of Education, delivers campaign flyers and yard signs to Brad, left, and Tina Krider Oct. 7, 2021, in Westerville, Ohio. Across Ohio and the nation, parental protests over social issues like mask mandates, gender-neutral bathrooms, teachings on racial history, sexuality and mental and emotional health are being leveraged into school board takeover campaigns. (AP Photo/Jay LaPrete)

It describes Critical Race Theory as “a radical belief that pushes the idea that America is an inherently racist country and white Americans are stained with the original sin of racism for which they can never be cleansed. Their solution is to remake the U.S., abandoning our founding documents and the capitalist system.”

It adds: “The 1776 Project PAC is pushing back against this growing crisis in our public education system by campaigning on behalf of school board candidates that vow to overturn any teaching of the 1619 Project or Critical Race Theory in their school districts. We will also support any type of education reform that promotes a patriotic vision of America and its history.”

What happens when a person reports a school they believe is promoting Critical Race Theory is not clear, as there is no list of questionable schools published on the site, just as there is no leadership or board or any other identifying information on the site. The only other way to interact with the group is to donate money.

Another agenda
Tyler Kingkade is an investigative report for NBC News who has researched the current wave of school board protests in detail. In June, he appeared on the NPR show “Fresh Air” with Terry Gross, who asked him if those who are stirring the pot have other agendas.


Tyler Kingkade

“Yeah, there are absolutely larger goals at play,” Kingkade replied. “I think there are a lot of people in conservative activist circles and in Republican circles who see this as their chance at another Tea Party-like wave. There has just been a transfer of power at the national level. There’s a lot of people who feel frustrated that their side lost, and they’re looking for a place to channel that. And at the same time, this is really something that, I think, gives folks who get engaged with this a little ownership in it. This is their school board, their school district. They feel like they are the ones to make a difference.”

David Barber, professor of history at the University of Tennessee at Martin, sees another agenda at work. Writing in the Nashville Tennessean, Barber lamented his state’s new anti-Critical Race Theory law.

“In Tennessee, our new law first makes it illegal for any public K-12 school to teach that one race is inherently superior to another; that people are inherently privileged or racist, etc., because of their race or sex; or that people’s moral character is determined by race or sex,” he explained. “While we should be glad that Tennessee is finally outlawing the teaching of racial superiority in any form, our legislature should have passed this part of its legislation 60 years ago, when it would have counted for something.”


David Barber

The history professor explained: “Right up into the 1960s, public schools in Tennessee were segregated. Whites in Tennessee openly and proudly characterized themselves as superior, even as they characterized Black people as lacking in morality, as being lazy, irresponsible, criminal, over-sexed, and as being intellectually inferior.

“But now, long after slavery and segregation’s overt white supremacy has been closeted, only now does our legislature decide that it must condemn the teaching of racial superiority. Of course, this legislation’s real intent is not to prevent our public schools from ‘teaching’ the superiority of one race over another, since no one is doing that. No, the real object here is to prevent educators from discussing nearly four centuries of white domination over Black people.”

Tennessee is one of eight states (Idaho, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Iowa, New Hampshire, Arizona, South Carolina) to pass laws prohibiting the teaching of Critical Race Theory, although what that means is vaguely defined.

Barber assailed this in his Tennessean column, noting that the legislature tried to cover up their true intent by claiming the new law doesn’t prohibit the “impartial discussion of controversial aspects of history.”

He asked: “Impartial? Meaning we hear both sides? The side of the slaves and the side of their loving masters? Or the side of the 5,000 and more lynched African Americans and the side of the noble defenders of white women’s purity?”

What about the Holocaust?
Since the anti-Critical Race Theory bills passed in various state legislatures are essentially the same — they were promoted as “model” legislation by advocacy groups — Tennessee’s problem also is Texas’ problem. And it is there, in the affluent Dallas suburb of Southlake that the limits of the partisan legislation recently got tested.

On Oct. 8, an administrator with the Carroll Independent School District in Southlake advised teachers that to follow Texas’ new anti-Critical Race Theory law requires them to present opposing views on controversial subjects.


Maureen Hall, a supporter of recalling the entire Mequon-Thiensville School District board, waves at drivers outside Homestead High School Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. A loose network of conservative groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

This conversation happened because the conservative school board had just reprimanded a fourth grade teacher who had an anti-racism book in her classroom. As a result, teachers were concerned about what books they could keep in their own classrooms.

“Just try to remember the concepts of (House Bill) 3979,” the administrator explained. “And make sure that if you have a book on the Holocaust, that you have one that has an opposing, that has other perspectives.”

One teacher responded: “How do you oppose the Holocaust?”

A recording of the exchange was reviewed by NBC News, which reported on the encounter, creating a wave of national headlines — and outrage.

Superintendent Lane Ledbetter had to issue an apology, explaining that the district understands “there are not two sides of the Holocaust.”

Part of the debate in Texas and Tennessee and elsewhere, then, is about what constitutes historical facts. If the Holocaust is historical fact, must the lynching of Black persons in the American South also qualify as historical fact? Is not the Tulsa Race Riot a historical fact? Is not the murder of Emmitt Till a historical fact?

“As we continue to work through implementation of HB3979, we also understand this bill does not require an opposing viewpoint on historical facts,” the superintendent wrote to parents. “As a district we will work to add clarity to our expectations for teachers and once again apologize for any hurt or confusion this has caused.”

Republican state Sen. Kelly Hancock, who represents an adjacent district, wrote on Twitter that “Southlake just got it wrong.” He added: “School administrators should know the difference between factual historical events and fiction.”

Back in Tennessee, Barber wrote that situations like these are exactly why public school teachers find themselves at risk of violating the new law.

“A teacher dedicated to getting out the truth of this country’s history wouldn’t be safe,” he said. “The law also enjoins educators from offering lessons in which an ‘individual should feel discomfort, guilt, anguish or another form of psychological distress solely because of the individual’s race or sex.’


Students, teachers and parents rallied on Sept. 28, 2021, in Newberg, Ore., to oppose an imminent vote by the Newberg School Board that will prohibit Black Lives Matter and Pride flags or banners in their schools. (Photo by John Rudoff/Sipa USA)(Sipa via AP Images)

“Simply telling the truth of what happened — for example, the lynch mob’s merciless nature, slow roasting its victims, gouging out eyeballs with hot pokers, cutting off the victim’s penis and testicles, slicing open pregnant women’s wombs — simply telling that truth should cause a certain amount of distress, should it not?”

Likewise, the professor said, “You cannot teach Black history — the history of this country from the perspective of Black people — without calling into question everything we know about ourselves and about our nation.”

Follow the money
Elvia Díaz is an editorial columnist for the Arizona Republic, in another state strained by anti-Critical Race Theory fervor. Arizona, like Tennessee and Texas, this year passed legislation to outlaw a full discussion of race and racism. And school board meetings there have been overrun by angry parents defending the innocence of their children.

She wrote an editorial July 7 titled “Republicans Want to Defund Public Schools One Child at a Time Over Critical Race Theory.”


Elvia Diaz

Díaz looks beyond the current controversy to see what she believes is the long game being played by social conservatives: “They have another subplot going that could be equally or more devastating to public schools and particularly to minority students who already are largely segregated in their neighborhood districts. Conservatives call their subplot academic transparency.”

Ultimately, this movement encourages parents to take their kids out of public schools they believe teach Critical Race Theory “and take taxpayer supported education funding elsewhere,” Díaz wrote. “This matters because a good chunk of K-12 school funding is distributed to districts based on the number of children enrolled.”

She quotes Matt Beienburg, director of education policy at the conservative Goldwater Institute, who has said that state laws banning Critical Race Theory “and other racially and politically divisive material” are only a partial bandage. True transparency — remember the body cam idea — would allow parents to make more informed decisions about whether to send their kids to public schools.


Matt Beienburg

If schools are under this kind of intense spotlight, the kind advocated by Citizens for Renewing America and Turning Point USA, they would count the cost of their “political activism,” he believes and would have to decide if it’s “worth alienating potential enrollees.”

Díaz calls this a “coordinated attack to defund public schools.”

“Targeting parents and encouraging them to boycott public schools is a brilliant political strategy for conservatives who want to keep teaching kids that America is a flawless nation and that anyone who disagrees with that assessment hates this country,” she wrote. “And they might just succeed. Don’t forget that Republicans have a proven track record at systematically defunding public schools and diverting tax dollars via vouchers to private institutions.”

Meanwhile, the battle rages
In the meantime, it is school board members, superintendents, principals and teachers who bear the brunt of the crusade against teaching the history of American racism.

In his interview on “Fresh Air,” NBC reporter Kingkade said because most of these school board battles are taking place in small towns and suburbs, the social fabric is being torn among people who have known each other outside of conflict.

“This is not happening generally in the center of large cities,” he said. “It’s happening in places where everyone knows everyone. And so it gets very personal very quickly. We talked to folks in one town in Cumberland, Maine, where one of the lead activists against Critical Race Theory has put up photos of school board members on his front lawn, billboard-sized photos, and then allegedly booby trapped them so that no one would take it down and displayed Christmas lights over them. We’ve seen in Loudoun County, Va., they just announced that they’re going to be driving around a mobile billboard on one of those small trucks with a school board member’s face on it as part of their efforts to get that school board member recalled.”

School boards in Nevada and Arizona have moved to virtual meetings not because of COVID this time but because of security concerns. “They’ve added extra security guards and metal detectors in school board meetings that have never had those before. It’s really frightening some of the people.”


https://baptistnews.com/article/who...-over-critical-race-theory/#.Yf8zv-rMLrc

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Youre basing your opinion on "baptist news" ??? What a joke.

Youre the radical sucking down radical bait hook line and sinker.

Come back when you can think for yourself and like a normal human being.


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Originally Posted by mgh888
Quote
EveDawg

Do you even believe what you post? Maybe should do some self reflection because trying to keep parents out of their childrens lives is disgusting.

So .... You aren't a parent. And parents have never had cameras in schools to watch (you could say Spy) on the teachers. And you think this is a discussion about keeping parents out of their kids lives? And you don't think it's about government control. It's not an authoritarian, scared "right" wing knee jerk reaction that grossly infringes on the rights of teachers. You don't think 99% of teachers wouldn't turn round and tell you and every other moron that proposed this to go F yourself?


And you ask if I believe what I post !


Libtards keep on tarding.

You think parents checking on their kids is somehow the Government spying. notallthere And teachers have no "rights". Guess what, employers have been recording employees for decades. This is not new and employees have no "rights". Try again.

You need some new meds. Come back when you get some.


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We need cameras in classrooms!


Can Deshaun Watson play better for the Browns, than Baker Mayfield would have? ... Now the Games count.
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This debate should have ended with S003er’s post…


Blue ostriches on crack float on milkshakes between the sidewalk titans of gurglefitz. --YTown

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Originally Posted by EveDawg
Youre basing your opinion on "baptist news" ??? What a joke.

Youre the radical sucking down radical bait hook line and sinker.

Come back when you can think for yourself and like a normal human being.

Damn. You are even beginning to sound like Trump. So much hate.

Last edited by OldColdDawg; 02/06/22 09:37 AM.

Your feelings and opinions do not add up to facts.
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Originally Posted by THROW LONG
We need cameras in classrooms!

Cameras in the classrooms. Bathroom monitors to make sure men don't use the women's restrooms. Rape victims MUST have the baby. Hate Muslims. Hate Mexicans ('Mexicans' used commonly among GOPers to mean any South American).

This is the crap the far right cHrIsTiAnS believe.


Your feelings and opinions do not add up to facts.
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Last edited by OldColdDawg; 02/06/22 10:15 AM.

Your feelings and opinions do not add up to facts.
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Originally Posted by PitDAWG
Originally Posted by EveDawg
The day is coming soon that your ilk will be squashed like a bug under a heel.

Yep, January 6th was only the beginning. We already know and a lot of us are ready for it.

I noted the ease with which this sort of veiled violence was thrown out there and was going to highlight it. But honestly - if you ever met someone with so little idea of the real world, and who was so full of hate and ignorance, you'd ignore them. So ...


The more things change the more they stay the same.
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Until they try and commit violence towards you and try and take over the country. Which we saw on January 6th. At that point you fight for your own safety and your nation.


Intoducing for The Cleveland Browns, Quarterback Deshawn "The Predator" Watson. He will also be the one to choose your next head coach.

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Here was Liz Cheney's response to the RNC....



Intoducing for The Cleveland Browns, Quarterback Deshawn "The Predator" Watson. He will also be the one to choose your next head coach.

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Basically - forget about the 15 million+ people involved in the peaceful protests across the USA after the George Floyd murder. . . . if that is legitimate discourse it would mean that all the rioting, looting, vandalism and violence that was associated with peaceful protests were legitimate discourse too. What a moronic and untenable position to make. And that's the RNC.... not some fringe lunatic member like MTG. This is what Republicans have become. smh.


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j/c

Pastor holds bonfire to burn to 'witchcraft' books like 'Twilight'

Tennessee Pastor Greg Locke claimed that the church had a "constitutional right and a Biblical right" to burn "occultic materials" like the "Harry Potter" and "Twilight" books.

A far-right pastor hosted a book burning event, encouraging parishioners to toss books like "Harry Potter" and "Twilight" into a fire to denounce what he described as "demonic" materials.

Greg Locke, head pastor at Global Vision Bible Church, held a book burning event Wednesday night, and urged followers to burn "evil garbage" like young adult fantasy books, tarot cards, "voodoo dolls and crystals."

"Bring all your Harry Potter stuff. Laugh all you want haters. I don't care. IT'S WITCHCRAFT 100 PERCENT," Locke said in an Instagram post Monday. "All you 'Twilight' books and movies. That mess is full of spells, demonism, shape-shifting and occultism."

In a video livestreamed on Facebook, churchgoers hurl books and other items deemed associated with "witchcraft" into a massive bonfire on the church's parking lot in Mount Juliet, Tennessee. The burning begins about an hour into the livestream.

At least one counterprotester claimed to throw a Bible into the flames, Nashville Scene reported.

"We have a constitutional right and a Biblical right to do what we're going to do tonight," Locke said in the livestreamed video. "We have a burn permit, but even without one a church has a religious right to burn occultic materials that they deem are a threat to their religious rights and freedoms and belief systems."

This is not the first time Locke has made headlines. The pastor has been permanently banned from Twitter for spreading Covid vaccine misinformation. He previously described the vaccine as "sugar water" and said that he'd turn away churchgoers if they wore masks to his services. He also criticized Republican Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee as a "coward...noodle...waffler" for signing an executive order that would allow the National Guard to assist overwhelmed hospitals during a Covid outbreak. Locke claimed that children with autism are possessed by demons, insisting that the diagnosis doesn’t exist in the Bible.

On Twitter, users raised concerns about the event. Some drew similarities between the book burning at Global Vision Bible Church and the ones held in Germany during the Nazi regime.

Locke's book burning event comes amid a growing effort to ban certain books from schools. Books about racism and sexuality are being pulled from Texas school shelves in record numbers — a majority of books targeted feature LGBTQ characters or explicit descriptions of sex. Some of the books that aren't explicit include picture books about Black historical figures and transgender children.

Last month, a Tennessee school board voted to remove "Maus," a Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic novel about the Holocaust, from its eighth-grade reading list over profanity and nudity.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/pastor-holds-bonfire-burn-witchcraft-books-twilight-rcna14931


Intoducing for The Cleveland Browns, Quarterback Deshawn "The Predator" Watson. He will also be the one to choose your next head coach.

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Wonder how it will be before he leads his cult over a cliff?


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I wonder how long it will be before they start targeting Fables and Fairy Tales? I mean only Satan could make it so pigs could actually build a house, or talk for that matter when they must face a home invasion scenario. Seven dwarfs rescuing a princess in the forest? That has Satan written all over it! And come on man, only Satan could make someone sleep for 100 years. And then there's that ruby red slippers in the Wizard of Oz. Not to mention the flying monkeys. Only Satan would create evil flying monkeys. God sure didn't create monkeys that fly. The list goes on and on how Satan has invaded the minds of our children.


Intoducing for The Cleveland Browns, Quarterback Deshawn "The Predator" Watson. He will also be the one to choose your next head coach.

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