I Prayed have prayed
Lord, we pray that you would protect the children in America. That you would give divine wisdom to families in regards to education and what our children are hearing, seeing, and watching.
Reading Time: 3 minutes

The fight over CRT has consumed American media. Conservatives have rallied against the toxic neo-Marxist ideology that seeks to divide the country into the racial categories of oppressor and oppressed; liberals have defended it as a “lens” for understanding vague buzzwords such as “systemic racism” and “racial equity.”

I’ve been on the cutting edge of this battle. My investigative reportingincluding columns for this paper, has exposed CRT in education, government and the corporate world. I’ve shed light on public schools forcing 8-year-olds to deconstruct their racial identities, telling white teachers they must undergo “antiracist therapy” and encouraging white parents to advocate for “white abolition.”  . . .

In recent months, outlets including The New York TimesThe New RepublicMSNBCCNN and The Atlantic have relentlessly attacked me. But the coup de grâce, they believed, would be a 3,000-word exposé in The Washington Post. The paper dispatched two reporters, Laura Meckler and Josh Dawsey, and spent three weeks preparing a vicious hit piece against me, accusing me of a range of intellectual crimes.

Only the Post’s story rested on a bed of lies. Among other things, Meckler and Dawsey fabricated the timeline of events surrounding my involvement with former President Donald Trump’s executive order on CRT; incorrectly claimed that a Cupertino, Calif., diversity lesson I exposed never happened; and insisted that my reporting about the US Treasury Department’s diversity programs was false.

After the article was published, I went through it line-by-line and made a point-by-point rebuttal on social media and to The Washington Post’s editors. Within 48 hours, the paper’s story had collapsed.

The paper admitted to fabricating the timeline of events, having originally claimed that a Fox News appearance I made on Sept. 1 had “soon” been followed by a visit by me to the Trump White House and thereafter by an anti-CRT memo from Trump’s budget chief (in fact, I didn’t visit the White House until Oct. 30, long after Team Trump issued the memo and an anti-CRT executive order).

Further, the paper retracted or added six full paragraphs to the story and reversed its accusation that I invented the Cupertino story. The training did, in fact, take place, the paper conceded.

As for the assertion that I made false claims about the Treasury training, the paper insisted on the absurd point that the material — which told employees that “virtually all white people . . . contribute to racism” — did not mean that “all white people are racist,” as I had reported.

This was a deep embarrassment for The Washington Post, which then attempted to hide behind vague “clarifications” and sent a vice president of communications to do damage control. But what the paper did was indefensible: It dispatched deeply partisan reporters to do a hatchet job on a fellow journalist, with no regard for the facts or probity.

Here’s the problem: I have a large social-media platform and can defend myself. But what about ordinary Americans who are smeared, slandered and degraded by hyper-partisan outlets like The Washington Post?

The episode also shed light on the bizarre determination of the prestige press to play down just how radical and fundamentally un-American CRT is. The Washington Post story framed CRT as merely an attempt to push white Americans to “confront systemic racism and white privilege in America,” to prompt a “reckoning with America’s past and present sins.”

Yeah, right. Meanwhile, in the real world, CRT trainings involve re-enacting racial segregation, only this time in the name of progress, as happened in the King County Library System (Seattle). They claim that “all white people play a part in perpetuating systemic racism,” as Buffalo students are taught. And they accuse the US education system of perpetuating “spirit-murder” against black kids.

This is far more than a healthy reckoning. It’s indoctrination in ahistorical nonsense. It’s demonizing vast swaths of America over skin color. It’s racism. Democracy does indeed die in darkness, as The Washington Post’s motto proclaims. It’s just that the paper itself helps spread much darkness.

What are your thoughts on the battle of CRT? Let us know your thoughts and prayers for CRT in the comments below!

(Excerpt from the New York Post. Article written by Christopher F. Rufo. Photo by UnSplash)

Comments (3) Print

Comments

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Renee McMichael
July 2, 2021

I pray that God will continue to expose the harm that this philosophy will do to our country. God please continue to open peoples eyes to the underlying purpose to pit people against each other. Please protect our nations children from this harm and watch over those fighting against this in the schools.

Ellen H
June 29, 2021

I am deeply concerned for our country. CRT is a racist teaching, itself. I grew up in a home 16 miles southwest of Detroit, MI. It was the summer of 1967 and I was at the Kensington Park beach. I had run to the monkey bars to play. I was 6 years old. I was alone on the monkey bars. I had kicked off my new pink flip flops at the base of the bars to climb them. Then 2 girls that were older (10-12 or so, also black, I am white) came to play on the bars. I noticed them, but didn’t engage them, I would have treated any older child the same way, regardless of skin color. I finally tired of climbing on the bars. I got down, looking for my flip flops, the sand was hot to walk on. I looked all around and couldn’t find them. One of the girls noticed I was looking for something and asked me what I was looking for. I told her I couldn’t find my pink flip flops. She then told me that she and her friend had buried them in the sand. I was confused, hurt and wondered why they would do this, I had not done anything to them (my stomach felt like it fell to the ground). She looked at me and I think she felt a little guilty, but she proceeded to tell me that I deserved it. I was shocked by that. Then she said I deserved it for what my ancestors did to their ancestors. I had no idea of what she was talking about. I didn’t even know what a ancestor was. All I knew was my new pink flip flops were buried somewhere in the sand, I had no idea where to look for them and the sand was hot. I ran as fast as I could back to my parents. I told them what had happened and they just said oh, it’s ok. Really, no explanation of what was going on. I have frequently prayed for these 2 girls over the years. It did not occur to me to hate blacks because of this ordeal. I did feel slighted and a loss because I had chosen those flip flops and they were not replaced. To a 6 year old, these things are important.

It strikes me now that I experienced racism. I was being held accountable for actions that had taken place over 100 years before my birth in 1961. I recently had my DNA analysed by Ancestry.com. All my lineage was in Canada and the Northeast US since the 1600’s. But that really doesn’t matter- we should not be held responsible for our parents, grandparents, great grandparents and on, sins. We should be held accountable for our own sins. I fault the teaching of those young girls, that they were victims because of what happened to their ancestors. It was not taught in a way that showed we had, as a country, fought long and hard against this heinous practice called slavery. Our country abolished slavery within 70 years of its founding. Shorter than any other country in the world. Slavery still exists in some countries today. It is wrong no matter who is being enslaved. Our country abolished childhood slavery in the early 1900’s. We first gave the blacks the right to vote before women were given the right to vote. We have overcome much. We still have things to overcome as a country. We need to learn how to work together in unity, so that our future generations will not have to deal with the fallout our sins have produced.

Lynek
June 28, 2021

The main stream media and our education systems are functioning under a spirit of deception. We must all pray to break the bonds this demon of deception has over our education systems and our media systems!

3

Partner with Us

Intercessors for America is the trusted resource for millions of people across the United States committed to praying for our nation. If you have benefited from IFA's resources and community, please consider joining us as a monthly support partner. As a 501(c)3 organization, it's through your support that all this possible.

Dave Kubal
IFA President
Become a Monthly Partner

Share

Click below to share this with others

Log in to Join the Conversation

Log in to your IFA account to start a discussion, comment, pray, and interact with our community.