To the editor(s) I've tried to attach a number of graphics/visuals that would make the piece more appealing, such as artist Jonathan Harris's powerful "whitewash" poster which would be right on the first page. However, while I've copied the URL's for the other graphics, the URL link works for a while but soon come up up as "URL expired". I'm hoping that you or another editor knows how to recover the links ? and I've used Harris's at last 3 times with his ok for presentations and I'v received the ok to use cartoons from 2 other artists.
Please make sure if you decide to use the piece that I get a look before it's published. keith brooks
the United States of America
Once the 13 colonies won independence from Britain in 1783 under the banner of "All Men Are Created Equal", the former colonists leading the newly created United States used their freedom to create the largest slave republic in human history, with the enslaved population booming to four million people by 1860. 12 of the first 16 U.S. presidents were slave owners.
It took the U.S. Civil War to end slavery in 1865. Contrary to Maga congressman Josh Hartley's ignorant claim that the U.S. was a leader in doing so, the U.S. was third from last in ending slavery. That same year the 13th amendment to the constitution was passed, making official that slavery was abolished throughout the land. A 14th amendment was then passed in 1867 overturning the 1856 infamous Dred Scot Supreme Court decision that proclaimed that Black people had "no rights that a white person was bound to respect (the actual wording of the decision !) . In 1870, the fifteenth amendment was passed, granting Black men the right to vote ( but not women, black or white.)The U.S. military (now both Black and white since the 1863 Emancipation Proclamation) had occupied the defeated South, providing some protections for the rights and gains won by the now free population.What followed was the Reconstruction Era from 1865-1877, when truly remarkable achievements were quickly made by those once free of their chains: "Coalitions of freedmen, recent Black and White arrivals from the North, and White Southerners who supported Reconstruction cooperated to form Republican, biracial state governments. They introduced various Reconstruction programs including funding public schools, establishing charitable institutions, raising taxes, and funding public improvements such as improved railroad transportation and shipping." (see wikipedia.org/wiki/ Reconstruction_era) But in 1877 as part of an infamous political compromise over a disputed presidential election, the military was withdrawn from the South, marking the end of Reconstruction. fn See C. Vann Woodward Reunion and Reaction: The Compromise of 1877 and the End of Reconstruction, Doubleday Anchor, 1956 In the words of W.E.B Dubois' Black Reconstruction "The slave went free; stood a brief moment in the sun; then moved back again toward slavery". All the promises of a new democratic birth of freedom and democracy were crushed by Ku Klux Klan terror, the denial of voting rights through literacy tests and poll taxes, and sealed off by the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme court Decision declaring a "separate but equal" new social order which came to be known as Jim Crow law. This further codified and cemented second-class citizenship by declaring a "separate but equal" citizen status for Black people. Contrary to what school textbooks claimed, and some still claim to this day, Reconstruction did not fail: it was sabotaged, as surely as the promise of 40 acres and a mule lifeline for the formerly enslaved was reneged upon.(see C.Vann Woodward The_Strange_Career_of_Jim_Crow The fight Against Second-Class Citizenshipand For Civil Rights And so one hundred years after the Civil War ended legal slavery in 1865, in the aftermath of a world war fought against forces led by the nazi white supremacist Hitler who openly drew inspiration from the U.S. treatment of Blacks and Indians, a massive civil rights movement gathered strength, knocking down the many racist ways by which Black people were still relegated to second class citizenship-- despite those three reconstruction amendments to the constitution. (Hitler's American Model, p71-72) In 1954, the Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Bd of Ed overruled that 1896 Plessy decision of "Separate but equal" ruling that the doctrine was inherently unequal and ordered the desegregation of the public schools. In doing so it paved the way for further legal actions and laws against de jure discriminations such as the 1964 Civil Rights act, the 1965 Voting Rights Act, 1968 Fair Housing Law and other legal victories.It took marches, sit-ins, boycotts and other grass roots mass actions to get the laws changed, but too often these gains had to then be fought for in the face of resistance that sometimes lasted for years--down to today.These gains were paid for in the blood, sweat and tears of millions of black people and their martyrs and allies from Emmett Till, the four young girls blown to bits in a Birmingham church, to the murders of Cheney, Schwerner, Goodman and Viola Luizzo, Medgar Evans, Malcolm and Martin Luther King, Fred Hampton and so many others. And as it became clear that just doing away with explicitly discriminatory laws and statutes like those that forbade people of color from buying homes when Levittown in suburban Long Island was built in 1947, or renting apartments in the Stuyvesant town complex in Manhattan, was not enough to achieve equal rights. It became increasingly apparent that in people's lives, on the job, and in the hiring halls and in the communities, that de facto systemic racism was very much alive despite these legal gains. The 1965 Watts uprising followed by Detroit, Baltimore, and dozens of other cities, almost always sparked by incident of police brutality and murder, belied glib claims of progress. So it is within this context of changed laws and policies that the reality by and large remained that by every measure of social well-being-- from life expectancy, infant and maternal mortality rates, unemployment rates, imprisonment, and all other measures of social well-being, the Black population was and still is significantly below the white population.See the invaluable annual Urban League report:nul .org/state-of-black-americaclick here How Shall These Facts Be Understood ? The following draws heavily from the excellent essay by Stephen Steinberg in "The Liberal Retreat Retreat From Race During the Post Civil Rights Era"from 'The House That Race Built" ed. by Wahneema Lubiano, Pantheon, 1997 : For politician Daniel Patrick Moynihan, in his 1965 report The Negro Family the Case for National Action the source of the problem was to be found in the of the Black family: "At the center of the tangle of pathology is the weakness of the family structure...the principal source of most of the aberrant, inadequate or anti-social behavior...that now serves to perpetuate the cycle of poverty and deprivation " p26 As social scientist Christopher Jenks commented on this blame-the-victim explanation which reverses cause and effect : "The guiding assumption is that social pathology is caused less by defects in the social system than by defects in particular individuals and groups which prevent their adjusting to the system. The prescription is therefore to change the deviant not the system".p27 And as sociologist Herbert Gans presciently noted, "the report could be used to justify a reduction of efforts in the elimination of racial discrimination and the War on Poverty"-- which in fact happened when in 1970 Moynihan joined the Nixon administration and issued his infamous call for a government policy of 'benign neglect' given that the black community was well on a path of progress ! ibid 27And still others of a similar bent continue to find the answer in one or another "pathologies" of the Black community itself. And with striking resonance today, psychologist William Ryan's 1971 popular Vintage Press book "Blaming the Victim" "Blew the whistle on the tendency of social science to reduce social phenomena to a individual level of analysis, thereby shifting attention away from the structures of inequality and focusing on the behavioral responses of the individuals suffering the effects of these adverse structures" p 28 The late James Loewen, author of Lies My Teacher Told Me gave a name to this reductionist denial of the weight of circumstances in his Teaching What Really Happened: "What is the basic idea of sociology ? It is this: social structure pushes people around, influences their careers and even affects how they think...I coined a new term...soclexia... makes it very difficult to grasp the basic idea of soiology" p7-9 Is The Fight For Equal Rights--or Black Liberation ? click here The 1960's into the 1970's were tumultuous times. The fight for equal rights continued but began to take more of a back seat to more radical calls for Black Power and self-determination, and black liberation by any means necessary as Malcom X said. (see Harvard Siticoff's fine The Struggle For Black Equality 1954-1980, Hill and Wang, 1981) The Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee leader (SNCC) Kwame Toure (well-known at the time as Stokely Carmichael) became the voice for Black Power as the goal,rather than integration per se. And his book by that title written with Charles Hamilton coined the term "institutional racism" to distinguish everyday attitudinal blatant racism from the more hidden ways the ways the U.S. social structure operates--the institutional racism that the De Santis's, Trumps, Rufos and company try so hard to deny.The Black Panther Party For Self-defense upped the ante with its Ten-Point Program for self-determination for the black community, coupled with a broad call for "All Power to the People". Black Panther leader Fred Hampton raised the need to build a multi-racial Rainbow coalition uniting "Black, Brown, Yellow and white". Martin Luther King jr."s 1968 Poor People campaign sought to join together the fight for economic and civil rights.The refrain increasingly became not a call for an equal share of what many were seeing as a rotten pie, but the need to remake the whole damn system: socialist revolution.use pic of 1969 press conference of the Chicago BPP, Young Lords, and Young PatriotsThe question still stands today: Can the full liberation of Black people, as well as other oppressed and exploited people be achieved under our capitalist system? Does not CRT co-founder Derrick Bell's statement that structural racism "was an integral, permanent and indestructible component" of U.S. society at the very least pont in that direction? (see Saying it Loud 1966--The Year Black Power Challenged the Civil Rights Movement by Mark Whitaker, Simon and Schuster, 2023 So as the civil rights movement was borne out of the struggle against Jim Crow laws and second-class citizenship, so too was critical race theory borne out of the effort to better understand in order to change why despite massive social movements and gargantuan efforts, white supremacy and racism continued to infect U.S. society? It is within this fertile political context that legal scholars Derrick Bell, Kimberly Crenshaw and others created Critical Race Theory, arguing that the white supremacy of the past lived on in the laws and societal rules of the present. As Crenshaw put it, critical race theory found that the issue was " Not simply a matter of prejudice but a matter of structured disadvantages that stretched across American society." CRT has developed as the embodiment, elaboration and further conceptualization of the most basic understandings of the role white supremacy and racism have played and continue to play in the U.S. It is a deepening of the understanding that racism and white supremacy are more than a question of individual attitudes, beliefs and preferences. One doesn't have to agree with all its formulations or emphases, but without the rudiments CRT works from, U.S. history is a white wash.CRT is rooted in critical race facts that are in front of us every day in our lives, communities and schools as well as the news : As legal scholar Ronald J. Krotoscynski jr has put it, "Critical race theory is in its essence an approach, a method for understanding and analyzing how what is called 'race' and white supremacy have played out in the history of the U.S. ...crt... systematically considers how even neutral laws, regulations and social norms have different impacts on particular racial and ethnic groups. It examines how legislatures at times target racial minorities for adverse treatment-such as recent voter suppression laws in Arizona,Georgia and "At a time when we desperately need to have more frank and open conversations about race, class, social justice and the concept of "the other," they hamstring educators charged with preparing young people to live and work in an increasingly diverse society."Iowa-and at other times are simpleory,y indifferent how these new laws will impact those outside the majority." Washington Post, May 26, 2021 And as Victor Ray succinctly puts itin his On Critical Race Theory, "Critical race theory matters because it provides a better explanation for the resilience of racial inequality than individualist theory describing racism as a negative personal quirk " pxxxixThroughout, it must be kept firmly in mind that the attack on CRT is not on its finer points; rather it's a catch-all target for dismantling and suppressing the very basic understandings of how white supremacy and race play out. The Propagandizing Indoctrinationof the White Supremacists One of the main propaganda techniques is a type of psychological warfare by A-crters like Rufo and DeSantis to turn common place understandings into loaded and suspect terms, in an effort to intimidate and inhibit their usage. These hucksters villainize common place understandings into sinister terms. "Racism ?" perish the thought ! "Intersectionality" My goodness! How can the commonsense idea that we all are a complex of various identities --Males, female, black white brown, gay straight, bi, disabled, etc--each of which have different weight and meaning in U.S. society, and which changes to a greater or lesser degree as society does constitute an existential threat to U.S. society as ludicrously claimed by Christopher Rufo, the charlatan instigator of this whole contrived crisis claims ? And why is it so threatening to recognize that that racism and white supremacy are more than individual prejudices, but are structural, systemic, and institutional? What makes those terms so controversial as to be forbidden from usage in a number of states, ruled out of order, demonized and censored? That the same everyday terms accurately describing and understanding U.S. society are literally made illegal and punishable by law, and if used by a teacher, by the possible loss of one's job? Is this 1984 or what? (Of course one of the banned books). And their newly passed laws and restrictions as to what cannot be taught or even mentioned in schools is nothing less than the official enshrinement in those states of white supremacist official history! The official state histories of Florida, Texas, North Dakota and others are in fact white supremacist histories! So first and foremost, the anti-CRT campaign is a pretext and a cover, an excuse, to whitewash, suppress and erase the teaching of the real history of the U.S. And the anti-CRT assault also needs to be recognized as part of the larger ongoing campaign to roll back and suppress the rights of women, people of color, LGBQT and others.Christopher Rufo :The Right Wing Con Man Selling Wolf Tickets to Critical Race Theory(Wolf ticket is a slang phrase that refers to a fake or counterfeit ticket) The main architect of the anti-CRT disinformation campaign launched in 2020 by right wing propagandist and agitator Christopher Rufo, a Trump supporter, now working with Florida's fascist Governor DeSantis to destroy public education. A senior fellow at the right-wing Manhattan Institute, he's also been a board member at the evolution-denying Discover Institute. Rufo has made clear that his agenda targets public education itself, and with it teacher unions, "declaring that it was time to abolish the teacher unions and overturn the school boards" Rethinking Schools, Winter 2022-23,pRufo is a charlatan selling snake oil. It is important to expose just how admittedly and self-consciously cynical his A-CRT attacks are. Here's Rufo gloating like the charlatan he is, proudly declaring that his goal in the crusade " Is to have the public read something crazy in the newspaper and immediately think 'critical race theory.' We have decodified the term and will recodify it to annex the entire range of cultural constructions that are unpopular with Americans." For Rufo, "Critical Race Theory is the perfect villain"...an existential threat to the U.S....They report on concepts that are highly contested, like anti-racism, systemic racism, intersectionality, etc." Rufo openly brags on Twitter about the success of his con: "In less than a year, my work has inspired a presidential order (Trump's "1776" project), legislature in the largest red states, and bills in the House and Senate. We have flipped school boards and protected millions from state sanctioned racism." Rufo just makes stuff up, as when he was exposed for his false claims that CRT is taught in grade school and and his lies about a Diversity training program for the Dept of Transporation.So not a word from this demagogue about CRT can or should be believed. Rufo pedals what he thinks will get over, and daily right wing talk radio and tv hosts like Tucker Carlson are major bullhorns for his and others' fabrications about CRT. As one commentator put it, "I thought of the bills that Rufo had helped draft, which restricted how social-studies teachers could describe current events to millions of public-school children, and the open letter a Kansas Republican legislator had sent to the leaders of public universities in the state, demanding to know which faculty members were teaching critical race theory. Mission accomplished.Benjamin Wallace-Wells, the New Yorker, June 18, 2021 How a Conservative Activist Invented the Conflict Over Critical Race Theory. A MOST REVEALING INTERVIEW WITH RUFO In a May 2021 interview with Marc Lamont Hill, host of the You Tube channel's 'Black News Tonight" Rufo makes a number of A-CRT claims debunked by Hill aptly demonstrating the utter nonsense Rufo offers up as critiques of CRT : For instance, Rufo ridiculously claims CRT is "state-sanctioned racism," compelling students to believe in ideas like race essentialism, racial superiority theory." He has also claimed that CRT is "official ideology taught in schools'-- but never backs up his claims. What schools? Where ?Hill ably refutes Rufo's nonsensical claims, responding that "Critical race theorists hold that the law and legal institutions in the United States are inherently racist insofar as they function to create and maintain social, economic, and political inequalities between whites and nonwhites, especially African Americans ". Every claim about CRT that Rufo makes is either an unsubstantiated straw man or just plain dishonest demagogery. In fact it is Rufo who is the racial agitating flame thrower he claims CRT to be when he attacks Noel Ignatiev author of "How the Irish Became White" for calling for "the abolition of the white race". Is it really possible that ivy league educated lawyer Rufo doesn't understand that what Ignatiev, Theodore Allen and others call for is the not a genocide of melanin-deficient homo sapiens but rather the abolition of the idea that being ' "white", that skin color demarcates different "races" of people. The "white race" is itself a historically rooted white supremacist divide and conquer creation-which didn't exist before the European conquest of the Americas! There is no "white race". --but perhaps Rufo would beg to differ?As educator Cheryl Harris notes "The theory started as a school of thought in law to examine how racial inequality persisted in society despite policies adopted to eliminate it...The curriculums and programs targeted by the right have little to do with critical race theory itself... One of the challenges is there is what critical race theory is, and there's what it's being portrayed to be in the context of this disinformation campaign. So it's difficult to start out a discussion about what it is when what is being projected really bears no resemblance to it and has no intention of bearing any resemblance to it. Wallace-Wells, the New Yorker Cheryl Harris notes "The theory started as a school of thought in law to examine how racial inequality persisted in society despite policies adopted to eliminate it...The curriculums and programs targeted by the right have little to do with critical race theory itself... One of the challenges is there is what critical race theory is, and there's what it's being portrayed to be in the context of this disinformation campaign. So it's difficult to start out a discussion about what it is when what is being projected really bears no resemblance to it and has no intention of bearing any resemblance to it. Wallace-Wells, the New Yorker So the fraudster who's done more than any other individual to stifle and criminalize critical thinking, has the temerity to attack CRT as indoctination ! Critical Race thoery Has Been Around for 45 Years--Why isIt Under attack Now ?The year 2020 turned out to quite a reckoning.It should not be lost-or forgotten-- that the A-CRT crusade came on the heels of the largest protests of people of color and white people uniting together against the non-stop police murders of Black people. The cold blooded murder of George Floyd right in front of our very eyes galvanized millions and presented the spectacle of a multiracial unity that had not been seen since the height of the civil rights movement, all in the face of the most openly white supremacist U.S. president since Woodrow Wilson who legitimated the murder of a protester at a fascist hate rally where the chants were "Jews Shall not replace us !. As the 2023 PM Press book "George Floyd Uprising" recounts :The Black stuggle has served a singular rolein American radical politics, oftern acting as the igniting element that sets wider layers of society into motion...p6"Multiracial crowds took to the streets night after night...the revolt soon spread to cities large and small across the country...in addition to daily mass demonstrations and marches, an entire array of creative form of collective action were spawned...occupations of of plazas, parking lots, and city streets fashioned themselves into autonomous zones...demonstrations tore down monuments to the confederacy and colonialism...the deadly climax of the Kenosha rebellion provoked a strike among the major league sports teams in the NBA WNBA, MLB, MLS and NHL...all told more riots (sic) took place in the summer and early fall of 2020 than during the long hot summer of 1967 and more people in this country participated in the resulting social movement than at any other time in American history" p 1-2 And then there was impact of the NY Times-sponsored 1619 Project which demanded recognition of slavery as integral to the founding and development of the U.S. Clint Smith writing in the Atlantic "In recent years, Americans have seen a shift in our understanding of the country's history; many now acknowledge the shameful episodes of our past andevelopmentlongside all that there is to be proud of. But reactionary forces today are working with ever-greater fervor to prevent such an honest accounting from taking place. State legislatures across the country are attempting to prevent schools from teaching the very history that explains why our country looks the way it does. School boards are banning books that provide historical perspectives students might not otherwise encounter. Many of these efforts are carried out in the name of "protecting" children, of preventing white people from feeling a sense of guilt. But America will never be the country it wants to be until it properly remembers what it did (and does) to Black people."Crenshaw, same NYer article :"It should go without saying that what they are calling critical race theory is a whole range of things, most of which no one would sign on to, and many of the things in it are simply about racism...This is a post-George Floyd backlash," As she sees it, the crusade against critical race theory represents an effort to change the subject, rather than being about systemic and structural racism... It's important to re-center the larger picture-- the attacks on CRT are part of a calculated and cynical campaign going well beyond censoring the teaching the truths of U.S. history. The A-crt crusade is very much one front in the escalating attacks on the rights of women, affirmative rights, voting rights, LGBTQ people and others. What is under attack is critical thinking, and the very foundations of an education grounded in inquiry: How the Banning of a Ta Nahisi Lesson Using Critical Thinking Skills Exposes Ever More Clearly Who the Real Indoctrinators AreFlorida Governor Ron De Santis along with his sidekick Rufo, in the best tradition of attacking others for what they themselves are most guilty of, like to claim that CRT is indoctrination. A censorship of a Florida teacher who used Ta Nahisi Coates's memoir Between the World and Me for a critical thinking unitwill be discussed further in part two for how it exemplifies the utter bankruptcy of their A-CRT crusade. Sign In a Provincetown Shop window : White Supremacy is Not the Shark. It is the Water. Guante ? click hereclick here CRT focuses on and analyzes how race and racism permeate virtually all aspects of life in U.S. society, whether easily and immediately recognizable like the police murders of innocent Back people like George Floyd, the massacre of 11 black church goers-or less visible such as the consistent significant disparities in social standing and well being between Black and white people. I taught adult ed for seven years at nite where my students were mainly immigrants from Guyana, Bangla Desh and Caribbean, ranging in age from 25 or so to 45 or 50; one year I had a 72 year old retired construction worker who told the class he was there to get his high school diploma after working his whole life to put his kids through school, and now he wanted to get his diploma. To facilitate class discussion, I sometimes asked my evening students what the biggest differences between life in the countries where they came from and life in the U.S. As students would offer their experiences-"the food', the "music", attitudes toward the teacher, invariably once the discussion proceeded, and people felt more comfortable in expressing their thoughts, someone would say "how important race is in the U.S.". At which point the whole discussion would change with everyone agreeing! For my overwhelmingly foreign-born and relatively-new-to the U.S. students, race and racism--white supremacy--was indeed the sea and not the shark while for still too many white people, it is only the shark. In Summary :Florida governor says "We're not going to let you impose an agenda on our kids" and "we're not going to let them indoctrinate our kids". But the reality is : * The attack on Critical Race Theory (TAOCRT) is a brazen attempt to mainstream and re-establish white supremacist thinking since the civil rights movement rose up to challenge it, and is part of the effort to roll back the gains of that movement. .* The attack on crt (TAOCRT) is an attack on teaching the truths of U.S. history. * TAOCRT is a campaign to intimidate teachers from teaching those truths. * TAOCRT is an attack on critical thinking, an attack on inquiry based teaching by ruling entire areas of thought out of order. *TAOCRT is an attack on students by ruling questioning and curiosity out of order. There are many good resources to follow up with on CRT. A few among them that I found particulaly useful are ; 1.On Critical Race Theory by Victor Ray, Random House, 2023--If I had to pick one book to read, or use for a course, this would be it.2.Marc Lamont Hill interview with Christopher rufo--https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihnuYXKBGZg. For that matter, any interview by Hill on Youtube!4. Critical Race Theory Explained! | First Amendment Unscripted .youtube.com/watch?v=8MoGTzQt77U5. Michael Eric Dyson interview on CRT: .youtube.com/watch?v=wQRibSsdgQY6.Video using 5 books to explain crt : .youtube.com/watch?v=2rDu_VUpoJ87. Critical Race Theory the Key Writings that Formed the Movement edited by Crenshaw, Gotonda, Peller, Thomas8.Critical Race Theory An Introduction Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic NYU Press, 20179. What is Critical Race Theory, and Why Is It Under Attack ? Stephen Sawchuck, Education Week May 18, 2021Bibliography: Sources cited For this article :Education Week, Eesha Pendharkar , "Efforts to Root Out Racism in Schools Would Unravel Under 'Critical Race Theory' Bills May 26 2021Milton Meltzer, Slavery A World History, 1993Frank M. Snowden jr., Before Color Prejudice the Ancient View of BlacksNell Irvin Painter The History of White PeopleNoel Ignatin How the IrishBecame WhiteHerbert S. Klein African Slavery in Latin America and the CaribbeanColonists in Bondage, Abbot Emerson Smith,Andres Resendez Smithsonian Perspective :The Other Slavery W ikipedia.org/wiki/ Reconstruction eraStephen Steinberg The Liberal Retreat From Race During the Post-Civil Rights Era in the House That Race Built, ed.wahneem LubianoWilliam Ryan Blaming the VictimEric Williams Capitalism and SlaveryKarl Marx, Capital volume 1Theodore Allen the Invention of the white race. vol. 2The George Floyd Uprising, PM Press, 2023Hitler's AmericanModelVictor Ray On Critical Race Theory Why It Matters &And Why You Should Care , Random House. 2023)Slavery's Constitution David WaldstreicherDark Bargain Lawrence GoldstoneReunion and Reaction: The Compromise of 1877 and the End of ReconstructionC. Vann WoodwardThe_Strange_Career_of_Jim_Crow C. Vann WoodwardBlack Reconstruction W.E.B Dubois'The Struggle For Black Equality 1954-1980, Harvard SiticoffSaying it Loud 1966--The Year Black Power Challenged the Civil Rights Movement Mark WhitakerRonald J. Krotoscynski jrBenjamin Wallace-Wells, the New Yorker, June 18, 2021 How a Conservative Activist Invented the Conflict Over Critical Race TheoryMarc Lamont Hill, host of the You Tube channel's 'Black News Tonight" Interviews Christopher Rufo Much thanks to Este Gardner for her feedback, input and support in writing this essay ! Coming in Part 2 of this essay : How I Used CRT Without Even Knowing It !which will include :*How the Banning of a Ta Nahisi Lesson Using Critical Thinking Skills Exposes Ever More Clearly Who the Real Indoctrinators Are*Race the Power of An Illusion :Using the 3 episode California Newsreel/PBS series in the class room.* Using the landmark PBS series Eye on the Prize Critical thinking and Critical writing : Howard Zinn's People's History vs. a mainstrean text on Columbus Lincoln--Who really freed the slaves ? Was Lincoln the great emanicpator or were there other force at play ? Integrating music jazz, folk, world into the curriculum, such as Oscare Brown jr's Bid Em In, 40 Acres and a Mule, Mingus, Coltrane, Gil Scot Heron, and others Skool theme song for the De Santis & Rufo Bored of Education Playbook : Tom Paxton's What Did You Lern in School today ?



