I have never asked government not to set the curriculum in public schools. In fact, I have argued many times in many places that’s preferable to banning promotion or instruction in ideas through poorly-drafted legislation. Better curriculum > poorly-drafted “anti-CRT” laws.
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We should just point out CRT is not part of Common Core. Checkmate Libs.
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That’s not quite right. Asking legislators not to pass badly-drafted bills isn’t cutting them out of the picture. And elected official (including local school boards) make curricular decisions.
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Drafting can always be improved. The question is the legitimacy of popular oversight via legislatures. In the long run, yes, to control implementation, conservatives need to engage more in school boards. But that is not the only power source.
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I disagree. I shop in the same stores as my school board members. My kids play sports with theirs. They meet in my town monthly. I can have enormous influence over local curriculum decisions. I have virtually none in Nashville, where lots of good intentions become bad law.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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