Critical Race Theory: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

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  • čas přidán 19. 02. 2022
  • John Oliver explains what critical race theory is, what it isn’t, and why we can expect to hear more about it in the coming months.
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Komentáře • 37K

  • @TheJapanChannelDcom
    @TheJapanChannelDcom Před 2 lety +18506

    It must be frustrating being a reasonable and intelligent American, knowing you are slightly outnumbered by fools with maximum confidence and minimum intelligence.

    • @BSRaven
      @BSRaven Před 2 lety +1083

      'America, land of the free' should really be more 'land of the Dunning-Krueger' sometimes...

    • @sascharambeaud1609
      @sascharambeaud1609 Před 2 lety +713

      Slightly?

    • @jameswilliamson3210
      @jameswilliamson3210 Před 2 lety +1268

      We're not even outnumbered (at least on a national level), our government is just set up to value land more than people, and unfortunately those people have more land.

    • @Pguz24
      @Pguz24 Před 2 lety +243

      Its more shameful and embarrassing IMO.

    • @catherinepraus8635
      @catherinepraus8635 Před 2 lety +98

      It is, high from Oregon

  • @jullit31
    @jullit31 Před 2 lety +38123

    As a German, not feeling discomfort during history lessons sounds like an utterly alien concept... Sometimes feeling discomfort is important.

    • @tabularasa0606
      @tabularasa0606 Před 2 lety +1658

      Exactly, you cannot stand up without falling down first.

    • @Tron08
      @Tron08 Před 2 lety +1933

      It's interesting because it's exactly this argument that helped shoot down some proposed legislation in Wyoming. A Jewish man discussed the lessons of the holocaust and how we absolutely should be made uncomfortable by them to help learn from past mistakes. The law was then vetoed despite a majority of Republicans in the chamber so there's still some hope left!

    • @mariondean8499
      @mariondean8499 Před 2 lety +760

      As a German, I agree

    • @peachybuttercrunch4409
      @peachybuttercrunch4409 Před 2 lety +272

      it validates them. it solidifies them. it is important. i once missed an interview. my husband and i are 30 years married and happy. that day, i wanted him to make me feel better. he did not sympathise. he said, feel it. i did. it is important. we fake nothing and remain happy and
      Married.😏👍

    • @mcmarkmarkson7115
      @mcmarkmarkson7115 Před 2 lety +168

      As a german most people didn't give a shit about what the nazis did and would look shocked at you if you said, those nazis were regular normal german like you and me and most people would have been nazis as well, because few people would sacrifice their life to fight for freedom unless the government supports freedom.

  • @apjtv2540
    @apjtv2540 Před rokem +1911

    As a British person, discomfort about history is kinda constant. Basically every country and ethnicity in the world was hurt by us at some point. And ignoring that entirely would just be unacceptable.

    • @st_420
      @st_420 Před rokem +30

      Same for Germany

    • @louiswilson6950
      @louiswilson6950 Před rokem +5

      1984 was called 1948 & about Britain, had to change Name !

    • @AG-vb6vv
      @AG-vb6vv Před rokem

      As a British Indian person, you should really chill. 99% of countries have hurted other countries. It’s part of history. And in relative terms, the Brits were fine. Compare them to the Arabs, the Turks, the Conquistadors and the Germans - and the British Empire seems to be rather civilised by the standards of their time. Your white guilt and self-flagellation is not only unasked for, it does seem to be a bit patethic. Have some pride in your people, your history and your nation. No one respects someone who doesn’t respect themselves.

    • @st_420
      @st_420 Před rokem +42

      @@AG-vb6vv The british Empire enslaved almost half the world and invaded even more. Saying that they were civilised while doing that, seems like a pretty bold statement.

    • @AG-vb6vv
      @AG-vb6vv Před rokem

      @@st_420 The Arabs and Turks used to engage in slavery too. They used to enslave non Muslims, mostly African pagans but also Slavs, Europeans, Indians, Central Asians, Christians etc. They used to castrate their male slaves (the reason why you don’t see descendants today) and use the females primarily as sex slaves. The Arab and Ottoman slave trade only stopped when Britain waged wars and enforced via treaty, abolitionism. I said Britain was civilised, only in RELATIVE terms. Anyone who knows history knows that, you just sound ignorant.

  • @evenberg8499
    @evenberg8499 Před rokem +239

    I watched the movie "The wave" (1981) at school when I was a teenager, and it really made me think
    how easy it is to brainwash people into discrimination.

    • @cadenvanvalkenburg6718
      @cadenvanvalkenburg6718 Před rokem +21

      My middle school teacher showed my class that to make a point about how easy it is to radicalize people while they think they are in the right the whole way down

    • @toritori5835
      @toritori5835 Před 4 měsíci +9

      I remember that. ABC After School Special, right? That ending really impacted me as a kid where all the students finally get to meet the leader (whose identity was a secret) and the teacher shows them a movie of Hitler.

    • @justathought7221
      @justathought7221 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I bring up that book all the time. It’s valid!!

    • @daisyd90
      @daisyd90 Před měsícem +1

      I've thought of that movie so many times the past few years.

    • @seanmolloy6188
      @seanmolloy6188 Před měsícem +2

      Don't forget that movie was made about something that really happened

  • @adrielsebastian5216
    @adrielsebastian5216 Před 2 lety +19426

    HE'S BACK! Our favourite depressed pigeon in a suit is back!

    • @PDS24
      @PDS24 Před 2 lety +232

      LMAOOO, depressed pigeon in a suit 😂😂😭

    • @yamankouli9996
      @yamankouli9996 Před 2 lety +248

      And the best thing is: I am positive John would immediately like your comment! :)

    • @queeneon
      @queeneon Před 2 lety +62

      Aww that’s the cutest way to call John

    • @JaydevRaol
      @JaydevRaol Před 2 lety +8

      Yes 😂

    • @juliovnobre
      @juliovnobre Před 2 lety +4

      Yaaay!! 🥰🥰

  • @jordanwagers9910
    @jordanwagers9910 Před 2 lety +3115

    Living in Indiana, a state that now has some of the most oppressive anti-CRT laws in the country, I learned about the trail of tears in 1st grade and the worst excesses of slavery in the 5th. Neither made me feel bad about being white, just left me wondering why Andrew Jackson is seen as a hero and the confederacy wasn't actively despised.

    • @jjerrell89
      @jjerrell89 Před 2 lety +163

      Hey, same mate. I was raised in a small town in Indiana, so small that I didn't see my first black family until I was in Jr. High. They where cool people. :-)

    • @rajanlad
      @rajanlad Před 2 lety +32

      Tribalism

    • @ivandobrev2240
      @ivandobrev2240 Před 2 lety +61

      No, you won't feel bad, but this incentivizes hatred in the mind of young children ( mostly black as their parents / grandparents were the victims ), creating prejudices and segregation. And I am not even living in the USA. Just hearing john oliver speak about this it painfully obvious that the net result is hatred. CRT must be removed completely. To live along side any nation what so ever, the past must be forgotten and a bond between them must be created, because looking at the past creates nothing but hatred and a lust for vengeance for people who are long long dead.

    • @steemlenn8797
      @steemlenn8797 Před 2 lety +18

      And thats the point. CRT is making people despise that great hero!!!

    • @blazoraptor3392
      @blazoraptor3392 Před 2 lety +387

      @@ivandobrev2240 you can't be fucking serious

  • @alexiscreates
    @alexiscreates Před 6 měsíci +208

    That woman said she doesn't judge people based on their skin color, only for the next thing to come out of her mouth was confirm her judgmental behavior. Judging someone based on how they dress is judging someone based on what they look like. What an idiot. She didn't even realize what she was saying. None of these people want to feel like they're bad people so they think just ignoring the problem and putting themselves on a pedestal is the solution. Good job John Oliver and team!

    • @Greg-yu4ij
      @Greg-yu4ij Před 3 měsíci

      I grew up in a non racist america and now everyone hates everyone else. Now we have teachers teaching the marxist playbook. We are falling to a marxist takeover and our birth rate is collapsing

    • @manuelschneider1105
      @manuelschneider1105 Před 3 měsíci +9

      I would have to slightly disagree. People's skin color isn't something they chose. Their behavior, the way they act, and the way they dress, is a choice. Judging people on things they can't change is wrong, but judging them for things they choose and they can change, is kinda fair game.

    • @shipyufrenchsong
      @shipyufrenchsong Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@manuelschneider1105Except that "how someone acts" and "how someone dresses" are too vague of terms. *Some* of the ways people act and dress are personal choices but many of the ways we act and dress are products of our culture or personal circumstance.
      Judging someone for the act of spitting on the ground? Perfectly fine. Judging someone for the act of using their hands to emphasize speech? That's rude. Judging someone for wearing shorts in winter. Perfectly fine. Judging someone for wearing culturally specific clothes/clothing styles? Makes you an asshole.

    • @purplecat1691
      @purplecat1691 Před měsícem +2

      ​​@@manuelschneider1105 yeah cause things like income, culture and social status totally dont influence the way someole might dress.

    • @masterraccoon2883
      @masterraccoon2883 Před měsícem +1

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@manuelschneider1105Ah yes, assuming everyone is from the same background, economic, social, cultural, and experiences.
      Fair game.
      Surely judging someone on an impossible metric of standard is fair game.

  • @bleedorange1998
    @bleedorange1998 Před 9 měsíci +258

    The entire point of history class is not only to educate the next generation on the history of our nation, but more importantly to teach them the lessons of the horrible mistakes this country has made so that they can learn and grow to know not to make those same mistakes again. So, yes, it IS going to get uncomfortable, but what history of any country is “comfortable”?

    • @qvintuse.urvind7002
      @qvintuse.urvind7002 Před 5 měsíci

      I reckon the history of Crybaby Racist Thugs (White Supremacists & MAGA morons), when thinking they aren't racist, while spouting racist thoughts and teaching their kids completely made up history, ignoring racism, is probably a comfort for them.

    • @MightyMewtron
      @MightyMewtron Před 3 měsíci +6

      the trick is that so many of these lawmakers WANT to repeat the same "mistakes" again, or at least not have us recognize the mistakes we're still making. (some of which are less mistakes and more very deliberate decisions)

    • @jackster9775
      @jackster9775 Před 8 dny

      The tribes of the Indigenous Americans can actually find a few peaceful periods.

    • @lobbyskids2
      @lobbyskids2 Před 6 dny

      @@jackster9775possibly but some of the things they did to each other were unspeakable. You wouldn’t want to judge their entire culture on that though which is what critical race theory aims to do.

  • @megafr8nk
    @megafr8nk Před 2 lety +527

    I am a german.
    When I was 12 I visited Israel with my family.
    A very kind elderly taxi driver picked us up from the airport and started small talk with us in exellent german.
    When we asked him were he had learned to speak german so well he replied 'during the war'.
    The light mood in the taxi instantly changed and we all fell silent.
    I remember vividly the discomfort I felt that day.
    My point is this: Some discomfort is meant to be felt.

    • @bri665
      @bri665 Před 2 lety +9

      Fantastic story, thank you for sharing.

    • @evanhaskel206
      @evanhaskel206 Před 2 lety +23

      Exactly. If learning history only fills you with pride then you’re not really learning history.

    • @batsonstevens4009
      @batsonstevens4009 Před 2 lety +1

      This clearly went over my head I'm so confused.

    • @PepsiV8Chix
      @PepsiV8Chix Před 2 lety +6

      @@batsonstevens4009 Their taxi driver was Jewish

    • @capencire6090
      @capencire6090 Před 2 lety +8

      why should you feel discomfort for a war you didn't participate in?

  • @minecrafter0505
    @minecrafter0505 Před 2 lety +1760

    As a German this discussion concerns me greatly. After WW2 the allies built an education system here where we learn a lot about the time between 1933 and 1945. Most schools will do a trip to concentration camps teaching children about the atrocities committed there. We learn a lot about that time and how wrong it was. And even with that we still have way too many racists here.
    But most people will completely avoid national pride. Our flags are only displayed by residents when there is some sport event (mainly soccer). Being proud of the achievements your nation has achieved will inevitably lead to accepting the current way things are because, after all, you're proud of yourselves. But not being proud will motivate to become better.
    The US' focus on national pride is something that stands in the way of major reform. It is hard to be proud of a country that is doing so much wrong right now. And you can't teach critically of a nation and at the same time make kids pledge allegiance to the flag of that nation. Hypocracy is one of these things that will make a child stop listening to you. National pride may have been useful in the past to rally support for your side in a war but in my opinion it has no place in our modern society. The first step towards reform is accepting that something is wrong.

    • @hansrama3485
      @hansrama3485 Před 2 lety +62

      well said

    • @katherinezimmerman6997
      @katherinezimmerman6997 Před 2 lety +62

      You can be proud of your country and still strive to improve it. They’re not mutually exclusive concepts. Your comment here is exactly the reason that people are freaking out and misinterpreting discussions of systemic racism (that and listening to nonsense on Fox).
      America is a constant work in progress. Fixing the current problems that stem from the bad elements of our past (redlining, inequality, systemic bias, etc) doesn’t mean we can’t celebrate the elements of our past that are worthy of pride (independence, emancipation, the space program, inventions, and, y’know, *beating the Nazis*). True pride in one’s country includes acknowledging its shortcomings and striving to improve it. Acting like people waving flags is somehow the root cause of societal problems is stunningly ignorant.

    • @J4CKWR4TH
      @J4CKWR4TH Před 2 lety +12

      You fucking started that rant with "as a German..."
      lololol
      Why don't you point to a success and not your status quo before giving advice. Germany is no beacon of culture nor prosperity and I feel its only right you accept responsibility for your own feelings about your own country and stop blaming "americans" cuz that's just you looking to blame or look down on anyone else. Sterilizing your youth with fear of your past has done such wonderous things as........as.......... exactly. It's how you do it because your fucking riot ass country in particular couldn't stop trying to be the most racist, fascist humans that our species ever produced. What works for you doesn't work for everyone and it is super super super ignorant to call other people ignorant for not doing things your way while making no attempt to understand why they do what they do.

    • @MisstressMourtisha
      @MisstressMourtisha Před 2 lety +4

      Have you watched "hellstorm " on byte chute? That movie really painted the whole picture.

    • @SynergistN7
      @SynergistN7 Před 2 lety +216

      Well said. You'll get a lot of hate for this though, cause pointing out how American nationalism is holding America back is generally a direct hit to the indoctrinated nerve.

  • @user-fb1xh6by6o
    @user-fb1xh6by6o Před rokem +309

    For thanksgiving our teacher made a play about the pilgrims and Indians. Me, my brother and sister, were the only Native Americans in that school so we were dressed up as Native Americans and the other kids were the pilgrims. My mom pulled us out of school and we never went to school on the day of the thanksgiving play again.

    • @oliviaturner7388
      @oliviaturner7388 Před rokem +34

      Good choice! Good momma!😊

    • @maximillianphoenix9374
      @maximillianphoenix9374 Před 8 měsíci +6

      They say racism begins at home thanks mum

    • @Jilla0559
      @Jilla0559 Před 6 měsíci

      Actually, thanksgiving in an American Lie. It was the start of the ethnic cleansing and relocation of Native Americans.

    • @Humanresouces
      @Humanresouces Před 5 měsíci +20

      Considering that the Natives were killed by the plague and their land was taken over by the Pilgrims, that has some disturbing connotations.

    • @JPizzle10125
      @JPizzle10125 Před 4 měsíci

      Soooo... the teacher attempted to recreate a Thanksgiving play with Pilgrims and Indigenous people. Hmmmmm? Now I wonder, should I have been offended for being a 10-year-old black kid playing Martin Luther King Jr, in my school play. Was my teacher a racist? At this point, I feel people look desperately for the things that consume their mind.. in this case Racism 🤦🏾‍♂️

  • @jellybelly230
    @jellybelly230 Před rokem +75

    11:00 the scary thing is he's right. When I was in junior high school we learned about the civil rights movement and heard Martin Luther King's speech and that's where the discussion of racism stopped so as a kid I just assumed that racism ended with the civil rights movement. They need to go beyond that in curriculums

    • @kudjoeadkins-battle2502
      @kudjoeadkins-battle2502 Před 4 měsíci +4

      That’s what most mainstream Americans seem to think.

    • @nickelmouse451
      @nickelmouse451 Před 2 měsíci +2

      You also need to do better in not making the assumption that because you weren't explicitly taught x, x didn't happen.

  • @danitho
    @danitho Před 2 lety +2907

    I grew up the only black kid in class. I remember, in second or third grade, the teacher gave us an assignment about family seals or something. We had to present it and tell our history. I had no idea what she was talking about and I knew my family didn't have one. But my mom and I spent a lot of time getting our family tree together, some old family stories, etc, to present. So day of class comes, we're getting ready to present. I was so excited to share my history. We're going up one at a time. Comes my turn, the teacher skips me entire.
    She looked dead at me, got this panicked look on her face, and skipped me.
    And I KNEW it was because I was black.
    The thing is I don't think she meant to be disrespectful or uninclusive. I think she literally just panicked, didn't quite know what to do, and skipped me as a way to save me from not having anything to share. I was too young to really know what to do at the time. I wish I had been a little older because I would have spoken up and told her I wanted to share my history. I wish I had. It was important to me. But alas.

    • @wickedale6060
      @wickedale6060 Před 2 lety +37

      Okay. So you, you family, the teacher, the class all learned a valuable lesson. A big lesson indeed.

    • @khulhucthulhu9952
      @khulhucthulhu9952 Před 2 lety +141

      This honestly brought me to tears.
      I've felt like that many times (for completely different reasons) and it stings.

    • @danitho
      @danitho Před 2 lety +152

      @@wickedale6060 What lesson did we all learn exactly?

    • @danitho
      @danitho Před 2 lety +36

      @@khulhucthulhu9952 Right! Did not feel good at all!

    • @hughjazzole2037
      @hughjazzole2037 Před 2 lety +3

      My brother came up w an idea that we were descnded from the 1st kings of Ireland. I thought that was Bullshit because we were Americans & we domnt kiss ass to kings!!I dont care if they were Irish. Kings have always been conniving dueschhebags!! & thieves.

  • @KielFisher
    @KielFisher Před 2 lety +2366

    "Kids have questions ... and they deserve good answers" is a lesson a *lot* more adults could stand to learn...

    • @richardcranium7692
      @richardcranium7692 Před 2 lety +7

      For most things except CRT I agree.

    • @waleuska
      @waleuska Před 2 lety +37

      @@richardcranium7692 Who is teaching you CRT?

    • @AntiMarxism21stCentury
      @AntiMarxism21stCentury Před 2 lety +10

      My kids want to know why CRT is used to brain wash them in public schools into hating themselves and hating the USA.

    • @dariocarraresi1823
      @dariocarraresi1823 Před 2 lety +43

      @@AntiMarxism21stCentury Ask them what is CRT, and I'm gonna tell you if it is taught in elementary/middle schools or not.

    • @AntiMarxism21stCentury
      @AntiMarxism21stCentury Před 2 lety +10

      @@dariocarraresi1823Black people good and perfect. White people still slavers. It is just hate speech repackaged for a new Marxism by the new marxists. "That is because the leading proponent of critical race theory, law professor Kimberlé Crenshaw, is a self-described Marxist, and critical race theory does focus on class divisions within our society."

  • @777BossTown1
    @777BossTown1 Před rokem +170

    My great grandmother was born in i885 in Abbeville South Carolina just twenty years after the Civil War. She shared many of the things that took place after slavery!
    My point, she had to live through that very disturbing period of time. If she could live through it as a child White children and others can surely learn about it...

  • @zerowatts5484
    @zerowatts5484 Před 6 měsíci +60

    I love that John called out “when was learning and growing as a person ever really comfortable.” I can only hope he keeps true to that narrative when discussing other topics.

    • @juliebraden6911
      @juliebraden6911 Před 4 měsíci

      🙄

    • @isisnmagic1812
      @isisnmagic1812 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@juliebraden6911guess you've only seen just one John Oliver episode, go look at him deal with other subjects and you'll see he does.

  • @thedapperdolphin1590
    @thedapperdolphin1590 Před 2 lety +3868

    I’ve taught high school before, and I got to say that many teens love the chance to discuss controversial or political issues when given the chance. They’re forming their own identifies and beliefs, and are starting to notice that the simple narratives they learned as a child may not be entirely true. However, most teens don’t have the opportunity or environment to discuss those things, especially if those topics don’t fit their parent’s worldview. So a classroom that provides context and information on subjects, and a civil discussion moderated by a teacher is exactly the place to discuss things such as racism.

    • @kayarnold3151
      @kayarnold3151 Před 2 lety +300

      Having those conversations at school and college is what helped me break away from a racist family. I already didn't feel the same as them, but those conversations helped cut the final cords. Now as a parent, my kiddo knows my opinion, has been able to see what is going on in the world, and openly discusses these topics with us. She has helped change my mind on a few thing because seeing it through the eyes of a future generation that will be impacted more than I will is life changing.

    • @VinOnline
      @VinOnline Před 2 lety +52

      @@kayarnold3151 That's great to hear!

    • @moonlily1
      @moonlily1 Před 2 lety +293

      It's not about the kids. The parents crying "oh, think of the children!" are only thinking about themselves. They aren't worried that their children will be distressed, but worried that their children will not espouse the same worldviews that they have. Or to put it straight, they are racist and they are worried that their children will not be racist.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Před 2 lety +15

      That's probably not the case if they're a white nonhispanic ethnic group. Imagine how shitty it is to be lied about the ethnic cleansing and cultural vandalism of your culture, while being told that your family was responsible for doing it for other groups. See the problem? Germans had our language banned, and were subject to the same executive order 9066 restrictions as the Japanese, but that basically does not come up at all during the units on internment. And internment isn't even the word, the word is concentration. Those were concentration camps, not internment camps.
      It was deeply uncomfortable growing up in desegregating schools to have to balance the same ethnic identity that the students of color were. I had one culture at home, another at school and got to be completely confused because the schools were making it into a issue of race rather than ethnicity and focused purely based on reversing it.

    • @HarlemSexyBlaqkat
      @HarlemSexyBlaqkat Před 2 lety +35

      Then they get lured in to extreme hate groups. We need to have debates and discussions in middle and high school.

  • @pianopolly
    @pianopolly Před 2 lety +2960

    I find it funny that there is apparently a large cross-section between the group of people who like to ban certain books and teachings because it makes them feel bad and the group of people who argue that "facts don't care about your feelings".

    • @anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023
      @anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023 Před 2 lety +48

      Schools are not free marketplaces of ideas. Theres only a limited amount of time at your disposal, you cant teach children about every ideology, every viewpoint that has ever existed and let them read every book in existence. You need to make a choice of what to teach and not choosing something isnt the same as banning it. Of course Im referring to people who want to eliminate certain things from the school curriculum, not those who want to ouright ban a book, thats a different story.

    • @BlindErephon
      @BlindErephon Před 2 lety +258

      @@anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023 These are also the same people who banned Maus. Because its totally worth banning a graphic novel about the experiences of a Holocaust survivor if it has some swears or, God forbid, discusses sex.

    • @lochnessmonsta2981
      @lochnessmonsta2981 Před 2 lety +47

      Crt isnt a fact. It is a point of view to look back at history and nothing more. Points of view are not fact, comrade.

    • @gavinwilson5324
      @gavinwilson5324 Před 2 lety +228

      @@lochnessmonsta2981 No one said crt was fact. It is in fact a viewpoint. However, the fact that people are trying to ban it is a facet of the overall issue of those people trying to cover up what the viewpoint is looking at.

    • @WMDistraction
      @WMDistraction Před 2 lety +43

      Don’t have to care about the facts hurting your feelings if you effectively stop them from existing!

  • @fantasymind8899
    @fantasymind8899 Před 4 měsíci +26

    As a half-German, half-English person I don't see how saying "I'm not going to talk about this because it makes me uncomfortable" could ever be a good idea. Germany talks about what it's done, and it is taught in our schools so it never happens again! That discomfort is essential to it not happening ever again, and I think we can all handle a little discomfort to make sure that the terrible mistakes of the past don't find opportunities to be repeated.

    • @vsong7496
      @vsong7496 Před 16 dny

      I am very sure if someone came up to you and blamed you for everything in their life (something you had nothing to do with) is very unfair.
      Now imagine doing that to a kid, if you think going up to a kid and blaming them for everything their grandpa did, then you all need some mental checking to do.
      CRT has only divided ppl even more, it has made being racist to white ppl a norm.

  • @butterflymuse2707
    @butterflymuse2707 Před rokem +58

    We can't do better until we know better. And we can't know better until we learn from our past.

    • @skillethead15
      @skillethead15 Před 18 dny

      All of these people demonizing CRT are just racists who don’t their kids to learn about the horrible things their ancestors did. They know learning about it can make their own children sympathetic to the plight of minorities.

  • @filipandersson
    @filipandersson Před 2 lety +3286

    I remember watching a documentary about the holocaust where they showed real footage of corpses being thrown into a mass grave by soldiers. I think some of my classmates cried at that scene. It was extremely uncomfortable to watch, but to me, it was that documentary that drove home just how terrible the holocaust was. Banning that kind of material from schools just seems like an awful, or even dangerous idea.

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před 2 lety +115

      You're right.
      But imagine for a second that a racist old white guy has been able to indoctrinate kids for generations in public school, and now CRT steps in and says they get to learn about racism so maybe they won't be so racist. Racist old white guy is going to be keen on banning everything to double down on it. Plus, maybe then there'll be classroom time for mandatory Christian prayers. When you recognize just how bad conservatives are in America, all the vile things that keep happening start to make sense.

    • @filipandersson
      @filipandersson Před 2 lety +71

      @@googiegress7459 yeah, I know why they want to ban CRT, I just felt the need to express why I disagree with it.

    • @lakoncers13
      @lakoncers13 Před 2 lety +56

      @@googiegress7459 I never had a racist old white guy teacher ever in public school. In fact between k-12 I only ever even had like 6 male teachers and only 3 or 4 of them were white, none of them were old men and none of them were racist. In fact these days its mostly liberal talking points indoctrinating kids in schools and the number of conservative teachers is less than 30% at most. Especially since teachers unions are all democrat. I never once in my life was taught ANYTHING about christian prayers or teachings ever in school, but was taught all kinds of things about racism and how it was bad and how it absolutely existed and how it needed to change. I really love to know if anything you said comes from actual real life experience dealing with anything you said about those evil conservatives, or just what you hear on Twitter and on liberal news outlets filled with people who only get their perspective from one talking point. to quote south park. basically farting in your wine glass and then bringing it to your nose to smell your own shit.

    • @maresam3910
      @maresam3910 Před 2 lety +2

      Can I ask how old you were when they started giving history classes about it?

    • @dm1972
      @dm1972 Před 2 lety +12

      We learn about all this stuff already in american schools lol.

  • @fexbio
    @fexbio Před rokem +2791

    As I saw a teacher tweeting another day: "If I was able to indoctrinate my students, they would be using deodorant and turning off their cell phones in class".

    • @dcgregorya5434
      @dcgregorya5434 Před rokem

      Idk, I saw a case of them telling some kindergarten white kid to call himself an oppressor. Thats crap. We know who the oppressors are and its not just some random little kid, its a small % of specific people who have the colonizer energy. Your senator? Sure. The mediocre kid down the block? He's got nothing to apologize for.

    • @robertblackshear8963
      @robertblackshear8963 Před rokem +65

      Damn lmao.

    • @deViant14
      @deViant14 Před rokem

      it's like saying you'd also be carrying autism. It doesn't work that way

    • @Thunar292
      @Thunar292 Před rokem +34

      best comment ever.

    • @coralineschmidt1078
      @coralineschmidt1078 Před rokem

      i mean yeah, but it goes both ways
      like wouldn't you agree that systemically white washing history is indoctrination?
      one teacher alone obviously can't do it though

  • @brettatton
    @brettatton Před rokem +167

    This show is a public service. Always spot on. Kudos to John and the entire production team at the show. We are living in times when evil appears to be on the rise...its pretty scary.

    • @tracyavent-costanza346
      @tracyavent-costanza346 Před rokem +8

      how many times has it happened that someone from somewhere else, made us look at ourselves. I gather he became a US citizen and we are richer for having him among us.

    • @GhostSal
      @GhostSal Před rokem +4

      Really? This was more like an infomercial for CRT, than an honest objective look at it.
      CRT has its foundation with Derek Bell and is inspired by ideas from the Błack Power movement of the 1960s and 1970s. CRT teaches to no longer see people as individuals but to see people as separate group identities. Assigning positive or negative traits based solely upon these group (groups based on skín color and perceived racíal identity).
      When anyone claims CRT isn’t being taught in-K-12, that-semantícs… Because while the entire program isn’t, that doesn’t mean elements of it aren’t. History is being taught in schools and it shouldn’t be watered down. If anything we tend to overlook the suffering of many others across the world and tens of thousands of years of slavery (not just hundreds of years).
      The segregated mindset CRT promotes is worse than most people realize, the beliefs below come from some of the supporters of CRT and people on the łeft (not people on the ríght or independents). Which again is something many won’t even acknowledge is a problem from the very same supporters of CRT.
      With thinking from CRT/BŁM supporters like…
      “Whíte privilegé”
      “Check your prívilege”
      All of one race “can’t be racíst”
      All of the other race is racíst
      “Melanin makes us strong/superíor, lack of melanin makes you inferíor.”
      “We are not the same” - comes from a belief of genetic superioríty. Caucasíans are descended from animals and Błack people are not (Błack people are the only true humans).
      There are extremists on the right and left, both are a serious problem. The thing is the extremists on the left are growing, driving media narratives and responsible for driving further division. All this us versus them cannot ever lead to “we”.
      How about some real world examples from supporters of CRT/BŁM?
      A Cupertino, California, elementary school forced third-graders to deconstruct their racial and sexual identities, then rank themselves according to their “power and privilege.” They separated the eight-year-old children into oppressors and oppressed.
      A middle school in Springfield, Missouri, forced teachers to locate themselves on an “oppression matrix,” claiming that white heterosexual Protestant males are inherently oppressors and must atone for their “covert white supremacy.”
      The Arizona Department of Education created an “equity” toolkit claiming that babies show the first signs of racism at three months old and that white children become full racists-”strongly biased in favor of whiteness”-by age five.
      The California Department of Education passed an “ethnic studies” curriculum that calls for the “decolonization” of American society.
      The principal of East Side Community School in New York sent white parents a “tool for action,” which tells them they must become “white traitors” and then advocate for full “white abolition.”
      How about employers?
      The Treasury Department told employees that “all white people” are racist and that children become racist by 3 months
      A Department of Education-funded conference advocated for “abolition” of American institutions and told whites they must “give up” their “wealth.”
      The Department of Homeland Security told its white employees that they have been “socialized into oppressor roles.”
      The State Department, EPA, and VA pressured staff to denounce their “white privilege,” become “co-resistors” against “systemic racism,” and sign “equity pledges.”
      Lockheed Martin, the nation’s largest defense contractor, sent key executives on a mission to deconstruct their “white male privilege” and encouraged them to atone for their “white male privilege.”
      Raytheon, the nation’s second-largest defense contractor, has launched a critical race theory program that encourages white employees to confront their “privilege,” reject the principle of “equality,” and to endorse the “defund the police” movement.
      Walmart’s training program tells employees that they are guilty of “internalized racial superiority.”
      * Many of the above examples with links are on Mr Chris Rufo’s site.

    • @axiomfiremind8431
      @axiomfiremind8431 Před rokem +3

      Wrong.

    • @juliebraden6911
      @juliebraden6911 Před 4 měsíci

      No. This show should be a supplement to the actual search for knowledge. If you let a show on HBO inform you, you've already lost.

    • @juliebraden6911
      @juliebraden6911 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@axiomfiremind8431stupid answer, try harder.

  • @MiguelHernandez-tz4ml
    @MiguelHernandez-tz4ml Před 4 měsíci +17

    And week after week these same individuals will go to church and be told how inherently sinful they are and nobody jumps up and says "you need to stop teaching critical sin theory. You are making our congregation feel like Catholics"....

    • @StrawberryShortcake12335
      @StrawberryShortcake12335 Před 2 měsíci

      That’s the “beauty” for Salvation by Faith alone. It doesn’t matter if they are sinful. 😢

  • @geekgirl_luv4262
    @geekgirl_luv4262 Před rokem +1413

    If you’re not uncomfortable in history class you’re probably doing it wrong. A lot of history IS uncomfortable, but it’s still important to know.

    • @GhostSal
      @GhostSal Před rokem +12

      No one is saying don’t teach history.
      CRT has its foundation with Derek Bell and is inspired by ideas from the Błack Power movement of the 1960s and 1970s. CRT teaches to no longer see people as individuals but to see people as separate group identities. Assigning positive or negative traits based solely upon these group (groups based on skín color and perceived racíal identity).
      When anyone claims CRT isn’t being taught in-K-12, that-semantícs… Because while the entire program isn’t, that doesn’t mean elements of it aren’t. History is being taught in schools and it shouldn’t be watered down. If anything we tend to overlook the suffering of many others across the world and tens of thousands of years of slavery (not just hundreds of years).
      The segregated mindset CRT promotes is worse than most people realize, the beliefs below come from some of the supporters of CRT and people on the łeft (not people on the ríght or independents). Which again is something many won’t even acknowledge is a problem from the very same supporters of CRT.
      With thinking from CRT/BŁM supporters like…
      “Whíte privilegé”
      “Check your prívilege”
      All of one race “can’t be racíst”
      All of the other race is racíst
      “Melanin makes us strong/superíor, lack of melanin makes you inferíor.”
      “We are not the same” - comes from a belief of genetic superioríty. Caucasíans are descended from animals and Błack people are not (Błack people are the only true humans).
      There are extremists on the right and left, both are a serious problem. The thing is the extremists on the left are growing, driving media narratives and responsible for driving further division. All this us versus them cannot ever lead to “we”.
      How about some real world examples from supporters of CRT/BŁM?
      A Cupertino, California, elementary school forced third-graders to deconstruct their racial and sexual identities, then rank themselves according to their “power and privilege.” They separated the eight-year-old children into oppressors and oppressed.
      A middle school in Springfield, Missouri, forced teachers to locate themselves on an “oppression matrix,” claiming that white heterosexual Protestant males are inherently oppressors and must atone for their “covert white supremacy.”
      The Arizona Department of Education created an “equity” toolkit claiming that babies show the first signs of racism at three months old and that white children become full racists-”strongly biased in favor of whiteness”-by age five.
      The California Department of Education passed an “ethnic studies” curriculum that calls for the “decolonization” of American society.
      The principal of East Side Community School in New York sent white parents a “tool for action,” which tells them they must become “white traitors” and then advocate for full “white abolition.”
      How about employers?
      The Treasury Department told employees that “all white people” are racist and that children become racist by 3 months
      A Department of Education-funded conference advocated for “abolition” of American institutions and told whites they must “give up” their “wealth.”
      The Department of Homeland Security told its white employees that they have been “socialized into oppressor roles.”
      The State Department, EPA, and VA pressured staff to denounce their “white privilege,” become “co-resistors” against “systemic racism,” and sign “equity pledges.”
      Lockheed Martin, the nation’s largest defense contractor, sent key executives on a mission to deconstruct their “white male privilege” and encouraged them to atone for their “white male privilege.”
      Raytheon, the nation’s second-largest defense contractor, has launched a critical race theory program that encourages white employees to confront their “privilege,” reject the principle of “equality,” and to endorse the “defund the police” movement.
      Walmart’s training program tells employees that they are guilty of “internalized racial superiority.”
      * Many of the above examples with links are on Mr Chris Rufo’s site.

    • @ronaldnixon8226
      @ronaldnixon8226 Před rokem +12

      @@GhostSal But them drag queen's is tryina read a book about "Crtitcal Race Theory" to my kid's!

    • @GhostSal
      @GhostSal Před rokem +1

      @@ronaldnixon8226 That’s your rebuttal? No one is saying don’t teach history and teach it as unbiasedly as possible (with facts). CRT isn’t a history lesson, it’s objective is to divide all people today into two different groups (øppressed and oppressør). I’ve already explained this and gave specifics as to how this is being implemented.
      Let’s look over some statements CRT/BŁM supporters have actually made and see what their objective really is.
      “The only remedy to racist discrimination is antiracist discrimination. The only remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination. The only remedy to present discrimination is future discrimination.” - Ibram Kendi
      “Błack people can’t be racíst.” - Michael Eric Dyson (no matter what act of racíal hatrèd and víolence is commítted).
      “We believe that so long as the white race exists, all movements against what is called ‘racism’ will fail. Therefore, our aim is to abolish the white race.” - Noel Ignatiev
      “If you abolish slavery, you abolish slaveholders. If you want to abolish racial oppression, you do away with whiteness.” - Noel Ignatiev
      The Isis Papers, Frances Welsing described whíte people as the genetically defective descendants of “albino mutants” She wrote that due to this "defective" mutatíon, they may have been forcíbly expelled from Afríca. She also promoted the belief that “melanin” made błack people superior to whíte people.
      Keep in mind his isn’t what I have said they want, these are CRT/BLM supporters own words and we should believe that they mean what they say.
      People don’t want chíldren being taught to separate each other today by racè. People don’t want kíds assigning group traits to individuals and instead they want kíds to see each other as the individuals they are. This used to be a mainstream view and not just a conservatíve view.

    • @ronaldnixon8226
      @ronaldnixon8226 Před rokem

      @@GhostSal Obama cain't force my kid's to study none a that Hogwash!

    • @GrimmJaw671
      @GrimmJaw671 Před rokem

      @@GhostSal You're confusing CRT bud. You should really go back to law school if you didn't graduate.

  • @brianr6651
    @brianr6651 Před rokem +1017

    I went to public school in a majority white district and my teachers were very upfront about our countries history. And yknow what? We were ok. We survived learning about the past. It ain’t the end of the world. We aren’t those people, all we can do is be better, more empathetic, compassionate and caring. Ignoring history has grave consequences

    • @tracyavent-costanza346
      @tracyavent-costanza346 Před rokem +24

      we are still living in the echoes of the past. it's true we didn't create those conditions but we can do something about not perpetuating the tendency to avoid the topic.

    • @GhostSal
      @GhostSal Před rokem +13

      No one is saying don’t teach history, that’s just a straw man argument.
      CRT has its foundation with Derek Bell and is inspired by ideas from the Błack Power movement of the 1960s and 1970s. CRT teaches to no longer see people as individuals but to see people as separate group identities. Assigning positive or negative traits based solely upon these group (groups based on skín color and perceived racíal identity).
      When anyone claims CRT isn’t being taught in-K-12, that’s semantícs… Because while the entire program isn’t, that doesn’t mean elements of it aren’t. History is being taught in schools and it shouldn’t be watered down. If anything we tend to overlook the suffering of many others across the world and tens of thousands of years of slavery (not just hundreds of years).
      The segregated mindset CRT promotes is worse than most people realize, the beliefs below come from some of the supporters of CRT and people on the łeft (not people on the ríght or independents). Which again is something many won’t even acknowledge is a problem from the very same supporters of CRT.
      With thinking from CRT/BŁM supporters like…
      “Whíte privilegé”
      “Check your prívilege”
      All of one race “can’t be racíst”
      All of the other race is racíst
      “Melanin makes us strong/superíor, lack of melanin makes you inferíor.”
      “We are not the same” - comes from a belief of genetic superioríty. Caucasíans are descended from animals and Błack people are not (Błack people are the only true humans).
      There are extremists on the right and left, both are a serious problem. The thing is the extremists on the left are growing, driving media narratives and responsible for driving further division. All this us versus them cannot ever lead to “we”.

    • @corabevill-thomas4632
      @corabevill-thomas4632 Před rokem +38

      @@GhostSal That is not what CRT teaches! There is way too much information available to make you aware of what CRT teaches and what it doesn't.

    • @GhostSal
      @GhostSal Před rokem +1

      @@corabevill-thomas4632 Yes it is what CRT and supporters teach. Wøke supporters and CRT is teaching to see skin color, to not see individuals but instead people as separate groups. Where everyone from one race are always “privileged” (even the homeless, no matter how hard their life has been), can’t voice opinions (unless you agree completely) or you are told “your privilege is showing”.
      When someone claims CRT isn’t being taught in-K-12, that’s semantícs… Because while the entire program isn’t, that doesn’t mean elements of it aren’t. History is being taught in schools and it shouldn’t be watered down. If anything we tend to overlook the suffering of many others across the world and tens of thousands of years of slavery (not just hundreds of years).
      The segregated mindset CRT promotes is worse than most people realize
      Here are just a few examples:
      A Cupertino, California, elementary school forced third-graders to deconstruct their racial and sexual identities, then rank themselves according to their “power and privilege.” They separated the eight-year-old children into oppressors and oppressed.
      A middle school in Springfield, Missouri, forced teachers to locate themselves on an “oppression matrix,” claiming that white heterosexual Protestant males are inherently oppressors and must atone for their “covert white supremacy.”
      The Arizona Department of Education created an “equity” toolkit claiming that babies show the first signs of racism at three months old and that white children become full racists-”strongly biased in favor of whiteness”-by age five.
      The California Department of Education passed an “ethnic studies” curriculum that calls for the “decolonization” of American society.
      The principal of East Side Community School in New York sent white parents a “tool for action,” which tells them they must become “white traitors” and then advocate for full “white abolition.”
      A Department of Education-funded conference advocated for “abolition” of American institutions and told whites they must “give up” their “wealth.”
      How about employers?
      The Treasury Department told employees that “all white people” are racist and that children become racist by 3 months
      The Department of Homeland Security told its white employees that they have been “socialized into oppressor roles.”
      The State Department, EPA, and VA pressured staff to denounce their “white privilege,” become “co-resistors” against “systemic racism,” and sign “equity pledges.”
      Lockheed Martin, the nation’s largest defense contractor, sent key executives on a mission to deconstruct their “white male privilege” and encouraged them to atone for their “white male privilege.”
      Raytheon, the nation’s second-largest defense contractor, has launched a critical race theory program that encourages white employees to confront their “privilege,” reject the principle of “equality,” and to endorse the “defund the police” movement.
      Walmart’s training program tells employees that they are guilty of “internalized racial superiority.”
      A recent survey found that 1 in 6 hiring managers was asked not to hire whîte males. According to a survey published by Resume Builder. Also, about half of all employers have openly admitted to prioritizing all other races over whîte males, putting “qualificatîons” as a secondary priority.
      This is just the short list and links to much of what I referenced are available on Christopher Rufo’s official site.

    • @katherinejones8022
      @katherinejones8022 Před rokem

      EXACTLY!! Learn about it & commit to rights & safety & integrity for ALL, got that GQP MAGA? ALL! F your BS hypocrisy of christianity! Jesus would be embarrassed by you.

  • @danniethomas1
    @danniethomas1 Před rokem +13

    Tennessean progressive here- Honestly, the best TN perspectives only come from teachers and nurses. You know...people who actually deal with people.

  • @stevenofford495
    @stevenofford495 Před rokem +36

    I had always understood CRT to be the abbreviation for the Cathode Ray Tube, which left me bewildered as to what people were getting airiated about. But then I grew up in the UK before LED TVs .

    • @20storiesunder
      @20storiesunder Před 3 měsíci +2

      Heck I thought it was cardiac resynchronization therapy and was baffled why Americans didn't want people with heart conditions to do better.

  • @chetmcgovern9985
    @chetmcgovern9985 Před 2 lety +1154

    I'm an old school nerd, when people started shouting about CRT, I thought they were mad about those big old monitors

  • @AstralPhnx
    @AstralPhnx Před rokem +614

    "absolute trombone slide of a sentence" will live rent free in my head for the rest of my life

    • @lesliewolfe7643
      @lesliewolfe7643 Před rokem +10

      Omg me too. I actually created a clip of it so I can enjoy it whenever I so desire 🙂

  • @evensteve284
    @evensteve284 Před rokem +11

    Watching this in February 2023. Seventy three year old white guy here. All I can say is wow. This is all so true. Thank you John Oliver.

    • @StatusNull
      @StatusNull Před 14 dny

      boooo he conflicted himself so much and more or less said yess please teach race theory in schools...... wtf

  • @Blasted2Oblivion
    @Blasted2Oblivion Před 7 měsíci +8

    Fun fact. I learned that, during WW2, the United States locked up US born citizens who committed no crimes simply because they were of Japanese descent...from an episode of jeopardy in my mid 20s. Not in a classroom. One would think we should be teaching the darker parts of history if for no other reason than how accurate the whole "those who dont learn from history" saying is.

    • @samuelschmitz186
      @samuelschmitz186 Před 3 měsíci +2

      George Takei (Hikaru Sulu from the Star Trek franchise) was in one of the Japanese internments camps as a child. He wrote a graphic novel about his experiences with his family called "They Called Us Enemy".

    • @DaveZeichner
      @DaveZeichner Před 20 dny +1

      Just one example of what fear and ignorance can do.

  • @protectedlands2869
    @protectedlands2869 Před 2 lety +1794

    Thank you for showing MLK in a color video. The constant use of black and white imagery of the Civil Rights Movement really seems like an attempt to make that time feel like the distant past when, in reality, a lot of our parents were around to witness it and feel it’s effects.

    • @StevenFox80
      @StevenFox80 Před 2 lety +161

      I've always wondered why he's always depicted in black and white, when color TV had been a thing for years at that point.

    • @nooberNXC
      @nooberNXC Před 2 lety +146

      He and Anne Frank were born on the same day. That's part of how it seems "they're so far back in the past."

    • @diosrobinson4748
      @diosrobinson4748 Před 2 lety +45

      @@nooberNXC insane fact I didn’t know

    • @MRCAB
      @MRCAB Před 2 lety +39

      Or maybe it’s because the most famous films of the man were shot in black and white…

    • @nickjacobs8507
      @nickjacobs8507 Před 2 lety +45

      Those darn racist cameras

  • @pacman5698
    @pacman5698 Před 2 lety +417

    The teens who threw rocks at Ruby Bridges are now grown up and want to make sure their grand children and great grand children never discover the fact they threw rocks at Ruby Bridges.

    • @raelshark
      @raelshark Před 2 lety +38

      I see this one a lot and kinda disagree with it.
      I don't think most of those people are ashamed by what they did. They don't want schools teaching that they were wrong to do it.

    • @krystalmoss7390
      @krystalmoss7390 Před 2 lety +17

      @@raelshark That is by definition hiding it, unless you want to have an interesting discussion where people will have to find a way to justify it as some simple disagreement where both sides were equally in the right.

    • @penname8441
      @penname8441 Před 2 lety

      +

    • @OJsLeftGlove
      @OJsLeftGlove Před 2 lety +3

      Mark Walberg?

    • @dylaneagen880
      @dylaneagen880 Před 2 lety +1

      @Greg Norman So you support the rock throwers reasoning for throwing rocks at Ruby Bridges. Their reasoning being that they hated black people and didn't want them to have equal rights, such as going to the same public school as the white kids.

  • @AJ-vm8ft
    @AJ-vm8ft Před 10 měsíci +9

    24:23 white man here. I was and never friendly to police when I’m pulled over. I have never been dragged out of my car. The worst thing that ever happened to me was being properly ticketed for the violation I committed. Then I was allowed to go my way.

    • @kevinkibble8342
      @kevinkibble8342 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yeah no one cares that you're white and a police officer has never harmed you. Stop making the conversation about yourself.

  • @TheMelissarossi
    @TheMelissarossi Před 6 měsíci +16

    How can you become a better person without reflecting on your word and actions? I just don’t get why being uncomfortable is so scary to some people

    • @Uruz2012
      @Uruz2012 Před 11 dny

      I haven't done anything of historical significance... if you identify individuals with long past actions by people with the same skin color, you're racist.

  • @DLord227
    @DLord227 Před 2 lety +659

    I'm an American and I live in Norway where I'm a chef. A friend who is a teacher asked for another teacher if I could come in and discuss with 2 classes (10th grade) about a book they just finished reading The Hate U Give. These kids wanted to learn about the history of why things happened in the book. Especially the reason behind the killing of Emmitt Till. they couldn't grasp that he was killed for whistling at a woman and when i told them that woman who accused Till admitted to lying about it. The look of shock and horror on their faces was telling and it even made me emotional to see it. Then they asked about a number of issues. The kids enjoyed it and thanked me for teaching them. But it was a great day for me too. In my head I'm thinking there's no way I could do this in a school in the US. The kids even asked the teacher if I can come back and I will be helping them with English and have more talks.

    • @tuckerbugeater
      @tuckerbugeater Před 2 lety +35

      The problem is that too many whites believe the rest of the world thinks like them.

    • @shovel_salesman
      @shovel_salesman Před 2 lety +50

      @@tuckerbugeater eh? not every white person is an anti-CRT psychopath. I get what you mean but that's not a good way to phrase it

    • @thewaffle003
      @thewaffle003 Před 2 lety +14

      That's so cool. I had to do a report on Emmett Till in the fifth grade :(

    • @MrFlatage
      @MrFlatage Před 2 lety +4

      You have a passport that says 'American'?
      Stop the BS comrade. Who are you really?

    • @DLord227
      @DLord227 Před 2 lety +56

      @@MrFlatage It doesn't say American but the giant American flag on the first page is a definite clue. Borscht Brotha

  • @sophiasumaray3492
    @sophiasumaray3492 Před 2 lety +656

    When I was a senior in high school, my Catholic school fired my favorite teacher for teaching about the history of Indigenous peoples. She asked me a couple of weeks earlier if I wanted to learn about Filipino-Americans later in the semester (I’m a first-gen Filipino, for context) and I excitedly told my family that I was so happy that I was going to learn more about my identity. I cried for weeks, along with my BIPOC classmates, because the opportunity to learn about ourselves and other historically silenced communities had been stolen from us-it felt like our stories didn’t matter. I think about her a lot today, and I now learn extensively about ethnic studies in college. My heart aches for those students who will have to go through the same thing my classmates and I did. Learning about yourself from the white man’s P.O.V for your entire life is dehumanizing. Thank you for bringing awareness to this.

    • @Chas-OTE
      @Chas-OTE Před 2 lety +14

      A gentle reminder that we were pretty much a US "territory" (colony) from 1898, when they bought us from Spain for $20 million, to July 4th, 1946.
      PS: I wanted to edit my previous comment to add dates but accidentally deleted it...

    • @dragonsword7370
      @dragonsword7370 Před 2 lety +29

      I'm not surprised the catholic administrators did that. There are mass graves Full of unmarked indigenous children and mothers bodies interred because of the church doing things their way. Whether for ideology, profit, racism or a mix of these combined.

    • @michaelechavez6407
      @michaelechavez6407 Před 2 lety +13

      I’m glad I’m in a college with a Filipino club to learn about my culture, but it sucks only learning about the Philippines when Spain’s colonization, US colonization, and WWII.

    • @dat2ra
      @dat2ra Před 2 lety +2

      Chances are they weren't fired for what they taught you, but for what part of the curriculum they did not teach in its stead.

    • @alejandrogallardo4955
      @alejandrogallardo4955 Před 2 lety +2

      WTF? Girl your ancestry its catholic...., what white mans POV? do you know that nowadays each country produces his own history, but for the last 70 years English historians have been the most influential ones.
      The spaniards mixed with everything we ve seen, the spanish under a catholic premise give the citzenship, his ways and religion to the natives, building universities, auto governance, made them richer, they were in the court of the King, Almirants, Co-Kings... you name it, if your teacher read you in history you should know better. Ethnic Studies are racist by category. Check the numbers on the inquisition and check the numbers for the same religious faults in the Luteran- Protestant world.

  • @LeifLovebug
    @LeifLovebug Před 11 měsíci +32

    I don't always audibly laugh at a John Oliver bit, but his imitating of Tucker Carlson's sentence structure and inflection while talking about monkeys in car engines really got me 😭

  • @TiggerToo27
    @TiggerToo27 Před 4 měsíci +5

    I attended an award-winning high school in an all-white community. I took one semester of World Problems and two semesters of Advanced American history. In NONE of those classes did I hear about civil liberties, or the historical sins of slavery and the treatment of Native Americans, or any other minority persecutions. It was up to ME to learn about things like the Chinese Exclusion Act, the Trail of Tears, the Tulsa massacre, and all other manner of our government's exclusionist policies. I'm not including the educational policies of our school system. All I'm saying is that these subjects are worthy of teaching kids about our past and present history, warts and all. No mention of our abuses to Native Americans or the horrors of slavery were mentioned in my school. NONE. It would behoove us to present ALL history of our country, unpleasant though it may be.

    • @theappraiserlady
      @theappraiserlady Před 4 měsíci

      Maybe you live in Tennessee as I do. It happened, but it didn't happen.

    • @TiggerToo27
      @TiggerToo27 Před 4 měsíci

      No, I don't live in Tennessee. I'll go you one better. I'm a lifetime resident of KENTUCKY! We're still living in the antebellum era here!@@theappraiserlady

  • @domenicpapa6181
    @domenicpapa6181 Před 2 lety +1356

    I am an Australian in my 60's. When I was little I remember hearing conversations from grandparents about our First Nation people and how they where dying out and would soon be gone. Then at school over the years we learnt more and more about how they where treated by white people. We where taught about the attempted genocide to be honest.
    To get to the point, knowing our history and understanding how we treated our First nation people did not make me ashamed of being white. There is nothing I can do about the colour of my skin. What it has given me is knowledge and understanding. I can see how I have benefited from what we took from them. It is a waste of time feeling guilty about it. But what I can do is take this knowledge and use my voice, my actions, to ensure that there is some remedy, some equalizations made to ensure that they no longer suffer from the abuse we delt upon them.

    • @AlitheaJ
      @AlitheaJ Před 2 lety +21

      So what have you done for the indigenous australians? Tangible and impactful actions have you made? Other than just knowing the history. genuine question

    • @domenicpapa6181
      @domenicpapa6181 Před 2 lety +140

      @@AlitheaJ That is a frightening question. What can I do? I do what little I can. I attend rallies, sign petitions and talk to people. That's the frightening part of this question is just how helpless one can feel when it comes to issues like this. So all I can do in my small way is help make people aware of the issues, aware of the past and hopefully changing opinions as I go. So in all honesty I would say I have done very little. I can only hope my very little when added to more and more very littles can add up to something.

    • @danwilley3911
      @danwilley3911 Před 2 lety +22

      🙏 white guy to white guy, right on man! It's a drag we all had to learn this way but, more and more people are learning to just let each other BE! ✌

    • @M.L.official
      @M.L.official Před 2 lety +10

      Actually there is something you can do. You can leave this country and give everything to the aboriginals. There is nothing wrong with not doing that since the burden doesn't fall on you as you werent responsible with what happened 250 or so years ago. However this also means that you lose all rights to virtue signal about this topic. So choose wisely I guess

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant Před 2 lety

      @@AlitheaJ CRT is used as such a Boogyman,
      i dont even f-ing know what it's exactly about, cause everyone's
      just yelling - ya know, how healthy, mature Adults?
      But what i do know cause it's objective fact is that teaching Children that
      Systemic Racism is a Word and Words have Meaning, so this Word
      also has Meaning, cant possibly be Wrong.
      'It's fighting Racism with Racism' is literal Idiocy
      and just a phrasing-with-agenda-behind-it.
      It's just the same good old 'Re-phrase things'-Strategy all over again,
      just like Flat-Earthers yelling 'Globeheads!'.

  • @brittabuender9954
    @brittabuender9954 Před 2 lety +1520

    One lesson from school I remember best is when our history teacher read us excerpts of what happened at concentration camps. We were all horrified. I remember how unusually quiet it was. No one talked, no one did anything. The only sound was the voice of the teacher telling us about the worst things humans are capable of. We weren't comfortable. But it was essential, because Never Again

    • @ericktellez7632
      @ericktellez7632 Před 2 lety +83

      Never again until like 3 years ago, throwing kids into cages and camps in the border.

    • @MarcLucksch
      @MarcLucksch Před 2 lety +94

      German Schooling in a nutshell. I was very annoyed going through it, but man, these days it feels like it was and is required.

    • @baileypratt185
      @baileypratt185 Před 2 lety +5

      Wait until what’s left of you and ur family are locked away at the fun covid deaded camps! Plenty of juice to stick u with there. Remember, history is doomed to repeat itself when you forget!!

    • @Brian-tn4cd
      @Brian-tn4cd Před 2 lety +78

      People need to understand that that bitter pill is needed to make a better society, because then people will just forget or ignore all the horrible things humanity has done in the past

    • @adrianaheiler9794
      @adrianaheiler9794 Před 2 lety +104

      @@MarcLucksch sama here Marc, as a German kid you kind of start rolling your eyes when you have to repeat it each and every school year. But now I see what's happening in the US and suddenly the little light bulb goes on and I think 'OH, that's why they were hammering it into our heads so much!'

  • @welcome_back_to_1972
    @welcome_back_to_1972 Před 4 měsíci +19

    Whenever someone says we aren't a racist country because we elected Obama, just ask if they voted for him. And then take a long pause.

    • @centurionfox7429
      @centurionfox7429 Před 2 měsíci

      I know you probably won't see this, but please explain that one more time​@@DanielVita

    • @SarahAbramova
      @SarahAbramova Před měsícem

      Or look at every other president.

  • @TheresaMarie16
    @TheresaMarie16 Před rokem +10

    I grew up Army, my Dad was a helicopter pilot. We spent at least 6 years off and on or more in Alabama. When I was in 7th and 8th grade I didn't see any African American students at all even though desegregation was the law. I am grateful that my parents did not indicate that people who are different because of their skin color were lesser.

  • @bridgetofold5645
    @bridgetofold5645 Před rokem +1435

    I am a Veteran and I have always believed that knowing and recognizing the darkest part of history and still be willing to put your life on the line for the idea of better is actually the most patriotic you can be.

    • @jackhammer3423
      @jackhammer3423 Před rokem +12

      Problem is tho that it isn't just historical info being fed to these kids..that's just how they are trying to sell it

    • @byanymeansnecessary9329
      @byanymeansnecessary9329 Před rokem +1

      Military doesn't protect anyone or make anything better, you are just a pawn to steal the resources from other countries. You are adding to the problem of amerikkkan white supremacy, not helping fix it.

    • @joshuaohuka7719
      @joshuaohuka7719 Před rokem +9

      Dear Lawd... That was trophy worthy for it's insightfulness... Well said....👏🏾

    • @LinkMcStink
      @LinkMcStink Před rokem

      People pushing CRT act like kids are being fed a whitewashed fairytale version of history when in reality, that's what they themselves are pushing. CRT is predicated on the notion that you're either a victim or an oppressor & the only was to attain true equality is to magically elevate the former up to the latter.

    • @jaykanta4326
      @jaykanta4326 Před rokem

      @@jackhammer3423 WTF is wrong with you? Is it just the lack of an education?

  • @fireyjon
    @fireyjon Před 2 lety +886

    "when was learning and growing as a person ever really comfortable" is by and far the most honest thing I ever heard

    • @anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023
      @anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023 Před 2 lety +5

      Yes we know the fat acceptance movement, censorship campaigns against "cyber bullying" (when all you have to do is literally close your eyes or turn off your computer/mobile phone), censorship campaigns against "hate speech" and the promotion of safe spaces can all be attributed to evil conservatves. Fortunately the left will always ensure people will be feeling uncomfortable.

    • @baileypratt185
      @baileypratt185 Před 2 lety +5

      You can’t learn and grow if you’re paying for original sin in a death camp!

    • @colemanbrenner6555
      @colemanbrenner6555 Před 2 lety +44

      @@priapulida yeah by learning about harm (like historical prejudice), self-reflecting, and using what we learned to not repeat it.

    • @danilicious2308
      @danilicious2308 Před 2 lety +23

      @@priapulida this coming from the "German" who claimed that CRT is the same as the holocaust.
      Talk about being a sociopath with dishonest arguments...

    • @anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023
      @anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Atheismisbased If those are all "meaningless culture wars", as you say, why dont you just stop fighting them and let the conservatives win? Just abandon the battlefield and stop fighting this petty culture war, after all there are more important issues than that. Right?

  • @ericahouston4395
    @ericahouston4395 Před 5 měsíci +17

    True story. My son had 2 gun related issues in his school last year. One was a white kid you brought an ACTUAL GUN AND AMMO to school. The staff sent an email out stating that the event happened and that the kid did not appear to be threatening and was just showing off. The other kid was a black kid who had told another student that he was frustrated and wanted to shoot his teachers. The staff found that he did not have access to any guns, but he was expelled. I know that one was an actual threat, but it's hard to imagine that skin color didn't play a role here.

    • @Onigirli
      @Onigirli Před 5 měsíci

      Hopefully the white kid was a bro and tried to lend the black kid his gun in solidarity if he wanted to carry out his wishes after that decision

    • @keriannekerr1876
      @keriannekerr1876 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​​@@Onigirli that's morbid humour, I don't know if I should laugh out of nervousness or a shared p.o.v.
      I have my own stories of how judging by race and subsequently percieved character negatively affected by brother from as early as age 6 with police called in for a bomb threat because my brother brought batteries to school to finish building the pop bottle rocket in his library book. He grew up in Ontario during the "zero tolerance" era which resulted in any claim of bad behaviour could get him suspended. Mom says she would get nervous anytime the school called her work. Ironic thing is that as adults, my sister and I agree that our brother had/has a functional level of autism, what would then have been called Asperger's and the one time the school mentioned psychological assessment to my mom, they didn't explain to her what the reason or outcomes would be. Therefore she was left to decide on whether or not my brother got assessed based on an extremely flawed view of the world due to a lack of accurate information.
      As for my sister and I, my sister at 13 wrote angst-filled and harm related things in a journal she carried with her to school and was suspended from attending her graduation ceremony after a classmate took her journal and showed the teacher. The following year in high-school (the same one I attended and I have no reason to believe the school wouldn't know we are sisters) the school marked my sister as ESL with her first language being jamaican patois. We lived in Toronto and the school was multi-racial, i.e. a lot of people would speak or understand patois, my sister was only just as good as any other who had strong jamaican ties (she spent 2 years in a jamaican school for the experience and to avoid being in the same school as our brother who had previously been sent to jamaica to finish his grade 5 year (age 10) because of the school or teachers relentlessness to criminalize him and force him into the foster system).
      I therefore was lucky that I grew up hating myself for existing to avoid interacting with anyone whenever possible. Yet still in grade 8 (age 13) I was put into the "change your future" program which pulled you out of class to do what I referred to as remedial kindergarten such as coloring pictures with the other black girls my age they pulled. (I don't know if there were other classes for other demographics or how wide-spread the program was in the school but considering that the year before my teacher put me in a corner beside my known greatest distraction due to hearing a rumor that "there was trouble in the home" and then didn't notify my mother of my sudden decline in school work only occurring in her class) I was was pissed at the whole "change your future" bunk.

    • @margaretreeks9322
      @margaretreeks9322 Před 3 měsíci +1

      This breaks my heart and enrages me in equal measure. I'm so sorry you had these experiences.

  • @Ryan78336
    @Ryan78336 Před rokem +11

    That infamous lesson was actually used as a case study on some long form news show in Australia the name of which escapes me but it may have been landline or Australian story or something like that. It was briefly touched upon in psychology class as a look at how not to teach particular attitudes to kids. It’s infamous for being highly unethical and borderline sadistic. And I’m sorry she went through that among other things.

  • @KevinKolpack
    @KevinKolpack Před 2 lety +824

    Back in high school, one of our U.S. history classes taught about the old boarding schools where Native American kids were forcibly "assimilated" into white American culture through violence. Did I feel uncomfortable, as a white kid? Heck yes, just like I get uncomfortable watching true crime shows, reading about black lynchings, or learning about Nazi death camps. Was I made to feel guilty or responsible for these horrible schools? Not in the slightest. And I'm glad I learned about them. We can't become a better society if we don't examine the mistakes of the past and discuss why they were wrong in the first place.

    • @B_Bodziak
      @B_Bodziak Před 2 lety +38

      CRT isn't even thought in K-12 schools. It's only ever been taught in a few law schools.

    • @felwinter7883
      @felwinter7883 Před 2 lety +21

      @@B_Bodziak that has been disproven tenfold.

    • @susanrolstad9338
      @susanrolstad9338 Před 2 lety +18

      Well said... our 3rd grade history class was mostly native American history. It was well balanced. But we need to know why and how it happened! I think the more we know the better our children will be. They are there to present our children with the facts even if offends a race. The truth is the truth and it should be part of history

    • @Chaoitcme
      @Chaoitcme Před 2 lety +46

      @@felwinter7883 Have any sources to back up your claim?

    • @felwinter7883
      @felwinter7883 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Chaoitcme it's called the Internet, you're literally using it right now.

  • @JohnDoe-jh5yr
    @JohnDoe-jh5yr Před 2 lety +511

    "When was learning and growing as a person ever comfortable?"
    THIS! A thousand times this! When schools embrace comfort over truth, they are no longer fulfilling their mission.

    • @staidenofanarchy
      @staidenofanarchy Před 2 lety +23

      The right does not want to learn and does not want to grow. It wants you to sit down, shut up, do as your told, and don't ask questions.

    • @FarTooFar
      @FarTooFar Před 2 lety +1

      Same for universities.

    • @tstager1978
      @tstager1978 Před 2 lety +4

      @@staidenofanarchy You just described the left perfectly.

    • @samuellmatthews3216
      @samuellmatthews3216 Před 2 lety +3

      @@staidenofanarchy HAHAHA, just take the jab! Do it! Sound familiar?

    • @dr.vikyll7466
      @dr.vikyll7466 Před 2 lety +13

      @@tstager1978 Tell me you're an American who calls moderate Conservatives Maoists without saying it.

  • @FlareonGames
    @FlareonGames Před rokem +35

    I love John Oliver’s writer who had the perfect response for her teacher at the end… “Guess which part of Africa you’re from.” “Bitch you guess…”
    Perfect…

    • @GhostSal
      @GhostSal Před rokem +3

      John Oliver is wrong here and this was little more than an infomercial for CRT. Overall I usually enjoy John Oliver but I don’t agree with him on CRT.
      Just because the entire CRT program isn’t taught in high schools and grammar schools doesn’t mean parts of it aren’t. It’s not actually about teaching history and although it’s promoted as “anti-racist” civil rights education, CRT actively encourages discriminatíon. At its core, CRT segregates everyone into two main categories (øppressed and oppressørs), based solely on skin color and racíal ídentity.
      CRT has its foundation with Derek Bell and is inspired by ideas from the Błack Power movement of the 1960s and 1970s. CRT teaches to no longer see people as individuals but to see people as separate group identities. Assigning positive or negative traits based solely upon these group (groups based on skín color and perceived racíal identity).
      The tenets of CRT go far beyond the humanities. In some classrooms in Oregon and California for example, students operate under the understanding that finding the correct answer in mathematics is racíst. “Right” and “wrong” answers are deemed a product of white supremacy. The proponents of CRT’s mental gymnastics required to reach such a conclusion would be amusing, if this destructive ideology didn’t pose a very real danger to education in our society..
      We all agree that racïsm and discrimination are absolutely wrong and have no place in our society or in our classrooms…. Nor does the racially motivated divisive mindset that CRT promotes.
      When anyone claims CRT isn’t being taught in-K-12, that-semantícs… Because while the entire program isn’t, that doesn’t mean elements of it aren’t. History is being taught in schools and it shouldn’t be watered down. If anything we tend to overlook the suffering of many others across the world and tens of thousands of years of slavery (not just hundreds of years).
      Let’s look at CRT/BLM supporters own words:
      “The only remedy to racist discrimination is antiracist discrimination. The only remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination. The only remedy to present discrimination is future discrimination.” - Ibram Kendi
      “Błack people can’t be racíst.” - Michael Eric Dyson
      “We believe that so long as the white race exists, all movements against what is called ‘racism’ will fail. Therefore, our aim is to abolish the white race.” - Noel Ignatiev
      “If you abolish slavery, you abolish slaveholders. If you want to abolish racial oppression, you do away with whiteness.” - Noel Ignatiev
      The Isis Papers, Frances Welsing described whíte people as the genetically defective descendants of “albino mutants” She wrote that due to this "defective" mutatíon, they may have been forcíbly expelled from Afríca. She also promoted the belief that “melanin” made błack people superior to whíte people.
      Keep in mind his isn’t what I have said they want, these are CRT/BLM supporters own words and we should believe that they mean what they say.
      Here are just a few examples where it is being taught in schools:
      A Cupertino, California, elementary school forced third-graders to deconstruct their racial and sexual identities, then rank themselves according to their “power and privilege.” They separated the eight-year-old children into oppressors and oppressed.
      A middle school in Springfield, Missouri, forced teachers to locate themselves on an “oppression matrix,” claiming that white heterosexual Protestant males are inherently oppressors and must atone for their “covert white supremacy.”
      The Arizona Department of Education created an “equity” toolkit claiming that babies show the first signs of racism at three months old and that white children become full racists-”strongly biased in favor of whiteness”-by age five.
      The California Department of Education passed an “ethnic studies” curriculum that calls for the “decolonization” of American society.
      The principal of East Side Community School in New York sent white parents a “tool for action,” which tells them they must become “white traitors” and then advocate for full “white abolition.”
      A Department of Education-funded conference advocated for “abolition” of American institutions and told whites they must “give up” their “wealth.”
      No one is saying don’t teach history and teach it as unbiasedly as possible (with facts). The thing is CRT isn’t really about history, it’s about controllíng mínds and separating everyone today into two categories: øppressed or øppressor.

    • @CalifornianSupremacy
      @CalifornianSupremacy Před 11 měsíci

      @@GhostSalnot a single thing you claim is sourced, bad disinformation bot. Reported.

    • @Capri_00
      @Capri_00 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@GhostSalno one, not even myself read that.

    • @GhostSal
      @GhostSal Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@Capri_00 So you’ll watch was essentially an infomercial for CRT but you won’t read anything that raises concerns about CRT. No worries, stay in your confirmation bias bubble where you feel comfortable. I was on the left my whole life until I actually started researching what they were telling me.
      My point is, you will never know what the actual truth is unless you are willing to do your own research with an emphasis on staying objective.

    • @Capri_00
      @Capri_00 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@GhostSal didn’t read that last comment either.

  • @jonkubina
    @jonkubina Před rokem +21

    Can we just get a whole episode of Ally telling stories?

  • @DMGamer_PC
    @DMGamer_PC Před 2 lety +874

    As much as there is to talk about here, I just want to take a step back and thank the LWT team for continuing to put these main segments up for public viewing online. Whether or not everyone sees it, having this kind of analysis available is a genuine service to the public, and it would be VERY easy for them to paywall it behind an HBO sub. Hats off to Last Week Tonight, and thank you for the continued act of generosity.

    • @cj.lambert
      @cj.lambert Před 2 lety +21

      Yes totally agree the fortunes we have, having free knowledge programs like this

    • @whathell6t
      @whathell6t Před 2 lety +7

      @@cj.lambert
      If only that would stop the book burnings from public libraries. And these day, libraries are more important. No impoverished person can afford to buy a book from Amazon Kindle.

    • @whathell6t
      @whathell6t Před 2 lety +10

      @@jenspersson8321
      Wrong thread, dude.
      This thread is not talking about CRT. It’s just giving thanks to the NWT for the presentation.

    • @depreciatingasset
      @depreciatingasset Před 2 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/SxLsTLNwlmg/video.html

    • @sydgriffin7591
      @sydgriffin7591 Před 2 lety +2

      Excellent point! This is high quality and much needed informative discussion, and I'm grateful to be able to watch. Thank You LWT!!!

  • @johnchessant3012
    @johnchessant3012 Před 2 lety +989

    Related to the "whose discomfort are we prioritizing" question, one of my favorite MLK quotes:
    "I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to "order" than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: 'I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action'; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man's freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a 'more convenient season'. Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection." -- MLK, "Letter from a Birmingham jail", 1963

    • @noor5x9
      @noor5x9 Před 2 lety +36

      Wow, that's a pretty nice quote

    • @Myster1970
      @Myster1970 Před 2 lety +16

      Amen

    • @kckillakrack9714
      @kckillakrack9714 Před 2 lety +16

      You mean the white liberals who been running minority communitys for over 100 years, providing zero change or improvement then blaming it on conservatives? Lol

    • @FretfulClown95
      @FretfulClown95 Před 2 lety +77

      @@kckillakrack9714 It’s astounding how someone can arrive to this conclusion.

    • @utilid4lifefigureitout602
      @utilid4lifefigureitout602 Před 2 lety +51

      @@kckillakrack9714 Meaning moderates from all parties you ignoramus.

  • @jmdean_
    @jmdean_ Před rokem +6

    Beautiful perspective by Kimberle Crenshaw here, thank you for incorporating this clip into your segment

  • @_somerandomguyontheinternet_

    Kudos to the editor at 19:26. That *cannot* have been easy to get the timing right on.

  • @rodyaraskolnikov7864
    @rodyaraskolnikov7864 Před 2 lety +1457

    I had a 6th grade teacher (in Canada) who spent a year talking about discrimination and tolerance, the history of segregation /slavery in North America, different cultures, and the struggles experienced by people of colour, blind/deaf people, mentally challenged people, physically handicapped people etc. She even brought people in to explain the struggles they go through on the daily etc and invited teachers to come in when they went on vacation and tell us about their trip and the different cultures/experiences. I credit her with the fact that all of those kids became nice, tolerant and curious people despite coming from a bad neighbourhood and poor circumstances.

    • @jhonklan3794
      @jhonklan3794 Před 2 lety +18

      Except you have no evidence to back such statements up. Simply anecdotes. Academia needs to be founded on empiricism.

    • @tysonkauth7232
      @tysonkauth7232 Před 2 lety +54

      @@peterb5235 it's not lumping them in with disabled people, skin color is not a disability. It's giving examples of people that are discriminated against.

    • @tysonkauth7232
      @tysonkauth7232 Před 2 lety +47

      @@peterb5235 no it doesn't. It merely shows that all manners of people are discriminated against. It's a wise lesson from the teacher, to show that discrimination comes in a lot of different forms, and learning empathy towards those discriminated against will make those students better at recognizing it in the future. It in no way insinuates that skin color is a disability.

    • @jessehachey2732
      @jessehachey2732 Před 2 lety +23

      @@peterb5235 The irony, as your comment is deeply offensive and ignorant of people with disabilities, many of whom do not “suffer”…🤦🏼‍♂️🙄 SMFH. That’s ableism at its finest - and you can’t even see your own bigotry as you criticize others of the same 🥴

    • @jessehachey2732
      @jessehachey2732 Před 2 lety +11

      @@tysonkauth7232 Exactly. And Peter here makes odd assumptions about people living with disabilities too, his disdain for skin colour being lumped in speaks friggen volumes about what he really thinks about people with disabilities SMFH.

  • @dontmatter966
    @dontmatter966 Před 2 lety +2540

    I remember my sophomore and junior year history teachers being real about history. If you aren't made uncomfortable you're doing it wrong. History is cool, but it's also icky

    • @grumpycat2092
      @grumpycat2092 Před 2 lety +69

      Absolutely. And I think, if someones patriotism makes them feel too uncomfortable to talk about the shit thats going on or was going on in their country, maybe they should take a step back with their patriotism, bc it is not healthy... Feeling uncomfortable is normal.But feelingso uncomfortable, that you just want to erase proof of what happened from the records, is clearly not.

    • @chinchillin2262
      @chinchillin2262 Před 2 lety +39

      I remember my AP US History teacher telling us to get the book Lies My Teacher Told Me and he prepared us for the AP exam questions that you had to answer wrong to get right (eg. The civil war was about ... He'd tell us the answer is slavery but you have to select states rights if you want credit for it on the test) seriously disturbing but I was thankful he was honest with us and didn't want us limited to curriculum and devoid of truth.

    • @mrwilson7617
      @mrwilson7617 Před rokem +14

      Look up how Hawaii became a state. I didn't learn it till I watched how on cable TV 40 years after I graduated HS.

    • @Arjun0905
      @Arjun0905 Před rokem +7

      Look no further than Japan to see where not feeling uncomfortable during history class takes you. I asked my teacher about a topic that was on the news at the time to further understand and he said "ok, maybe later".

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Před rokem

      CRT is surrounded by Myths and made out to be a Boogeyman,
      so you may wanna double- and triple-check what you know/believe about it.
      BUT WHATEVER. Honestly, more on my mind:
      Have you seen 'The Past, Present, And Future Of Work - SOME MORE NEWS'?
      I was surpirsed just how much 'for the average Person' and how 'universal' this video is.
      Legit: who cares what political Orientation this guy has? His videos about Work and Unions
      and also Inflation are Universal.

  • @adirsu
    @adirsu Před rokem +5

    4:59 Confront Inequality
    10:47 We need to talk about race to present day.
    11:52 Chris Ruffo taking education dollars.
    13:09 School Choice and Segregration Institutions
    13:34 Florida and indoctrination.
    14:57 Current Affairs Teacher argument against criticism. Fired for not giving varying points of view.

  • @oliviapare7346
    @oliviapare7346 Před rokem +8

    Rewatching this with my College being taken over by Rufo himself is hitting different

  • @shermanculbertson6244
    @shermanculbertson6244 Před 2 lety +1488

    3 months without John Oliver felt like 3 years. Welcome back John!

    • @Syiepherze
      @Syiepherze Před 2 lety +2

      @CarAudioMan16 ok

    • @h7opolo
      @h7opolo Před 2 lety +3

      notice crime rates increase when society is denied their comedic relief and moralistic lecturing via mass media.

    • @brigettedeva
      @brigettedeva Před 2 lety +1

      I’m pretty sure it WAS 3 years

    • @anisejones9482
      @anisejones9482 Před 2 lety +1

      I swear🤣

    • @RyanR20000
      @RyanR20000 Před 2 lety +3

      He was probably getting hair replacement

  • @inkynewt
    @inkynewt Před 2 lety +663

    Listening to later interviews from Dr. King is honestly heartbreaking. You can see how tired he was, how he was trying to hold onto dying embers. You can see how long the road he was looking down was. RIP, good sir.

    • @benwasserman8223
      @benwasserman8223 Před 2 lety +96

      Yeah. Not to mention things he openly advocated for like protesting Vietnam and pushing the Poor Peoples Campaign would have labeled him a “radical woke socialist” by the same people who use King’s dream as a shield.

    • @haydn-db8z
      @haydn-db8z Před 2 lety +12

      I sometimes wonder what MLK would think if he were watching what's happening in Philly, Houston, and Chicago today.

    • @thinkbeforeyoutype7106
      @thinkbeforeyoutype7106 Před 2 lety +13

      Exactly! America went from “home of the free and land of the brave” to “home of the slave and land of the cowards.” These rightwing RepubliCULTS are the biggest snowflake I’ve ever seen.

    • @chazdomingo475
      @chazdomingo475 Před 2 lety +7

      @@thinkbeforeyoutype7106 Home of the afraid. White Christians cannot accept that they won't dominate the country anymore. Well, you sold yourself out to the capitalists and now you're dealing with the rise of races that have historically been lower class because they're cheaper. Deal with it.

    • @peachybuttercrunch4409
      @peachybuttercrunch4409 Před 2 lety +2

      he suffered the big hit , being a trailblazer,going through so many days consecutively, like a linebacker breaking through so many lines of questioning, so many speeches, sermons and to so many pulpits. How exhausting!

  • @laurabustos6560
    @laurabustos6560 Před rokem +3

    Hearing John Oliver say "low key" was wonderfully fun!!
    Makes me think I may also be able to use this phrase someday!

  • @youngwang97
    @youngwang97 Před 10 měsíci +8

    As a Canadian, I was horrified when i learned how Canada treated Chinese immigrants in the early 1900s. But it didn't make me hate my country

    • @maximillianphoenix9374
      @maximillianphoenix9374 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Your not a proper Canadian your a Chinese who lives in Canada besides Chinese have always done much worse to their own go read a book 📕

  • @me.6953
    @me.6953 Před 2 lety +2277

    To add to the 'history lessons in Germany' thing this comment section has going on... When I was in 3rd grade, they took us on an excursion to a local former concentration camp, particularly infamous for medical experimentation on children, many of whom had been around our age. It was a deeply impactful visit, not despite but also BECAUSE of how deeply uncomfortable it was, because emotions often stick in our memory better than empirical facts do. Sure, it was a lot to take in at that age, but in retrospect I'm very grateful for that visit because it taught me about the horrors of the holocaust in a way no history book ever could.
    The banning of a book like Maus is honestly wild to me, especially with the flimsy excuses such as 'coarse language' (as if that's the issue here, srsly, wtaf) or the violence being age-inappropriate. How can you teach about something like the holocaust, or slavery for that matter, without mentioning the violence? How can you teach children the truth of the dark parts of history without causing discomfort, when that's something simply inherent in the subject matter that's supposed to be taught?

    • @TheLastAngryMan01
      @TheLastAngryMan01 Před 2 lety +139

      I read Maus as an adult and it’s a searing depiction of the Holocaust and its after effects on the survivors, depicted in terms a child could easily understand. It’s crazy that people are trying to censor it.

    • @dr.vikyll7466
      @dr.vikyll7466 Před 2 lety +95

      99% They didn't ban it for coarse language. 100% they don't like Jews.

    • @Roaming725
      @Roaming725 Před 2 lety +106

      I also think it's important that we learn about the atrocities so that we don't repeat them in the future.
      I once visited a former concentration camp/museum in Poland and I felt emotions that could never be expressed in words. Yet, I've encountered adults that deny it ever happened. We need to keep talking about these uncomfortable topics so we don't go backwards or repeat them.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Před 2 lety +26

      It's worth noting that being uncomfortable is one thing. When I visited Dachau when I was in high school, it was incredibly uncomfortable and mind-blowing. But, it's worth noting that it's not at all the same thing as what's being done in the US educational system where they'll pile onto that a bunch of racist lies in an effort to persecute white minority groups that may not have had anything to do with the particular issue that's being covered. My family arrived in the US after the civil war and settled into an area that was far away from any slavery, but somehow I'm supposed to be responsible and to contribute towards reparations even though for nearly that entire period, my family was dirt poor and barely any better off than the emancipated slaves. History is heavily sanitized to remove any mention of the ethnic cleansing of various white minority groups moving into the US up until the post-war period. There isn't even any meaningful acknowledgement when WWII covers up that internment camps were not Japanese only, in addition to the Chinese and other Asian groups that were close enough, there were Germans and Italians purposefully moved there, the reason why it was mostly Japanese had mainly do to with the fact that the Japanese were heavily centralized in the exclusion region and weren't as easily relocated to parts of the country not subject to the restrictions.
      I remember literally being told that black people now have high blood pressure because several centuries ago slaves pissed on each other on the ships they were brought to the US on. It was deeply uncomfortable to have to be the one to point out that it's bullshit. And it goes on fairly often where the schools are telling outright lies in order to inform the students that are just as racist as the racism that they're claiming to oppose.
      It's really disappointing that we accept this kind of bullshit. There's got to be a way that we can be opposed to neo-Nazis and the Klan without buying into the racist narrative that everything has been peachy-keen for various white groups that are all basically the same monsters that perpetuated race wars for centuries and delight in torturing and murdering people of color. I mean, they literally had to invent the idea of Hispanics in order to justify excluding various white ethnic groups from consideration. Even though Hispanic isn't even a real thing, it's a massive number of ethnicities that have basically nothing in common other than a common language.

    • @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley
      @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley Před 2 lety +65

      You ask how these things can be taught without mentioning their horrors...but that's exactly it. Regarding the Civil War, groups like the Daughters of the Confederacy gave schools history books that practically omitted slavery and rewrote that the war was just about land ownership in the south...not about the right to own slaves, as it actually is. Because it made them uncomfortable, they'd rather scrub away that it ever happened as opposed to learning from it. John mentions this in the video and now, it's happening yet again.

  • @jeronimo486
    @jeronimo486 Před 2 lety +1404

    Here in Germany, you can't escape hearing about the history of the Holocaust and World War 2. It is, obviously, a mandatory topic in school, and there are lot of documentarys about the time on german television and so on. Many germans are a bit tired of hearing that their grandparents and great-grandparents were terrible murderers who lost the war. Just a fraction of those are still somewhat leaning to fascism and naziism, most of them just don't want to hear about it because it is unconfortable to imagine what their own family members did back then.
    Catering that feeling and going easy on educating about the Holocaust would be BY FAR the worst thing the german state or society could do. The fact that the US debate about this kind of nonsense is deeply troubling. It is infuriating.

    • @chriskrassga84
      @chriskrassga84 Před 2 lety +80

      Kein Vergeben. Kein Vergessen.

    • @Dutch3DMaster
      @Dutch3DMaster Před 2 lety +59

      The same is true for people here (The Netherlands) finding out some of their family members, even if they are deceased for quite some time were part of the NSDAP or NSB. Unfortunately somehow people are not realising there's a fascist-to-be in our national government right now and are actively in favor of him and his party becoming bigger...

    • @LarsEckert_Molimo
      @LarsEckert_Molimo Před 2 lety +39

      And even though we do all that, there are still large groups in our society that lack the understanding of what history should teach us. Not to mention, that the words race or xenophobia occured not once in my time at a German school. History really is one of the most important subjects, not because of what happened but because of what is not supposed to happen again. Discussions harming this process of understanding and improvement indeed are infuriating.

    • @JaviusSama
      @JaviusSama Před 2 lety +29

      It's not so much WHAT is taught but HOW. In the US, CRT in early grade levels (little kids) has lead to cases where little white kids are forced to say sorry to black kids for things they are not responsible for.
      How would you feel if your six years old was forced at school to ask for the forgiveness of their jewish schoolmates for the holocaust?

    • @McAero08
      @McAero08 Před 2 lety +23

      Could not agree more. And with what we seeing with the rise of right wind parties and fascists all over Europe the history serves as a lesson to have to be prevented in the future.

  • @who_gave_me_a_pen9463
    @who_gave_me_a_pen9463 Před 8 měsíci +5

    Honestly, people really need to grasp the concept that a lot of history is uncomfortable, and that you should be uncomfortable learning about certain events. Like, I go to a canadian school, we have had many, many, many lessons on residential schools. You are supposed to see what our country did to the indigenous people and see that it was fucked up.

  • @luckystrike8547
    @luckystrike8547 Před 5 měsíci +15

    people who use the term "MARXIST IDEOLOGY" have never read MARX!

    • @utopianeconomics5814
      @utopianeconomics5814 Před měsícem

      Right, his whole point was to focus on class analysis; in the 1860s, he certainly wasn’t talking about how we need to teach about racism in the contemporary American judicial system to high schoolers.

  • @Decadentotter
    @Decadentotter Před 2 lety +625

    Man all I remember about talking about race and modern racism was spending the last week of high school history class speeding through the modern chapters. It was almost literally summarized as Dr. King solved all racism and 911 happened.

    • @R_A_3000
      @R_A_3000 Před 2 lety +20

      Yeah that makes sense especially if you went to school down south.

    • @Decadentotter
      @Decadentotter Před 2 lety +22

      @@R_A_3000 I didn't. I went to a school in the north east

    • @R_A_3000
      @R_A_3000 Před 2 lety +11

      @@Decadentotter Oh wow that's crazy because I went to school in the NE too. But my school didn't sugar coat it to us.

    • @oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368
      @oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 Před 2 lety +1

      Race is important but America needs to get over it because China and Russia are manipulating that hatred and playing the US like a perfectly tuned recorder. The more social divisions America has, the more domestic strife there is, the less likely the US will have a unified front against China/Russia forign aggression.
      Do you know how bigoted and xenophobic China is? It's insane. It's a monoculture and looks at other races and subordinate. They use the Uighurs as slave labour and harvest their organs for fuck's sake! The Han are the dominant race and view ANYone who isn't Han as inferior.
      Shall we not complain about China, despite it's egregious racial inequality because our own house is not in order? But by comparison, America is racially harmonious if we judge China with the same standards. Calling this 'whataboutism' is a weak deflection of cultural moral equivalence. We're all human and we've learned that denying someone their freedom better be for a good reason, and China has yet to learn that lesson. Yet they're the ones who help fund corporate American media into pushing racially divisive narratives.
      TL;DR--stop talking about race because it's holding America back and is part of the CCP's plan to socially divide the US. Or, if we continue to fixate on race, point the tip of the sword of justice to where it's needed most: China. For it is there where a genocide is currently taking place. Or to India, North Korea, or Nigeria where modern slavery still exists. America, by comparison, is pristine despite its sordid history.

    • @TheQuashingoftheTub
      @TheQuashingoftheTub Před 2 lety +12

      @@R_A_3000 I got real lucky woth my Texas history classes. We thankfully spent more time on Civil Rights and Slavery, however it was still a pretty truncated experience as far as I remember. We also spent a whole Nine Weeks studying Multiple Schlerosis instead of history for some reason, which is an important subject, but why did we waste an entire quarter on it?

  • @fjs5059
    @fjs5059 Před 2 lety +1115

    "If you don't get angry while studying History, you don't do it right." As a German Historian I wholeheartedly agree. There are times I feel like I don't deserve to be Happy After reading about the Holocaust, let alone to be able to laugh ever again. But I think the least I can do to kinda honour the victims, is to acknowledge their suffering and to learn about it to do my part that this won't happen again in Germany. It's like Oliver said at the end: "Yes it isn't easy. But Learning and growing never really is." An Amen to that.

    • @hanfbrot
      @hanfbrot Před 2 lety +29

      As a German, I can agree. B u t the term “race theory” implies that there is a diversity of human “races” in the first place. Which we as Germans definitely learned - is not true. so to me, with my cultural background, it sound pretty racist.
      For me it’s even hard to communicate with fellow Americans arguing about at this point. I like to go with the term ethnicity.

    • @matthewbyers4034
      @matthewbyers4034 Před 2 lety +4

      Lots of Germans and Brits with some strong feelings here. I wonder if there was ever a European nation that held slaves...

    • @jeffmacdonald9863
      @jeffmacdonald9863 Před 2 lety +42

      @@hanfbrot I agree ethnicity is generally a better term, but it's important to understand that although "race" isn't real in any biological sense, racism certainly is real in a cultural one. Which is what critical race theory studies.

    • @fjs5059
      @fjs5059 Před 2 lety +8

      @@hanfbrot I don't know if u noticed the struggle the translation of the Amanda Gormans Poem "The Hill we climb" into the german language caused. Among the Problems was the translation of the term "race". Bc the english term has not the exact meaning as the German term "Rasse". It's an oldfashioned term I don't like either in that context. But we agree that people can be racist towards each other bc they still use the old and insulting stereotypical and deregatory way of thinking and communicating they assume is right. And to point it out as that is important to adress that huge issue that still exists and is embedded in many layers of society. And that's what CRT is trying to do- to show that systemic und societal issues, that is actually humiliating towards people but seen as normal by many.

    • @sylviabrooksfunchess2438
      @sylviabrooksfunchess2438 Před 2 lety

      @@hanfbrot Barry
      The creation story:
      :God said; let us create man in our image... male and female created he them..."
      GENESIS 1:26
      It is a debasement of creation when a false narrative seek to divide the people.
      There are good and evil people. No one group has the market on racism.
      When however any government, the media, or the establishment tries to prejudice and guilt you into believing that a wgole group of people are racist, know without a doubt, that ther mottive is to pull the wool over the people's eyes, and to keep the people from seeing how they're robbing the people blind.
      Added thought:
      Each of us should ask one question; and that is who are the people whom they personally might disliked. And these people are those who lack good character.
      Martin Luther King he. said it best, and I quote; " I look forward to the day when Jews and Gentiles, Blackson and White, Catholics and Jews can finally join hands and singing in that old Negro spiritual, free at last! Free at last! Thank God Almighty we are free at last."

  • @RoughStoneRollingLapidary
    @RoughStoneRollingLapidary Před 7 měsíci +6

    15:18 The textbook he just talked about actually exists and is in schools? That blows my mind so hard I almost want to fly there and have it proved to me. I grew up and went to school in California. I didn’t even hear that there was a theory that the civil war was fought over states rights until I was in my mid-late twenties. I still have a hard time believing that anyone actually thinks that. Thats like hearing the entire east coast learned and actually believes that 1+1=7. I cant believe that education isn’t standardized in this country.

  • @jmmclaughlin1989
    @jmmclaughlin1989 Před rokem +5

    26:28 "When was learning and growing as a person ever really comfortable?"
    Cue the mic drop.

  • @Corso117
    @Corso117 Před 2 lety +676

    I am in the middle of reading "Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community" by MLK and I cannot recommend it enough.
    It really shows what we lost when Dr. King was assassinated. He was a true radical in the greatest sense of the word and incredibly eloquent. He absolutely had his finger on the pulse when it comes to America.
    Every high schooler in America should read this book. Too much of it unfortunately remains relevant today and the only way a multiracial America achieves its lofty goals of equality is by addressing its uncomfortable past and painful realities of today.

  • @aladoristcg3769
    @aladoristcg3769 Před 2 lety +570

    Standing ovation for using a clip of MLK filmed in color. He died in 1968, civil rights need to stop being talked about like ancient history.

    • @Madderthanjoker
      @Madderthanjoker Před 2 lety +33

      Yeah our history class always made it seem like all this shit happened long ago with their black and white films. Shit always pissed me off.

    • @SALEENS7GTR5
      @SALEENS7GTR5 Před 2 lety +22

      I've never heard/seen that follow up he did. Everyone needs to see that after learning about the Dream speech.

    • @dsproductions19
      @dsproductions19 Před 2 lety +6

      To be fair, that was 54 years ago. It's going to feel like a long time ago for any child in school, no matter what a teacher says.

    • @morganaalexander8672
      @morganaalexander8672 Před 2 lety +23

      @@dsproductions19 Yeah, but we're not just talking about little kids in school who feel like this. Showing black and white images makes grown adults feel like this was all in the distant past. My mother was a kid when he did that speech and my grandfather was in the crowd. Civil rights images are purposefully shown in black and white to give the feeling that this all took place in a time closer to the Civil war and Lincoln than today. It was cheaper to print in black and white at the time, but the images were in color when they were taken.

    • @ericanderson5195
      @ericanderson5195 Před 2 lety +2

      @@morganaalexander8672 I guess if you're really low iq that a black and white video could easily deceive you into believing MLK was with Abraham Lincoln and the civil war 😆 🤣

  • @bbjaessiraslan970
    @bbjaessiraslan970 Před rokem +5

    The original teacher who did this exercise then switched it halfway through the experiment to brown eyes being the higher class and blue eyes were then treated as "less than". I'm curious, if other teachers have done this experiment or lesson, are they stopping with the brown eyes and not doing the switch? I feel that would nullify the entire point of the lesson. It was an elementary version of the prison experiment where being told who was prisoner and who were guards led to an observable and intrinsic undeniable example of human nature and how power corrupts. Like animal farm or lord of the flies.
    This entire lack of understanding or denial of verifiable scientific evidence is so very confusing to me. I find the effects of this heart wrenching.
    People have to respect the existence and experience if others. Just because it is not your experience or that you find it uncomfortable to consider this incomprehensible experience someone presents to you does not give you the right to diabolically choose ignorance and completely deny it's validity and effect on someone else.
    "When someone tells you you hurt their feelings, you don't get to say you didn't."
    -c.k. lewis (if I remember correctly)
    The point is to stop teaching people what to think and teach them how to think.
    Teach them to stop arguing to find out who is right by teaching them how to have discussions to find out what is right.

    • @Onigirli
      @Onigirli Před 5 měsíci

      lmao @ the "c.k. lewis" making him sound like that author. Comedian/masturbator Louis CK you must mean, yeah, and the quote is basically right but it was said in response to physical pain from someone jostling him too hard

  • @souldrinkerducy
    @souldrinkerducy Před 11 měsíci +4

    Comment from 2023. CRT is presently only taught in 1% of schools in USA. A weird peice of news is Ron Desantos recently was in the news fighting CRT being taught even though the number of schools that teach it is so low and none of those schools are in Florida.

  • @blablubb1234
    @blablubb1234 Před 2 lety +609

    As a German who knows about German history very well, I really get a bad feeling about laws banning books from schools. We’ve been there 85 years ago and as the world knows, that hasn’t ended well.

    • @spitxfire99
      @spitxfire99 Před 2 lety +24

      Are you concerned about the pro-CRt advocates removing books such as To Kill A Mocking Bird and Shakespear from school curricula on the basis that they are "whitewashed"? Weird how John doesn't mention that in his 30 minute tirade.
      There's a lot of other stuff he fails to mention, I wonder why...

    • @FretfulClown95
      @FretfulClown95 Před 2 lety +23

      @@spitxfire99 Source?

    • @hurrly9036
      @hurrly9036 Před 2 lety +9

      @@spitxfire99 How are thoey whitewashed? Have you read any Shakespeare?

    • @oceania2385
      @oceania2385 Před 2 lety +8

      You and your countryman started this with the Frankfurt School, your government forced them out and they came here. Bear some responsibility for god's sake.

    • @spitxfire99
      @spitxfire99 Před 2 lety +12

      @@FretfulClown95 Look up "Newsweek- School drops To Kill a Mockingbird in a bid to decolonize program"
      There's literally schools who are removing books in efforts to "decolonize" their curriculum, yet John Oliver could giver less of a shit apparently.

  • @k.k.2157
    @k.k.2157 Před rokem +1148

    As an Italian, history is a tough and discomfortable subject, but discomfort is a necessary aspect of the learning process and it's only by embracing it that we get to know our past, our history with all its sad and unpleasant truths. After all, history is not about celebrating ourselves, it's about learning about ourselves.

    • @GhostSal
      @GhostSal Před rokem +2

      I agree, CRT is that really about history? That aside, what do you know of what Italians went through in the US? As a Sicilian myself, I’m curious what you know.

    • @jimwitt21
      @jimwitt21 Před rokem

      Try being British! We teach history, but don't talk about the opium wars, our role in the American civil war, the Irish Famine, the devolved nations getting forced into Union, the East India Trading Company, Suez Canal, Churchill sending the army to shoot Welsh miners, Kenya, Windrush.....

    • @valdurion6779
      @valdurion6779 Před rokem +2

      It's only tough when the teacher is peddling the wrong interpretation to make modern day people who had nothing to do with anything feel bad. Why don't they teach people that black slavers caught and sold the slaves ever? That's why people are against CRT, biased view points that are 'uncomfortable'

    • @Free.Clear3802
      @Free.Clear3802 Před rokem +16

      @valdurian I'm so sure that is the exact reason. I've heard and read a plethora of court and government officials, politicians, parents and saying that is the reason they are opposed to teaching ANYTHING they don't like. Bull! As a descendant of slaves, freemen, and white Europeans I can say we know that African tribes sold other members of opposing African tribes. It was taught. Maybe not where you are from? That's not the issue. The issue is people don't want to teach any of it at all. How are we supposed to add that lesson and history to those courses when people are saying the courses shouldn't exist in the first place? That's like saying 'some people are allergic to peanuts, so we shouldn't show pictures, movies, books or talk about peanut butter. Ever.'

    • @mobo7420
      @mobo7420 Před rokem +15

      @@valdurion6779 1) of course modern day people still have to do with the stuff back then. the discrimination of black people in the USA continues until today. kk2157 says they are Italian - and Italian voters just recently voted a neo-fascist into office. So of course the present is connected to the past. 2) of course there were black slavers in Africa, but does that excuse the white slave traders, the white slave buyers, and the white slave owners? You don't have to feel personally guilty for something you didn't do, but the segregation of black people in the USA is still happening, as you can see in the examples in the video you are commenting (e.g. the game of separating students into blue and brown eyed groups)

  • @kezkezooie8595
    @kezkezooie8595 Před rokem +3

    That blue eyed/brown eyed social experiment that John's writer was in at school was botched if the brown eyed people were the group considered inferior. It's the people with blue eyes who are supposed to be the underdog in that experiment. I don't know what her teacher was thinking and I hope it was done out of incompetance and not intentionally as a not so subtle show of racism. I can only imagine how fucked up that school day was for her and her brown eyed classmates.

  • @GypsyWeaver
    @GypsyWeaver Před 6 měsíci +2

    I graduated from what was, at the time, the number one public school in the US in 1999. Yeah, a long time ago. But it was a great school, and overall, I was VERY lucky in my history education. But my US history education never went past WWII. Every year of US history started in the 1700's, and we NEVER made it past 1945. That really kept us from questioning the modern world, beings that we never had to study anything in the modern world.

  • @cshaslag
    @cshaslag Před 2 lety +320

    As a chemistry teacher, I fully appreciate you shout-out to covalent bonding.

    • @gatkaonlymychannel201
      @gatkaonlymychannel201 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/9kKFzmXCc_Q/video.html

    • @Q_QQ_Q
      @Q_QQ_Q Před 2 lety

      Mutual ( double ) covalent bond

    • @MyLoveBarnett
      @MyLoveBarnett Před 2 lety +1

      I thought they did a good job on 21 Jump Street lol

    • @alive_twicedead_once34
      @alive_twicedead_once34 Před 2 lety

      Lets teach how the *democrats* in the 1700s-1800s who said black people
      are not really human, are not as worse as *democrats* in the 1900s-2000s
      that say babies in the womb are not really human. *Because babies in
      the womb can't even fight back when their being killed.*

  • @markkennedy9263
    @markkennedy9263 Před 2 lety +290

    As a teacher, I think that it's important we teach the history of America the way it happened not the way Texas wants it to have happened.

    • @darkprince56
      @darkprince56 Před 2 lety +21

      I'm in Texas & we do learn of the horrors of how non-whites were mistreated in this country.
      Critical race theory asserts, without evidence, that the US and its institutions are _still_ inherently & irredeemably racist, now & forever. It bases these assertions on past transgressions & dismisses the reality of the progress & evolution of the US as a nation & a culture over the past 245 years. It’s racism disguised under the cloak of anti-racism. It’s nefarious & damaging because it conditions non-Whites into a state of learned helplessness. It tells people like me that no matter what we do, we'll forever be perpetual victims of oppression & that success or happiness is reliant upon White action.
      CRT is damaging because the way they're teaching it. They're having children "deconstruct their whiteness and privilege" or to see themselves and their non-white classmates as oppressors and oppressed, they're being taught to judge by skin color instead of character. This only serves to create resentment, tribalism and racism where it didn't exist, and exacerbate it where it did.

    • @EdaugEthanbYT
      @EdaugEthanbYT Před 2 lety +22

      Student here. I’d love to learn about CRT despite the fact I’m not eligible to. Also I really respect you for teaching us for a shit salary and no benefits

    • @markkennedy9263
      @markkennedy9263 Před 2 lety +39

      @@darkprince56 That is simply not the fact. As someone who has been teaching history in Texas for 32 years (If you would allow me to use anecdotal evidence) I can attest that critical race theory which is not even taught widely in our curriculum, can help students approach to other atrocities and events that occurred in history. It is simply teaching history as it occurred and expanding on the belief that there are people who because of slavery and our past currently are racist and believe that one race is more superior to another.

    • @markkennedy9263
      @markkennedy9263 Před 2 lety +16

      @@EdaugEthanbYT Thank you. I suggest you buy the book that John Oliver was talking about or there are also some great videos on CZcams that you can research.

    • @EdaugEthanbYT
      @EdaugEthanbYT Před 2 lety +10

      @@markkennedy9263 I’ll make sure to watch those videos and when I have enough money, buy that book. Thank you!

  • @Til_What
    @Til_What Před 6 měsíci +3

    US Americans really do think they are the chosen few who get to not feel shame in history class, huh. Don't think ya earned that one, friends.

  • @shawns1050
    @shawns1050 Před rokem +3

    I just love that John Oliver made that subtle jab at the bro-man joe rogen

  • @alysarianeed1748
    @alysarianeed1748 Před 2 lety +252

    I'm french, and my country had slaves and colonies too, and I was told about the strong racism that existed and that still exist at certain levels. Yet I don't hate my country, and I never felt bad for being white. It showed me how far we were back then, and that there is still work to do, but more importantly, it showed me that it was better to learn from the mistakes of our ancestors, and to not disregard our history, even if we don't like it.
    (sorry if there is some spelling mistakes)

    • @ashtonhoward5582
      @ashtonhoward5582 Před 2 lety +23

      No no, your spelling was great and thanks for sharing

    • @MrFlatage
      @MrFlatage Před 2 lety +2

      @@ashtonhoward5582 Awh not ending sentences? You were taught critical grammar theory am I right?

    • @Pandemonis
      @Pandemonis Před 2 lety +6

      Yeah but we have a revisionist polling at around 15%... :/

    • @PerryCoxPF93
      @PerryCoxPF93 Před 2 lety +7

      You should absolutely STILL hate France because of the neo colonialism taking place in West Africa and the CFA Franc

    • @MrFlatage
      @MrFlatage Před 2 lety +1

      White is in fact the most important colour to focus on for the French. When facism and racism came to France? They raised that flag being pure white ... and then worked with the facists and racists to deport? How many non white French?
      France has a proud history of using capital letters for 1000s of years. Yet you hate them and dishonour the 'french'.
      Sorry if me being critial of that offended you. I will wait for a letter from any 7yo French girl that is really cute.

  • @null090909
    @null090909 Před 2 lety +391

    Learning about racism at school is a conspiracy to divert our attention from the real problem: learning the recorder.

    • @thewaffle003
      @thewaffle003 Před 2 lety +6

      I'll take interpretations I can get behind for 500

    • @nersharific813
      @nersharific813 Před 2 lety +10

      You had me in the first half NGL 😂

    • @costeris35
      @costeris35 Před 2 lety +14

      The instument of Satan.

    • @BlindErephon
      @BlindErephon Před 2 lety +9

      Do kids actually learn the recorder or just fuck with it going "booodle oooodle oooooooo" for hours until you throw the fucker away or they lose interest and lose it? I've never seen a single kid play one properly.

    • @baileypratt185
      @baileypratt185 Před 2 lety +2

      Learning about racism at school is a conspiracy to divert our attention from the real problem: the southern border.

  • @Wedgetail14
    @Wedgetail14 Před 7 měsíci

    I spent a holiday in Taiwan recently with a four-person travel group. The leaders were a couple from Florida. They are good people, really. However, at one point, the dinner conversation took an uncomfortable turn as the husband went into detail about his opinions on CRT. He says it teaches kids that America is evil and should be hated, that patriotism is bad, and many other things that I tuned out, while sitting there in discomfort.
    I didn't reply or comment, because I couldn't think of anything. I wish I could show him this video explaining everything, but he won't want to see it. That "embedded in legal systems and policies" might be exactly why he thinks that, but being aware of it and acting upon that embedment is the right thing to do. It will leave the dark past behind, more or less.
    Let's hope more people do just that. Act upon it.

  • @baoge4591
    @baoge4591 Před rokem +3

    CRT? For some reason the first that popped into my head was Cathode Ray Tube, the big blocky tv monitors that was created and used before LCD monitors.

  • @KatarinaTVD
    @KatarinaTVD Před 2 lety +368

    In my country we went to a concentration camp run by our Nazi collaborators in *middle school*, you can bet it caused anguish and discomfort but I always thought it was a very important experience, and I remember I wanted to know the truth of what happened, no matter how terrible. There are people who like to downplay the horrors of WW2 in my country but I like to think most of us kids who saw those letters and clothes and names and little pieces of life from people who were brutally killed, won't believe in those who deny it, and won't forget about it so easily. It's important to have these uncomfortable conversations to make sure we don't repeat the same horrible mistakes.

    • @ProkofNY
      @ProkofNY Před 2 lety +10

      No serious critic of CRT is against the comprehensive and realistic teaching of the history of slavery and racism (or any other historical atrocity). The issue with CRT is that, for example-if it were to be applied to Germany and the Holocaust-it would teach students that the reason the Holocaust happened is because of the Nazi’s “whiteness.” It would further explain that all Germans today have been socialized into the same system of “whiteness” as their 1930s counterparts.
      In the US, “whiteness” is now understood (particularly amongst a certain ideological demographic) as an abstraction of all that is bad with the world (including “oppressive” academic subjects such as math and physics-if you don’t believe me, please independently corroborate). When we talk about CRT, we are talking about a worldview centered around the belief in ever-present/inescapable systemic oppression (this is one of the ideology’s tenets). Such a worldview is simplistic, centers group identity over the individual, and is not really conducive to dialogue, justice or understanding.

    • @HeyyyitsBell
      @HeyyyitsBell Před 2 lety +3

      @@ProkofNY I agree. Thank you for articulating it so well.

    • @jeremysmith4620
      @jeremysmith4620 Před 2 lety +27

      @@ProkofNY If you use some non-scholarly definition of CRT, like most of the talking heads do today, then perhaps. CRT and the Holocaust don't exactly match up 1 for 1, as CRT began as a distinctly American legalistic point of view. Being fair, and actually using the frame of reference for what CRT is in reality and not just what critics want to frame it as, would actually look at the institutions, laws, and other norms of government, society, and business at large in Germany that allowed for anti-Semitism to take hold and be used as a weapon against citizens. There are somewhat similar parallels that can be drawn, like America's history of red-lining and Germany's creation of Jewish only districts where they weren't allowed to own homes or land outside of those areas. It also isn't just a coincidence that both of these area have been historically titled ghettos.
      It is the effects of racism and using legal and financial means to systemically separate and disadvantage others/minorities that the actual theory is concerned with. The inclusion of "whiteness bad" tends to be a more reactionary and reductive response to many of these criticisms instead of a willingness to actually examine how the past has effected the present and will effect the future. This is where another fitting parallel can be drawn. Saying that the former laws and systems of slavery in the US and the subsequent Jim Crow laws somehow hasn't effected black people since slavery ended and somehow won't hold sway on the future is just as ridiculous as stating that the events of World War 2 and actions of the German state didn't have any effects on the Jewish people after September 2nd, 1945.
      I think America could learn a great deal by honestly looking at Germany and how they teach World War 2 and the legacy of the holocaust when attempting to shape curriculum that addresses our past. The legacy of slavery, Jim Crow, and many other issues like imperialism simply can't be hand waived away and our future generations are better off confronting these topics head on so that they never occur again. It is the complete and utter lack of this discourse that is dangerous. This is where I will disagree with your first premise, as there are critics of CRT that don't want the actual history or ramifications of slavery taught in schools at all. There are many school districts today in our country that have removed any text or library books that even refer to slavery as a cause of the civil war. You may believe that is not the case, but if you begin in examining select school districts in Tennessee, Kentucky, and several other states that this is very much the case. Having a conversation about curriculum is one thing, but outright removing books that deal with and discuss race is simply un-American by its very premise and will do nothing but hurt the coming generations. Books and theories don't hurt children, not being able to learn the important lessons found inside and being able to synthesize those concepts for themselves is what will be truly detrimental to youth in those school districts.

    • @ProkofNY
      @ProkofNY Před 2 lety +1

      @@jeremysmith4620let’s first clarify how the notion that CRT is not taught in k-12 schools is incredibly disingenuous. My kids have a state-mandated critical pedagogy framework based on the scholarship of critical race theorist Gloria Ladson-Billings (know for introducing CRT in schools back in *1995* ). This framework is called “culturally responsive sustaining education” but it might as well be called “CRT as it applies to education” it wouldn’t make _any_ difference. The framework is so highly politicized that two thirds of its goals (vision, page 4) deal with the “critical lens/critical consciousness” and “sociopolitical consciousness.” Further, it is specified that k-12 students will see the world using a single lens (the “critical consciousness,” of course). As a liberal who is for critical thinking I find this framework aimed at young children deeply troubling.
      Yes, the motto “whiteness bad, ‘social-justice’ good” (where “social-justice” refers to a specific ideology, and *not* justice as an ideal) is simplistic to the extreme. This is particularly true when critical pedagogues and critical race theorists consider critical thinking part of “whiteness” or label it as “epistemic oppression.” It is not hard to see how simplistically these ideas are currently applied by “social-justice” scholars as evidenced by how subjects like math are now seen as part of whiteness/oppression.
      No, you cannot wave the legacy of Jim Crow/slavery away, but-with all due respect-any productive conversation on the topic of justice needs to be able to consider whether or not oppression/racism are a factor when it comes to highly complex problems. How can CRT be an objective tool when it begins with Bell's thesis (racism is an integral, permanent, and indestructible component of this society)? Let’s not pretend that academic criticisms of CRT for its lack of objectivity do not predate the inclusion of the framework into these so-called culture wars.
      Critical thinking remains a valid and effective tool to address problems pertaining to justice. Additionally, the analytical techniques people associate with critical thinking value viewpoint diversity, are flexible by nature, and self-corrective. Critical thinking can even include many of the ideas coming from the “social-justice” scholarship/worldview as part of these important conversations. In contrast, the “social-justice” scholarship aims to teach its core beliefs to students at the expense of critical thinking; the “critical consciousness” in my kids’ framework is not to be questioned or doubted under any circumstance. Consider the following quote by intersectional feminist and gender studies scholar Alison Bailey’s (Tracking Privilege-Preserving Epistemically Pushback in Feminist and *CRT* Philosophy Classes, 2017):
      “The *critical thinking* tradition is concerned primarily with epistemic adequacy. To be critical is to show good judgement in recognizing when arguments are faulty, assertions lack evidence, truth claims appeal to unreliable sources, or concepts are sloppily crafted and applied… *critical pedagogy* regards the claims that students make in response to social-justice issues *not as positions to be assessed for their truth value,* but as expressions of power that function to re-inscribe and perpetuate social inequalities. It’s mission is to teach students ways of identifying and mapping how power shapes our understandings of the world.”

    • @jeremysmith4620
      @jeremysmith4620 Před 2 lety +6

      @@ProkofNY First of all I find some of your claims more than a little fluffed up for the sake of an argument I'm not even trying to have and never stated anywhere in my post.
      First off I think you are being insanely myopic. Ladson-Billings is certainly not the only voice where CRT is concerned and her work was mostly aimed at helping educators expand their effectiveness when communicating with black students.
      I have no clue why you are choosing to focus on her except maybe she is some new boogey-man of CRT opponents.
      You are throwing around a bunch of terminology without saying much of anything. I don't care what lofty goals are stated on the highest level documents in your particular state's K-12 curriculum goals. What actually matters is what is being taught to students. Sure, big words are scary to a great number of people in America and this type of Gish Gallop can then be used to insert whatever fear mongering that is the initial goal. Throw in a few critical frameworks here, a few pedagogies there, and a dollop of "intersectional feminist and gender studies" on the side to further scare people who have no idea what any of that actually means by using a quote that isn't very relevant to what I actually said.
      My comment was a critique of you stating that through the lens of CRT that the holocaust would be ultimately blamed on "whiteness" which was absolutely ridiculous. You don't want to actually answer to that absurd criticism though. You want to throw out a bunch of meaningless terms taken out of context, disjointed quotes, and buzzwords in an attempt to deflect from how utterly ridiculous your assertion was.
      If you knew anything about CRT or the actual issues at hand you wouldn't be trying to use buzzwords like "whiteness" which is so laughable because the basic framework that CRT analysis is built off of is that race is a social construct that is not only antiquated, but used to harm the outgroup through systematic means of integrating these ideas into very frameworks of the legal, political, financial, etc cornerstones of society that serve to further said oppression. No actual proponent of CRT is blaming anything on "whiteness" because "whiteness" isn't real. It is a made up fair tale used to establish an in group and power dynamic. No legal scholar (remember that CRT is a tool to legal analysis and isn't just any old thing you don't like about race taught to kindergarteners) is going to make an argument where the core issue and main problem is a racial identity that is a made up social framework they are working to abolish in the first place.
      People have lost their minds about this non-topic which does show just how much of a racist undercurrent there is in modern America. If all you can do is compare things to WW2 Germany, toss out meaningless word salad, pearl clutch about white fragility, and then finish with "won't you think of the children" then those who can't see just how meaningless and disingenuous your so-called argument is have already fallen prey to a sub standard educational system that didn't give them the tools necessary to suss out bad faith arguments that only appeal to the worst of emotions.

  • @angirassharma709
    @angirassharma709 Před 2 lety +322

    That TED cruz poetry slam is the longest and best recurring gag of all time. 😂

    • @lavrentivs9891
      @lavrentivs9891 Před 2 lety +1

      "Why am I persecuted?!"

    • @AlecSmolenskiMusic
      @AlecSmolenskiMusic Před 2 lety +2

      I literally screamed “PLS DO A TED CRUZ RHYME” as soon as it showed teddy boy. I was so happy🤣

  • @filthybonnet
    @filthybonnet Před 2 měsíci +6

    I'm a curator/wearer of many hats at a small museum in Florida and because of our "wonderful" governor Ron DeSantis we were denied grants. Why were denied state grants? Our museum deals with a community of free African Americans that was a stop of the Underground Railroad that was on the land before any of the white settlers in the area. Apparently teaching that there were free African Americans and runaway slaves on the land our museum is on in Florida while it was under Spanish control falls under Critical Race Theory.

  • @gibsonrickenbacker6317
    @gibsonrickenbacker6317 Před 8 měsíci +2

    And a year later DeSantis passes laws to say slaves benefited from slavery.

    • @midwintersnight
      @midwintersnight Před 7 měsíci

      And just last week, there were Nazi marches in Florida.
      People really have the audacity to ask why we need things like representation in media, pride and blm when this shit is happening NOW.

  • @patathatapon
    @patathatapon Před 2 lety +616

    As a Canadian, I remember learning about the Chinese migrant workers we basically killed to make our railroad. The aboriginals we screwed over, and even a pretty even look at Louis Riel, a Métis man who, from the governments perspective, was a terrorist. From his perspective he was fighting for the aboriginal people. I remember us being encouraged to write a piece on whether we thought his actions were justified or not based on our perspective. It seems like the United States just doesn’t seem to do that…

    • @hamatsa_
      @hamatsa_ Před 2 lety +4

      CRT is what happened to the natives-- leftists only replaced the church and residential schools on reservations. They only build cheap schools on reservations to deny special education needs of welfare cases multiplying unabounded. The few that do make it through are lobbied and ushered by there own professors into social justice where they return home unqualified to aid illiterate children with math. Youth are committing suicide with no history of abuse or drugs or alcohol at an unprecedented rate.

    • @westonmeyer3110
      @westonmeyer3110 Před 2 lety +1

      I don’t really give a fuck about Canadian history but I can confidently say at least half of what you learned was pure bullshit. The Chinese were a tiny minority of railroad workers in North America, ESPECIALLY in Canada.

    • @AL-fo3jj
      @AL-fo3jj Před 2 lety +17

      @@westonmeyer3110 don't know about your numbers for Canada, but it just wasn't absolute numbers I think it was the fact that the Chinese were brought in as cheap disposable people to build the railway in the rocky mountains.

    • @davidshillaker7578
      @davidshillaker7578 Před 2 lety +31

      @@westonmeyer3110 if you don't care about Canadian history, how can you say that it's BS?

    • @hollandscottthomas
      @hollandscottthomas Před 2 lety +33

      I'm studying for the citizenship test atm and there's a whole section on how badly they screwed over Chinese immigrants and how long it took to even apologise.

  • @Nassaldromus
    @Nassaldromus Před 2 lety +725

    My ancestors came from Spain and owned slaves. Was this correct? No. Is it something I should feel ashamed of? No. It was not me who owned slaves, but that doesn't mean that I should have been kept ignorant of the facts of history or deny them in order to protect my sensibility.
    We need to learn reality, not a whitewashed version of it. The understanding of the reality of racism does not make you racist. We all have the choice to work towards overcoming our weaknesses and retaining your strengths.

    • @Beretta249
      @Beretta249 Před 2 lety +66

      That's a brave thing to admit and it's tragically telling that I am 1/4 your upvotes. Because CRT insists that you are in fact responsible for the eternal misery and deprivation of the slaves of your ancestor. Because Whiteness.
      How that works if your ancestors were Muslims who weren't European changes the equation somehow, but not in a clear sense besides that the sum total is always Whiteness.
      I like John Oliver's content and investigations but too much remains unclarified. It's true that racist communities are using the CRT panic to create obstacles to teaching actual history, but that doesn't mean there isn't legitimate cause for concern. That bit about "CRT teaches that BIPOC people are holier than whites" isn't fake. The deliberate confusion that "maybe that's not real CRT" doesn't change the fact of that being taught _as Critical Race Theory._ That Critical Race Theory is hard to nail down despite being this morally obligatory is something worth being concerned with, not joked about and then ignored.

    • @ProkofNY
      @ProkofNY Před 2 lety +33

      It is hypocritical to claim that individuals on the right misconstrue the meaning of CRT, while simultaneously implying that CRT deals with teaching a realistic/objective/comprehensive version of the history of adversities and injustices in the US…one can teach a realistic version of the history of slavery/segregation without having to rely on ideas that derive from CRT. It is equally hypocritical to claim that a white washed version of history is biased, while elevating the 1619 projects as “unbiased” history. I am not saying, however, that individuals on the right do not misconstrue what CRT is, or that a whitewashed version of history is objective. Just pointing out inconsistencies and double standards that should be addressed so that dialogue surrounding these matters does not remain such a stagnant political power struggle.

    • @paintballplayer700
      @paintballplayer700 Před 2 lety +88

      @@Beretta249 " Because CRT insists that you are in fact responsible for the eternal misery and deprivation of the slaves of your ancestor. Because Whiteness." no it doesn't you banana. CRT is about how minority groups are still disadvantaged to this day because of baked-in policies in current laws that never considered their disproportionate effects on said minorities. I don't think any serious CRT scholar would say you should feel ashamed because your great-great-great-great grandfather was a slave owner. But I do think they would say you should learn about how slavery became Jim Crow, Jim Crow became neighborhood redlining, redlining became the war on drugs, and other ways that your ancestor's overt racism morphed into more subtle racism that still benefits you in 2022. If the end of slavery had magically ended racial discrimination, there would be no CRT.

    • @paradoxxis8612
      @paradoxxis8612 Před 2 lety +153

      @@Beretta249 "Because CRT insists that you are in fact responsible for the eternal misery and deprivation of the slaves of your ancestor." For the last fucking time, _nobody is putting responsibility on you to atone for the crimes of your ancestors._ Rather, they're trying to encourage people to _understand_ the shit your ancestors did and why it was wrong, and to understand the lingering effects that remain in our society as a result of it.
      Nobody is saying you're responsible for racism or slavery. They just want you to understand why it happened, how we can fix the ripple effects, and how we can prevent it in the future.
      Jesus Christ, has America just completely forgotten the old maxim about learning history and being doomed to repeat it?

    • @spitxfire99
      @spitxfire99 Před 2 lety +27

      @@paradoxxis8612 "Nobody wants to blame you for the actions of your ancestors, we simply want to castigate every action of yours that we disapprove of as being caused by your allegiance to whiteness, which was crafted by your ancestors. And we also want to tell white children that they propagate racism and oppressed non-whites implicitly, regardless of whether they know or not. There's nothing wrong with that! After all, don't you want to learn about history?"
      Yeah, please continue spouting this nonsense. It's actually entertainment for me at this point.
      The last thing CRT proponents want is an honest discussion on history. Far too many historical (and contemporary) facts are an inconvenience to their ideology.

  • @adrianafranco2741
    @adrianafranco2741 Před 5 měsíci +1

    The opposition to critical race theory is even more confusing when you consider how most schools barely teach history. It was literally optional in my school to take US history despite how we live in the United States. Why are they so worried when most people don’t even take history classes, let alone ever reach the level where critical race theory is taught…

  • @scottnelsen164
    @scottnelsen164 Před rokem +7

    Thank you so much for pointing out all the drama and insanity of a made up argument around an issue that virtually no one seems to understand. Someone imagined a boogeyman and got everyone else to believe there was one and they should be afraid of him. The emotional hype around this is astounding. I'm reminded of Orson Well's "War of the Worlds" radio broadcast and the hysteria that caused or McCarthy' s red scare in congress. This is nuts. You nailed it.

  • @alternativeplane
    @alternativeplane Před 2 lety +778

    Man, I always thought those villain monologues in movies where they lay out their entire plan were unrealistic, but I guess the villains really do that irl. These past few years have really shown how realistic those "unrealistic tropes" that we see so often really are

    • @onkelpappkov2666
      @onkelpappkov2666 Před 2 lety +26

      Some people's obsession with reenacting B-movies is going a little too far.

    • @oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368
      @oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 Před 2 lety +11

      The Chinese Communist Party does openly talk about how they like to leverage the American cultural divisions on race to fracture the US society.
      America is easier to play than the recorder.

    • @Hainabification
      @Hainabification Před 2 lety +9

      This is what American media does to you, you start to see villains

    • @Safe-and-effective
      @Safe-and-effective Před 2 lety +5

      @@Hainabification You're wasting your breath. There is no cure for brainwashing.

    • @avigailpekelman8239
      @avigailpekelman8239 Před 2 lety

      @@Hainabification are you saying that people do not change their opinions?

  • @joshcee3362
    @joshcee3362 Před 2 měsíci +2

    One problem with whitewashed history is that in all of my History classes, I don't remember ANY of them covering the Tulsa Race Riots and the literal execution of dozens of black residents and the mass graves they were dumped into.
    I had to learn this AS AN ADULT.

    • @dinahmyte3749
      @dinahmyte3749 Před měsícem

      I've read first and second hand resources about whyte people EATING Black people... they literally didn't consider it cannibalism because they didn't consider Black people to be human. We had people buying and selling mixed race children based on whether or not they were white passing. They used to have picnics below lynched bodies and sold post cards with pictures of dead and rotting bodies on them... Of course white people don't want us to know that, they want it to be "well, Black people just couldn't drink or eat from the places" instead of "yeah, selling children into slavery or child marriages was common because it's not like they were real people or anything."

  • @MenTaLLyMenTaL
    @MenTaLLyMenTaL Před rokem +2

    A law to "prohibit any teachings that would cause discomfort, guilt, anguish or distress solely because of the individual's race or sex" sounds so ridiculous to be coming from either side of the politics, an outsider couldn't guess at all.

  • @-DaMox-
    @-DaMox- Před 2 lety +186

    I'm German (and nowadays a teacher btw). Here in Germany, kids are being taught about our history from a pretty young age, and much more upfront than CRT is being taught in the US. When I myself was in 5th grade we watched/looked at pictures and documentaries about war crimes, concentration camps, mass graves, you name it. Did it make me feel uncomfortable? Of course it fucking did. That was the whole point. That's what confronting and learning from history means. And we didn't cover this only once and were done with it - it was a recurring topic througout my years in school. The Land of the Free and Home of the Brave is neither that free nor that brave it seems.

    • @ellapowell3437
      @ellapowell3437 Před 2 lety +11

      The weird thing is that in the US, we had a similar education on the holocaust at least where I’m from. Just not on our own history

    • @twichay1889
      @twichay1889 Před 2 lety +9

      Yeah... yeah. It's bad over here. We don't learn about smallpox blankets and the genocides the American people have committed. I learned "slavery bad, there were whips and also slave ships were bad. Okay so then the damnable Yanks came storming down and killed a fuckton of good people just for owning slaves. Oh also some natives died but that's not really important."

    • @pamelaporter4750
      @pamelaporter4750 Před 2 lety +9

      maximilianwmueller, It's worse than that. The republicans are openly fascist and racist, pursuant to the former loser president's scheme. He gave us 4 miserable years of lies, hate, and the distrust of science. Many are still teetering on the edge as they die, refusing to get a Covid vaccine, and are now intubated.

    • @istdochallesegal3427
      @istdochallesegal3427 Před 2 lety +2

      Well-said!

    • @-DaMox-
      @-DaMox- Před 2 lety +3

      @@ellapowell3437 That's just crazy. Imagine if the Germans only learned about the Vietnam War instead of their dark history... I bet the US would have their objections to that.