Just like communists have famously done in China, leftists in the United States have found a way to get children to denounce their own parents and other family members, driving themselves like an obnoxious wedge right into families.
In an alleged exercise about “anti-racism,” educators at a public elementary school in Washington, D.C. asked pupils as young as 4 to identify “racist” family members, thereby turning the children’s allegiance to the educators and away from their families.
It is the latest outrage as the moral and political corruption of America’s public schools is broken open for all to see.
A Nov. 30 letter from Janney Elementary School Principal Danielle Singh describes how students in pre-K through 3rd grade were made to take part in an “Anti-Racism Fight Club” event by speaker Doyin Richards, according to FOX News.
“As part of this work, each student has a fist book to help continue the dialogue at school and home,” said Singh’s letter, with a link to Richards’ presentation. “We recognize that any time we engage topics such as race and equity, we may experience a variety of emotions. This is a normal part of the learning and growing process. As a school community we want to continue the dialogue with our students and understand this is just the beginning.”
Richards’ Anti-Racism Fight Club Fistbook for Kids is classic Critical Race Theory. It claims that “white people are a part of a society that benefits them in almost every instance,” and that “it’s as if white people walk around with an invisible force field because they hold all of the power in America.”
“If you are a white person, white privilege is something you were born with and it simply means that your life is not more difficult due to the color of your skin,” the Fistbook for Kids explains. “Put differently, it’s not your fault for having white privilege, but it is your fault if you choose to ignore it.”
In other words, little kids, if you are white you are guilty and must atone.
Questions in the book include: “Where do you see racism in yourself?” In the section “How to deal with racism from loved ones,” the book asks “Who in your family has racist beliefs? Do you think you can change their ways? What is your strategy for dealing with them?”
After the presentation, the school sent parents a link to Richards’ Anti-Racism Fight Club Fistbook for adults, which asserts: “racism is as American as apple pie and baseball.”