Bigga
Well-Known Member
Never inferred that you do but people will exercise their right to vote and their children's education is important for many of them whether they play more than a supporting role on not.
Rightly or wrongly it became a factor in the outcome.
if your inference on educational ills has merit then the stakeholders can address if there is a will to do so.
So, I'm going to say this to you as a matter of respect because we will tend to disagree, here and there.
'CRT' is not taught in lower academics of schooling as far as I'm aware and, by and large, is only a 'theory' looking at the way the system benefits one race over another in systematic terms of the way the law is structured. This is for the US but, by and large, you could apply anywhere there's an imbalance of equality from one set of people against another set of people, therefore it becomes a principle.
But, if we're attributing it to the US alone, you would see how the system is shaped. To my mind, the reason why there's such furore about it is the logical conclusion it has to reach as it challenges the way the 'Constitution' is attributed for one demographic over any other (i.e., demographically a White construct) that, if so taught in younger academia, would lay real ground for reparations for ADOS that would be irrefutable.
Fear of reality is the issue. The 'American Dream' is a theory; a Ponzi scheme in many ways, not designed for certain people as the Rule, but there will always be 'breakthrough cases'.
Anyway, that's why it's not taught, cos mommies and daddies don't want their kids to grow up with guilt about 'race' when really the guilt should be about how one section of Humanity fought and succeeded to subjugate another section, building and tweaking laws to keep that power as long as possible.
Just my opinion, of course.