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Replying to @realchrisrufo @thomaschattwill and
Chloé S. Valdary 📚 Retweeted Jeffrey Sachs
My sense is that these bans will not actually result in cultural change and so do not produce sustained change. There's also a precedent for fighting against racist ideas in schools which is written about here:https://twitter.com/JeffreyASachs/status/1412222982940942338?s=20 …
Chloé S. Valdary 📚 added,
4 replies 0 retweets 27 likes -
Replying to @cvaldary @realchrisrufo and
Also
@realchrisrufo some of these bills are...absolutely horrendous and also seem to be in violation of the Constitution, which, you know, would be really ironic given the pro-America spirit that is motivating the fight.https://www.arcdigital.media/p/laws-aimed-at-banning-critical-race …3 replies 6 retweets 23 likes -
Replying to @cvaldary @thomaschattwill and
You're moving the goalposts. They already *are* creating cultural change and we'll litigate the specific texts in the states over time and, if necessary, revise them. But the deeper question remains: who gets to decide what happens in public schools? Voters or bureaucrats?
4 replies 16 retweets 97 likes -
Replying to @realchrisrufo @thomaschattwill and
They're not creating cultural change if the bans in question are as unconstitutional as the curricula they seek to prohibit. And the dichotomy you present is false. The voters in question are state legislatures effectively banning books. That is bureaucracy and it is tyranny.
3 replies 2 retweets 20 likes -
Replying to @cvaldary @thomaschattwill and
Every sentence here is wrong: they aren't unconstitutional; the dichotomy is the state of play right now; they are not banning books, they are banning racist pedagogies; it's not tyranny to restrict the power of the state to indoctrinate children into a racialist ideology.
7 replies 19 retweets 113 likes -
Replying to @realchrisrufo @thomaschattwill and
Chris have you read the texts of the bans being passed? Have you read the Tennessee bill? Or Oklahoma? Or Texas? Please explain how banning the mere "inclusion" of certain topics in curriculum is not tyrannical?
7 replies 2 retweets 20 likes -
Replying to @cvaldary @realchrisrufo and
Tennessee bill: Note the words "shall not include." This is tantamount to an English lit teacher not being able to include books like Huckleberry Fin, or 'I know why the caged bird sings' merely because they both "include" this historical context.pic.twitter.com/9do80a87hd
12 replies 1 retweet 23 likes -
Replying to @cvaldary @realchrisrufo and
What's incredibly ironic (and would be humorous if it wasn't tragic) is that both the woke and the anti-CRT both effectively call for the same kinds of bans all for different reasons. This is mimesis.
6 replies 7 retweets 36 likes -
Replying to @cvaldary @realchrisrufo and
According to this, if I wanted to get
@enchanttheory in schools, I would be in violation for merely discussing James Baldwin. This is absurd.11 replies 3 retweets 39 likes
Nope. This is 100 percent wrong.
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Replying to @realchrisrufo @cvaldary and
is it time for
@cvaldary vs.@realchrisrufo on the theory if enchantment?!1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes - Show replies
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