Show an ad over header. AMP

I am the FIRST!!!

Republicans in 9 states launch blitz against critical race theory in public schools

Republicans in at least nine states are moving to limit students' exposure to critical race theory — a concept that links racial discrimination to the nation's foundations and legal system.

Why it matters: A year after George Floyd's killing, how systemic racism is — or is not — taught in public schools has become a new fault line in the culture wars, with implications for how the next generation of Americans understands U.S. history.


  • Conservative activists are pressing for less talk about racism and more talk about patriotism.
  • Civil rights advocates and some educators say banning critical race theory from schools constrains academic freedom and suppresses the experiences of people of color.

Driving the news: Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed a bill this week banning the teaching of critical race theory in public schools — over the objections from Black Democrats in the county where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated in 1968,WHBQ-TV reported.

  • Idaho Gov. Brad Little and Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt recently signed similar bans, and lawmakers in Oregon, Arkansas, Utah, Missouri and Arizona are crafting their own versions.
  • Stitt was kicked off a commission marking the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre after he signed the bill banning critical race theory from schools.
  • In Texas last week, the state Senate approved a bill to ban critical race theory in public and open-enrollment charter schools and eliminate requirements to study writings by women and people of color.

What we're watching: A political action committee launched this week with ambitions to fill school boards around the country with candidates who oppose teaching critical race theory, as Axios' Stef W. Kight reported.

  • A forum at a Missouri school district turned heated last month after white parents booed speakers talking about racial discrimination and others denounced critical race theory as propaganda. School administrators reported receiving death threats.

What they're saying: Rep. Burgess Owens, a Utah Republican who is African American, said local school officials who advocate critical race theory should be fired.

  • "Fire them. Get rid of them," Owens said during a Saturday appearance on Newsmax. "That ideology is against everything we believe in. We need to fire everyone we can find, and those we will fire later on, we’ll figure out a way to get rid of them, too.”

The other side: Critical race theory "invites us to confront with unflinching honesty how race has operated in our history and our present, and to recognize the deep and ongoing operation of 'structural racism'," deans of the University of California Law Schools said in a joint statement last year.

  • "What comes next is...what we are going to do about it? That's what is scaring people," said Jeffery Robinson, executive director of The Who We Are Project.

Details: Critical race theory is a framework developed in the 1970s, by legal scholars including Derrick Bell and Richard Delgado, that argues white supremacy maintains power through the law and other legal systems.

  • Critical race theorists — also known as crits — dismiss the notion that racism stems from acts of individuals, saying it comes from how the nation formed. Only through attacking routine practices and institutions through color-conscious efforts will racism be dismantled, they say.
  • They note that the Declaration of Independence refers to Native Americans as "savages" and the U.S. Constitution counted enslaved Black people at a rate of three-fifths. They say such credos gave the U.S. cover to remove Indigenous people and keep Black people as second-class citizens.

What's next: President Biden will travel to Tulsa on June 1 to observe the centennial of the Tulsa Race Massacre, the White House said Tuesday.

  • The massacre has become a rallying cry for African Americans seeking reparations from one of the worst acts of racial violence in the nation's history.
  • City officials and the white mobs who destroyed Tulsa's Black Wall Street and killed 300 innocent people were never brought to justice, and the legal system prevented Black people from seeking redress.

regular 4 post ff

infinite scroll 4 pff

In photos: Race to evacuate Afghanistan

The U.S. and allied countries are "working around the clock" to evacuate people from Afghanistan ahead of next week's scheduled full United States military withdrawal from the country, per the New York Times.

The big picture: President Biden said Tuesday that over 70,000 people had been evacuated since the airlift began on Aug. 14 and that the U.S. and its allies were on pace to pull out from Afghanistan by the deadline. He's suggested that U.S. troops may remain beyond Aug. 31 to continue to help in evacuation efforts.

Keep reading...Show less

Venture capitalists invested a record $288 billion in the first half of 2021

Venture capitalists invested $288 billion in the first half of 2021, an all-time record, per Crunchbase.

By the numbers: Venture capitalists invested $140 billion into U.S.-based startups in the first half of 2021, anall-time record, per Ernst & Young. At that pace, the 2020 total should be surpassed in a matter of days.

Keep reading...Show less

Corporate media backlash fuels new upstarts

New media personalities have gained enormous traction over the past year by catering to individuals who feel disillusioned by the mainstream press.

Why it matters: A convergence of trends over the past year has made it easier for writers to launch new entities that can rival mainstream outlets and it's given these creators the freedom to criticize big media institutions.

Keep reading...Show less

Pacific Northwest heat wave has no historical precedent and is fueling wildfires

Reproduced from Robert Rohde, Lead Scientist at Berkeley Earth; Chart: Axios Visuals

The extreme heat that shattered records across the Pacific Northwest — and still has not abated in many areas — has no precedent in modern record-keeping, data analyses shows. This is also the case in British Columbia, where the temperature soared to an almost unimaginable 121°F in Lytton on Tuesday.

Why it matters: Heat of this magnitude is proving to be deadly, which is consistent with findings that heat waves are typically the deadliest weather phenomena in the U.S. each year.

Keep reading...Show less

Insights

mail-copy

Get Goodhumans in your inbox

Most Read

More Stories
<!ENTITY lol2 “&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;“> <!ENTITY lol3 “&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;“> <!ENTITY lol4 “&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;“> ]> &lol4;