ATLANTA — While Republicans and Democrats in the General Assembly tangle over guns, noncitizen voting and Medicaid expansion, education could become the most highly charged issue of the election-year session
ATLANTA – While Republicans and Democrats in the General Assembly tangle over guns, noncitizen voting and Medicaid expansion, education could become the most highly charged issue of the election-year session
Georgia s recent Board of Education resolution constricting discussions of race (in response to Governor Brian Kemp s admonition against critical race theory) may be driven by a fundamental tenet of White supremacist culture - prioritize White people s feelings above all else.
the founding principles. teach children how to think, not what is to think. we re still going to teach these things, we re not going to indoctrinate our children in pursuit of a political narrative. will: i m glad you said that, courtney. how you frame the discussion even in the introduction to you, limiting discussions on race. it is not limiting discussions on race. in fact let me read a little bit from the resolution, that the georgia board of education passed. here is what it said. a individual by individual race or sex you cannot teach they are inherently racist or sexist, oppressive, consciously or unconsciously. an individual based on his sex or race or cons possible by actions of past. you re not guilty of the sins of your forefathers. you re character is not dirk stated by your skin color. here is the more difficult question, can the georgia board