1984: Thread

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Wed Aug 17 21:31:48 PDT 2022


When CRT databases Free Thought Association Choice Speech
to target Everything...


UCLA Creates Database To 'Track Attacks On Critical Race Theory'

https://www.theepochtimes.com/ucla-creates-database-to-track-attacks-on-critical-race-theory_4661823.html
https://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/ucla-law-launches-critical-race-theory-forward-project
https://www.theepochtimes.com/teacher-creates-educational-guide-to-counter-crt-in-the-classroom_4034034.html
https://www.theepochtimes.com/placentia-yorba-linda-school-board-bans-critical-race-theory_4388051.html
https://www.theepochtimes.com/california-teacher-moves-to-florida-after-exposing-critical-race-theory-in-ethnic-studies-2_3887603.html
https://blexitfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/CRT_Packet_Web_Final.2.pdf



Faculty at the University of California–Los Angeles (UCLA) School of
Law have created a database to identify and record efforts to block
critical race theory (CRT) being taught in schools across the country.
A woman holds a sign against critical race theory in Los Alamitos,
Calif., on May 11, 2021. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)

The database, called the CRT Forward Tracking Project, allows users to
“track attacks on critical race theory” and filter the information as
part of an effort to “support anti-racist education, training and
research,” according to the school.

The project was created by UCLA’s Critical Race Studies Program,
founded in 2000 as the first law school program in the nation
dedicated to critical race theory.

CRT, according to the school, is “the study of systemic racism in law,
policy and society,” and suggests efforts need to be made to fix these
alleged injustices.
Parents concerned about Critical Race Theory took home these buttons
from a school board activist training Jan. 19, 2022 in Sarasota,
Florida. (Alexis Spiegelman)

Meanwhile, critics say CRT pushes a controversial worldview related to
Marxism that analyzes all aspects of life through a racial lens
instead of through the concept of class struggle.

UCLA Law announced earlier this month it would track anti-CRT activity
through the database at all levels of government across the nation.

“The project was created to help people understand the breadth of the
attacks on the ability to speak truthfully about race and racism
through the campaigns against CRT,” said Taifha Natalee Alexander,
project director of CRT Forward, in a statement.

The database analyzes these efforts to determine where the activity is
happening and how opponents are taking action, such as protesting
curriculum at the school board level.

It also includes the type of CRT content being restricted, such as a
course being taught at a public school, as well as the institution or
group being targeted and enforcement mechanisms being used to regulate
the content.

For example, the Placentia-Yorba Linda School Board voted to ban the
teaching of CRT in classrooms this past April, ending months of debate
in the Orange County district.

Prior to the narrow 3-2 vote, supporters for the ban asserted CRT is a
divisive ideology that pushes a political narrative. Other trustees at
the April 5 school board meeting, however, claimed such efforts
amounted to censorship, according to public comments.

The UCLA program claims that many of those who are against these
concepts being taught in K-12 schools are using the term CRT
“incorrectly,” and have “affected plans to include ethnic studies more
broadly for students before they get to college.”
Chinese-American parents in California rally against Assembly Bill
101, which was later signed into law to make ethnic studies a high
school graduation requirement, in Los Angeles on April 26, 2020.
(Linda Jiang/The Epoch Times)

In 2021, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation making ethnic
studies a statewide requirement for high school graduation starting in
the 2029–30 school year, amid debate among parents and teachers about
whether ethnic studies curriculum includes elements of CRT.
Tracking Results

As of Aug. 2, the UCLA database has screened nearly 24,000 media
articles and identified 479 instances of anti-CRT activity since
August 2021.

The database team found this activity is “much more pervasive and
extensive than generally reported,” according to the school, with such
policies either proposed or enacted in 49 states.

The project also found that most anti-CRT proposals have occurred in
Florida, Virginia, Missouri, and the U.S. Congress, while local school
board measures make up more than 20 percent of the activity in the
database.
Signs against critical race theory in front of the Loudoun County
School Administration building in Virginia on Nov. 9, 2021. (Terri
Wu/The Epoch Times)

Most such measures at the school board level have been introduced in
California, North Carolina, Florida, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, with
Californians enacting five out of the eight proposed measures.

The study also found the most common anti-CRT enforcement measures
include withholding funding or issuing fines against individual
teachers, administrators, schools, and districts for engaging in
“prohibited conduct,” the school says.
CRT Controversy

Noah Zatz, faculty director of the UCLA Law’s Critical Race Studies
Program, is helping to spearhead the tracking project. CRT Forward
staff also include law librarians and undergraduate and law school
research assistants.

“We need critical race theory to understand this assault on racial
justice, where even naming structural racism gets portrayed as unfair
to white people. And we need CRT to develop legal theories of
education and free speech that not only blunt these attacks but place
anti-racism at the center of a democratic society,” said Zatz in a
statement.

However, opponents contend that CRT is not needed and does not teach
hard history, but is instead an approach to analyzing that history
with the intent to dismantle modern systems that proponents claim are
white supremacist.
A man holds up a sign against Critical Race Theory during a protest
outside a Washoe County School District board meeting in Reno, Nev.,
on May 25, 2021. (Andy Barron/Reno Gazette-Journal via AP)

“Those that are upset about proposed bans on CRT in our schools have
been misled to think that states that have banned CRT from being
taught will no longer teach about Jim Crow Laws, the displacement of
Native Americans, or even slavery in America. This is simply not
true,” according to a CRT guide written by former California teacher
Kali Fontanilla. “On the contrary, banning CRT will remove a dangerous
twisting and rewriting of American history.”

The UCLA project is funded by a $400,000 grant from the Lumina
Foundation, a private, Indianapolis-based foundation with about $1.4
billion in assets, according to the nonprofit’s website.


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