President Joe Biden traveled to Florida on Saturday to survey the destruction from Hurricane Idalia and comfort victims of the storm, but he did not meet Governor Ron DeSantis, a potential presidential rival, who opted not to come.
Biden, who praised DeSantis during the visit, said he was not disappointed by the governor’s absence and said DeSantis had helped plan the trip.
DeSantis’ spokesperson said on Friday the governor had no plans to meet Biden, saying “the security preparations alone that would go in to setting up such a meeting would shut down ongoing recovery efforts.”
What is CRT for those of us who are not American?
It’s a post- graduate legal theory about the intersection of laws and race in America. Exactly what it is isn’t really relevant- even among legal minds in the US, it wasn’t a widely accepted or debated concept.
However, three or four years ago, a racist shit bag named Christopher Rufo started lying about what it was to rile up the racists in the Republican party. He claimed CRT was designed to make white children feel guilty about America’s slave-owning past and that it teaches that Black children are owed status and money at the expense of white children. He also claimed this was being taught to children at all levels of American public education.
Again it must be pointed out that he completely fabricated everything he said about CRT. Unfortunately, Republicans are generally as unintelligent as they are fearful, and a wave of anti “CRT” panic is sweeping through America. The net result is Republican governments are banning nearly any discussion about racial disparity in current or former US events all because they don’t want to admit that 1) YES RACISM IS BAD and 2) freeing a class of people you’ve kept enslaved for hundreds of years doesn’t magically make things okay or make that people equal to you.
To be clear, white Americans shouldn’t feel guilty over America’s slave-owning past. I never owned any slaves, and neither has anyone I know. But we should be recognizing how a system of laws built on the literal backs of Black slaves would generationally prevent Black Americans from reaching parity with white Americans- you just can’t wave you hands and say “Poof! Slavery is gone!” and everything becomes sunshine and rainbows. It’s these kind of discussions that Rufo and the GOP are trying to prevent.
To be clear “CRT” when used by alt-right reactionaries is not the Critical Race Theory college level courses most people would expect. It is used as a bully word for the Right to rally around and push actual historical knowledge out of grade-school education (and it’s worked very well for them).
There’s further context here. A right wing grifter on twitter openly recognized and mused about how this could be exploited as a topic and pushed for it to be adopted nationally as a rallying cry. He recognized there was no controversy but there could be. And so because of one asshole this nonissue took flight. Arguably the Virginia governor race was won by the right because of this exact nonissue, the current governor made it the foundation of his platform, even made a tip line to report crt being taught. Do you know how many instances of crt he’s uncovered? None. Do you know how I know? Because he would have jumped all over any instance and celebrated the victory. He has done no such thing in his entire time as governor.
It’s just another nothing burger. Another sad pathetic attempt to create a boogey man for the right to justify their victim fetish. What a bunch of pathetic limp dick losers. Every last one of them.
Critical Race Theory. Pretty much the excuse the GOP is using to not teach the history of slavery in the US.
“Critical Race Theory”; it’s a college-level class about how racism affects the recording of history, but the term has been misappropriated for several years now to mean any acknowledgement of the USA’s past (and current) struggles with racism. The Civil War, Jim Crow Laws, and the Civil Rights Movement are all getting lumped together with the term (as well as other major events) and has been used as an umbrella term to restrict schools’ abilities to teach those subjects.