Politics - News Analysis

Lara Trump Wants Biden to Apologize to America’s Children for Allowing Them to be ‘Indoctrinated’ by CRT

There's another name for Critical Race Theory: Actual US history.

Republicans know that triggering their base’s fear of being called racist is a good way to win elections. That’s how Glenn Youngkin, the GOP governor-elect of Virginia won his race — by telling voters that their kids would be taught “critical race theory” in school.

There are a couple of problems with this. Number one, critical race theory is a law school-level course that itsn’t being taught to “kids” anywhere in America. But number two, it is nothing like the way that Republicans portray it. It is, at its root, an examination of how racial inequity in America has affected everything since the founding of the country.

Its purpose is not to call everything and everyone racist; it is to explain how race has played a factor in things that many Americans don’t even know they’re still participating in. If your name is Jason, have you ever had a job application thrown in the trash as soon as a hiring manager saw it? Someone named Jamal may have a different answer than you.

Unfortunately, Republicans like Eric Trump’s wife Lara see teaching anyone this as “indoctrination.” It’s not, of course, but that doesn’t stop people like her from calling out how horrible a thing that isn’t actually being taught anywhere is for children.

Now she’s calling on Joe Biden to “apologize” for CRT, as though he thought it up and issued a mandate for it to be taught in public schools from kindergarten on.

We wish Lara and the rest of the Republican party would take a good hard look at why the lessons of CRT are even needed, because the existence of a course like this is demonstrated as necessary by people’s reactions to it.

People on Twitter were disgusted:

meet the author

Andrew is a dark blue speck in deep red Central Washington, writing with the conviction of 18 years at the keyboard and too much politics to even stand. When not furiously stabbing the keys on breaking news stories, he writes poetry, prose, essays, haiku, lectures, stories for grief therapy, wedding ceremonies, detailed instructions on making doughnuts from canned biscuit dough (more sugar than cinnamon — duh), and equations to determine the airspeed velocity of an unladen swallow. A girlfriend, a dog, two cats, and two birds round out the equation, and in his spare time, Drewbear likes to imagine what it must be like to have spare time.

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