Curtis' argument has 3 parts 1 Taking over school boards to "stop" CRT will fail 2 The reaction to this by the people who failed will be to accept it - learned helplessness 3 "CRT" can't be stopped without replacing the entire regime 2 is debatable - 1&3 are absolute truthhttps://twitter.com/Chowman30103166/status/1415786741051633664 …
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There are plenty of teachers who are skeptical with the bullshit that is uncritically spoon-fed to them in teacher training. Not explicitly political, but framed as prog/trad approaches to pedagogy, that has some overlap with the corresponding political positions.
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Have a look at ResearchEd that came out of the UK, and was a bottom-up reaction from teachers tired of decades of nonsense they were expected to just unquestioningly accept.
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significant no but effective at scale…perhaps?
@normonics - Show replies
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Don't disagree that SBs are small but they are a front that needs fighting on WHILE other efforts are made. Local & community efforts are worth the fight and the are winnable. Still need strategy to confront legacy institutions and DC. Those are big but harder fights. Need both
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Arn't Yarvin's prior recommendations basically secession? Wasn't formalism basically creating lots of nations of which one can vote with their feet? How is this not simply localism on steroids? And how does secession not accelerate this?
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He kicked around many ideas but the idea of localism was contingent on those localities being defensible. That was also a description of a world after the progressive egregore was defeated - not one where they get a patch and immediately start plotting.
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