1970 SPECIAL REPORT: "HOUSTON SCHOOL INTEGRATION"

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  • čas přidán 20. 02. 2022
  • HOUSTON, Feb. 28 - Amid a clamor of protests from many parents and teachers, the Houston School Board, is mov ing toward voluntary racial integration of the Houston independent school district.
    With about 250,000 students and 10,000 teachers, it has been the largest segregated school district in the United States.
    Angry white parenth, some of whom have shouted threats at school board members, have been crowding meetings for two weeks to voice objections toward the action approved by a 4 to 3 board vote. Two organizations have been formed to oppose the ‘school board's actions.
    Economic reprisals have been made against at least two members of the school board majority. A number of motor ists have returned their credit cards to the Shell Oil Com pany where Dr. George Oser, one of the school board ma joility, is a research physicist.
    The Levy Clinic, where school board president Dr. Leonard Robbins is an asso ciate, lost one of its corpora tion clients because of the school board's decision.
    Dr. Robbins said that the school board majority had no intention of bowing to pressure and is determined to integrate peacefully Houston schools. He said that segregation was a disservice to both whites and Negroes.
    Expression of Hope
    “Many of our black young sters in Houston have been attuned to survival instead of achievement and we are hope ful that we can inspire some to aim higher than mere sur vival,” Dr. Robbins said.
    White students who are taught by Negro teachers “hopefully will learn respect and admiration” for accom plished Negroes, he said.
    “We want to prepare our young people to become pro ductive citizens and in today's society we believe this is best served in a desegregated situa tion,” Dr. Robbins said.
    #HOUSTON
    #BLACKHISTORY
    #CIVILRIGHTSMOVEMENT

Komentáře • 194

  • @HezakyaNewz
    @HezakyaNewz  Před 2 lety +14

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    • @HackedBy
      @HackedBy Před 2 lety +4

      Comeone @youtube @abcnews Stop demonetizing this channel! Let him keep doing this important work that nobody else is doing!!

    • @swankybutters8371
      @swankybutters8371 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm going to donate to you soon man, just need a little time... You deserve that and more... That kids speech at the end was very good... As Bruce was fond of saying. "Under the sky, under the heavens, there is but one family..." Truer words have never been spoken...

  • @BenHaMiqra
    @BenHaMiqra Před 2 lety +56

    As a lifelong Houstonian, I thank you for a glimpse of something I've only heard my old man talk about..Salute.

  • @char3497
    @char3497 Před rokem +18

    I'm a native Houstonian and clearly my first day in 1970 1st grade has a black male in South Park schools. I had no problem making friends with other white kids and only remember great moments. The parents and media made it more of an issue than it was.

  • @HicksterTexan
    @HicksterTexan Před 2 lety +23

    Children getting an education should have never needed to go through this. I was starting school in Houston during integration and then African Americans started moving in our neighborhood and some hated it and would burn their houses down. I was a kid and thought it was horrifying. 40 years later I went back to our old neighborhood and it’s full of prospering black people and I had to have a laugh because I loved it. We are equal and it should never have been an issue

  • @iantempleton313
    @iantempleton313 Před rokem +17

    Note worthy things:
    - There was not a single fat kid amongst this school.
    - Everyone is well dressed and put together
    - The students are punctual, respectful, and well spoken
    - The students are respectful to the teachers. No shouting, disruptive behavior, or talking back.
    - Yeah, there was some prejudice going on here, but most of the kids that were interviewed said all the right things.
    Somewhere along the line, we went horribly wrong in our society.

  • @chloeew4627
    @chloeew4627 Před 2 lety +96

    As usual the kids are so much more beautiful and honest compared to the adults.

  • @GR-hy3tf
    @GR-hy3tf Před rokem +37

    The kids had a lot of class back then. Amazing 🌺

    • @respectamerica3728
      @respectamerica3728 Před rokem +4

      Yeah because they all had married mothers and fathers, Black or White.

    • @pariahnation1284
      @pariahnation1284 Před 7 měsíci

      yeah....we used words like nigger, queer, faggot and said them with PRIDE!
      STILL DO

  • @icecreamladydream
    @icecreamladydream Před 2 lety +58

    Those black young females were sooo classy. we as black women can learn a lot from them

    • @JNante
      @JNante Před 2 lety +8

      It was learned in the home. Our parents had high morals and values and we were taught how to behave. That's not to say the generations after didn't have the same thing but we didn't have the level of social influences that exist today.

    • @HakunaMaPasta
      @HakunaMaPasta Před 2 lety +3

      just say girls

    • @forporter1
      @forporter1 Před rokem +2

      Absolutely! clearly we have not progressed because it shows in our women.

    • @damagecontroller8637
      @damagecontroller8637 Před rokem

      Tel- a-vision programming sucks

    • @goldenitri8748
      @goldenitri8748 Před 11 měsíci

      Agree

  • @tonekennel4353
    @tonekennel4353 Před 2 lety +38

    Damn, it seems like the interviewer was trynna provoke the kids to say something foul

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Před 2 lety +3

      TV reporters using film or video tape customarily would let the camera roll and prompt the speaker to talk, or just muse for a few minutes so they could find a sound bite or two to air.

    • @ericaseymour3732
      @ericaseymour3732 Před 2 lety +11

      The interviewer was the obvious one who had an issue & was trying to egg on the students to agree with him. They were already clear in the beginning that they were fine. This is so sad to watch how recent this was even up for discussion.

    • @tonekennel4353
      @tonekennel4353 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ericaseymour3732 agreed

  • @melissalogan75
    @melissalogan75 Před 2 lety +41

    Lmao the kids had more sense then the adults.

  • @Atitlan1222
    @Atitlan1222 Před 2 lety +44

    Interesting how the kids have such a different view than adults. Kids are less fearful. I live in houston and would love to see more videos from this time period.
    As a note, the high school I went to had maybe two african american kids and a a handfull of hispanic kids. My school was excellent academically but a social failure.

  • @sylundy
    @sylundy Před 2 lety +33

    Hey!!!!! Look at you with the vintage H town!!! I been waiting to see some old school Houston!!! My city❤

    • @sah-nae
      @sah-nae Před 9 měsíci

      Same ! This is a treat !

  • @NsyShwl
    @NsyShwl Před 2 lety +39

    Wow seems like a whole different world than today.. the kids seem so well mannered unlike most people today

  • @LaydieeB
    @LaydieeB Před 2 lety +27

    Although the name of the school has since been changed that school still exist. MC williams was located in Acres Homes(the 44 if you from H town). Acres Homes was and still is a predominately black community

  • @MaryJaneHancock
    @MaryJaneHancock Před rokem +8

    It would be great to interview these kids today. Would like to know how they think/ feel today.

  • @theamused8705
    @theamused8705 Před 2 lety +8

    It's a shame people actually protested racial integration in our schools.

    • @respectamerica3728
      @respectamerica3728 Před rokem +1

      I wonder what their opinions are of the LGBT? Black or White?

    • @alexjames1397
      @alexjames1397 Před 6 měsíci +1

      The problem is the integration was forced and unnecessary.

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 Před 2 lety +9

    Considering the scenes are about students walking into classrooms and their teachers starting lessons - instead of racist mobs screaming, it would seem it went well in Houston.

    • @BenHaMiqra
      @BenHaMiqra Před 2 lety +8

      Looks can be deceiving. I'm sure ABC wasn't available to catch every moment, in every district.

  • @tyezillaOG
    @tyezillaOG Před 2 lety +14

    Sad... look at Houston now! Shyt is embarrassing.... we gotta do better as a people! Respect 💯 to the elders that paved the way... while we fawk it up today...

    • @jona2sikk
      @jona2sikk Před rokem +3

      This shit getting outta hand fr mayne it's my generation that's gonna fuck it all up

  • @Catdaddy510
    @Catdaddy510 Před 2 lety +12

    This always shocks me no matter how much I have read about it. It wasn't that long ago.

  • @olijadu
    @olijadu Před rokem +7

    seems like every else has noticed in the comments also that the kids are miles more well-mannered than there parents, complete opposite today. shame. these videos are so important to serve as a reminder, now u can for yourself how things were. it seems like present day needs more lessons from the past more than ever

    • @THATBOISHAD
      @THATBOISHAD Před 8 měsíci

      No the adults are still acting foolish

  • @MrTnorth80
    @MrTnorth80 Před 2 lety +10

    Say bro thanks for posting this it was good too see some history from my city born and raised 🤘🏿 graduated from Houston school district

  • @TheMouseAvenger
    @TheMouseAvenger Před 2 lety +16

    Wait'll my grandma sees this! 😃

  • @gregman1715
    @gregman1715 Před 2 lety +6

    Your Channel Rock's 👍✌️

  • @southsidestilldripin1404
    @southsidestilldripin1404 Před 2 lety +8

    Good look from houston been waiting on you to drop something on us

  • @JordanWilliams-ix2td
    @JordanWilliams-ix2td Před 2 lety +10

    The Adults: loosing their mind & Scared
    The kids: You have on a Pokemon shirt, i love Pokemon lets be friends

  • @videojones9884
    @videojones9884 Před 2 lety +5

    I noticed that you don’t see old teachers like that nowadays. All my children teachers are younger than me and I’m 40

    • @iwarrior89
      @iwarrior89 Před rokem +1

      And they were mean as hell 😂 my kids have it so fun and easy.

  • @mugpush4816
    @mugpush4816 Před 2 lety +5

    Wow....Amazing to see my hometown, a few years before I was born...

  • @geriko1
    @geriko1 Před 2 lety +8

    I've only experienced school integration once in my life. I was adopted single parent adoption in 1976 from the east coast from Pennsylvania to the west coast to California when I was 10yo and I saw the very changes of desegregation in 1975 before I got to the west coast the following year. I was young but I could understand what was going on. There were a lot of negative thinkers of integration in Pennsylvania before I got to the west coast, lots of racist insults and small clashes between whites and minorities at the time. By the time I got to California, the only thing that was a worry was school bus integration in 1977 but I had a more pleasant school experience than on the east coast.

  • @jessetate9697
    @jessetate9697 Před 11 měsíci

    As a Houstonian i been trying to find this content about integration in my city thanks for tha content💯

  • @gmshadowtraders
    @gmshadowtraders Před 2 lety +4

    Before all the shootings, the drugs, and moral decay. Witness how it used to be.

  • @NoirL.A.
    @NoirL.A. Před rokem +5

    jesus look how thin everybody was back then!

    • @respectamerica3728
      @respectamerica3728 Před rokem +1

      Yeah, because everyone could survive one income and had a mother at home cooking homemade food for them everyday. With only one TV and telephone number per household.
      And the kids had no choice but to read books, play cards and board games, or went outside to play stick ball or ride their bikes.
      And divorce and single parent homes were rare and looked down on.
      Look all the boys wore pants, no jeans. And all the girls wore dresses. No expectations. Sneakers and sweat pants were only for gym. Denim Jeans were only for Blue Collar work.
      Next ask them want the thought about the LGBT?

  • @Invisiblesideoftheheights
    @Invisiblesideoftheheights Před 4 měsíci +1

    It breaks my heart that things like this were normal back then

    • @Walgreens27richmond
      @Walgreens27richmond Před 2 měsíci

      It makes my ❤️ happy that the children didn’t care about skin color

  • @jjackson6928
    @jjackson6928 Před 2 lety

    Great video

  • @ericwright2181
    @ericwright2181 Před 2 lety +4

    This my city!!! I went through the end of this in Aldine district

  • @Courtpie443
    @Courtpie443 Před rokem +2

    Oh my goodness that sweet teacher outside ❤❤❤

  • @aboutashow
    @aboutashow Před rokem +1

    Do you know the name of the guy giving a speech at the end?

  • @ccali327
    @ccali327 Před 2 lety +8

    To see the parents literally waiting there all day to pick up their teenage kids is really amazing. I love the thinly-veiled guise of "not wanting to go through the bad neighborhoods" to send their kids there. It's like saying "we don't mahnd are children goin to school with black folk. We just don't like havin to go through the black neighborhoods is all!" You could tell some genius came up with that as the "more politically acceptable" response as it was repeated by many. They knew they couldn't come right out and bash black kids, so they'll blame it on the bad neighborhoods. In hindsight, it appears equally moronic.
    I will say though, it was great to see the kids not minding at all, despite the loud objections of the parents and what they must have heard behind closed doors while at home.

  • @dougclem7711
    @dougclem7711 Před 9 měsíci +1

    In the eighties, Houston started the MAGNET SCHOOLS. Baytown children were invited to attend these specialized classes according to the students desired occupation. Medical, art, or industrial studies. But the underlying goal was to integrate Houston schools. Baytown schools started the same at HARLEM ELEMENTARY SCHOOL IN MCNAIR, A BLACK NEIGHBORHOOD just north of Baytown.

  • @ConwayTruckload
    @ConwayTruckload Před 10 měsíci +1

    I remember having a black teacher at Memorial elementary school in Houston in 71. She was a terrible person in the way she treated the white kids vs the black kids.

  • @chick-fil-agal2264
    @chick-fil-agal2264 Před 2 lety +3

    Wow been born in 1972 n attending school racially mix in 1977 never knew this wish my parents told me even though we had some prejudice in the school

  • @desertdetroiter428
    @desertdetroiter428 Před 2 lety +7

    The Latino kid at the end!👍🏿👍🏿

  • @JNante
    @JNante Před 2 lety +9

    This made me remember when I started being bussed to Jr. High in 1977. I was bussed to a predominantly white affluent area (Houston).The funny thing about integration is that although you make friends with different ethnic backgrounds you still pretty much group together with those that are more similar to yourself. Yes I made a few white and hispanic friends but my core group of friends were people who looked like me. What I will say is that going forward it did open up more possibilities when choosing High School's and College's. You became more exposed to what was available. For the most part people are people and I didn't necessarily ever think about color. Then again it's typically not the A/A folk who look at color, just saying.

  • @LaydieeB
    @LaydieeB Před 2 lety +4

    The activist at the end is that Adrian Garcia?

  • @PlasmaGrounded
    @PlasmaGrounded Před 2 lety +1

    The internet at it's finest

  • @vincentlara4563
    @vincentlara4563 Před 4 měsíci

    This was interesting! I am a Mexican American who grew up in the late 60's/early 70's. We were one of a few Latinos in a predominately white neighborhood, Southwest Houston. While we were able to attend the newer schools with better facilities/teachers we had cousins that went to inner city schools that were at that time, decaying. The young man at the end of this video was good! It would be interesting to see him/hear him today. He was spot on about the system trying to screw us by labeling us as "white" just to meet their criteria, it was screwed up and this young man was spot on!

  • @srgwyoutube
    @srgwyoutube Před 9 měsíci +1

    11:48 Her hyping the kids up is so cute 😂😂😂😂

  • @1HitCombo
    @1HitCombo Před 7 měsíci

    The Latino representative was spittin'. 🔥

  • @deshaefromarounthawayricha7324

    Salaam my brotha ✊🏾

  • @flex19112
    @flex19112 Před 9 měsíci +2

    These are the same people who fled their own neighborhoods once they became fully integrated LOL.

  • @johnduff3914
    @johnduff3914 Před 10 měsíci

    10:59 I remember that. The boys line and girls line. We had to hold hands in the 1st and 2nd grades.

  • @ladytee7311
    @ladytee7311 Před 2 lety

    They went to school together but it was still segregated on the inside

  • @astrobear5353
    @astrobear5353 Před 2 lety +4

    This is in Houston Texas were I'm from

  • @candysmith8724
    @candysmith8724 Před 3 měsíci

    First thing I noticed is all the kids were so well spoken and civilized. I can't imagine HISD having mostly white students. Today, I would never send my white kids to HISD schools! Now way!

  • @mrmckraken4893
    @mrmckraken4893 Před měsícem

    the kid at the 19:45 mark was incredible

  • @happygrandma4ruthP
    @happygrandma4ruthP Před 2 lety

    School was different back then. Certain schools offered more activities than others AND some school buildings were maintained BETTER than others.

    • @JordanWilliams-ix2td
      @JordanWilliams-ix2td Před 2 lety +1

      nothing has changed at all, TRUST! Everyschool i went to looked like an apple store, we ALWAYS had the most up to date technology, best Sports uniforms & warmup gear, we literally had 2 sets of different uniforms just cause, bags that had each teammate's names engraved on them & teachers who werent there just for a check & actually gave AF & stopped us from stopping ourselfs in life..yes i went to mostly white schools

    • @JNante
      @JNante Před 2 lety

      @@JordanWilliams-ix2td me too, and I always felt like I was missing out by not going to my home school. Because of the integration I only knew the kids within a specific radius in my neighborhood, while my "friends" in the hood knew everyone, because they went to school together.

    • @johnnylongfeather3086
      @johnnylongfeather3086 Před 9 měsíci

      They don’t now

  • @sr-ty7gb
    @sr-ty7gb Před 9 měsíci +1

    @4:04 Dude was checking her out. I think we know how he felt about school integration.

    • @kwadwotuffour5529
      @kwadwotuffour5529 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I think he's the one they interviewed later, and he had an interesting response. Saying he preferred the all white school he went to the year before. He mentioned the 'position' he had there.

  • @washredskin887
    @washredskin887 Před rokem

    this was the year I was born. shocking that this is once how it was in our country - that is was once a big deal for white and black kids to go to school together.

  • @aaronhoosiershrm-cpphr8362
    @aaronhoosiershrm-cpphr8362 Před 8 měsíci

    I had no idea that this happens in the 70s.

  • @samwheat8348
    @samwheat8348 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm out here in mo city tx

    • @jreidtastic
      @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci +1

      I lived in Lake Olympia when it was first built. Mo City has gone to ish, too.

  • @MargDBX
    @MargDBX Před 7 měsíci

    I wonder where all these kids are today? And what school is this?

  • @loronetrulliot2606
    @loronetrulliot2606 Před 2 lety +6

    MC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ACRES HOMES 44 NAWFSIDE

    • @jreidtastic
      @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci

      So, that’s the outhouse of the city. Gotcha.

  • @taurussun2228
    @taurussun2228 Před 2 lety

    4:45 bless their hearts. 💕 6:35 💕

  • @Tritone
    @Tritone Před rokem +2

    What were Mexicans hollering about?

  • @Stormylilly444
    @Stormylilly444 Před 3 měsíci

    NO MORE!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I AM LAJREN!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @woobuglauryn
    @woobuglauryn Před 2 lety +1

    Who is the boy in the tan shirt? Looks like Adrian Garcia??

  • @edk2221
    @edk2221 Před 2 lety

    Interviewer sounds like Dan Rather

  • @jubilantsleep
    @jubilantsleep Před rokem +1

    H-TOWN!

  • @WeezyJeffersonYo
    @WeezyJeffersonYo Před 2 lety +3

    TF is wrong with her? 6:03

    • @BenHaMiqra
      @BenHaMiqra Před 2 lety +5

      Nervous..

    • @ilovegot7754
      @ilovegot7754 Před 2 lety +2

      Lol cameras were huge back then and being in front of one wasn't the norm like it is now, she was probably very nervous

  • @respectamerica3728
    @respectamerica3728 Před rokem +1

    Now ask them back then Black or White want they thought about the LGBT?

    • @nicelol5241
      @nicelol5241 Před rokem

      they are probably homophobic thanks to Christians but, why not, it’s part of a culture such as it is part of the Greek culture
      what the hell do you have against lgbt people lmao

  • @dc9345
    @dc9345 Před 2 lety +3

    WHAT THE NAME OF THAT SONG

    • @HezakyaNewz
      @HezakyaNewz  Před 2 lety

      Paul McCartney

    • @Starshyne9
      @Starshyne9 Před 5 měsíci

      Little Woman Love from the Red Rose Speedway album from Paul McCartney and Wings (1973)

  • @babatall1283
    @babatall1283 Před 5 měsíci

    Who is the Hispanic-American activist

  • @jreidtastic
    @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci +1

    Look at the students in all of the HISD schools, today. Just a sprinkle of white students, if that!

  • @jailahbryel305
    @jailahbryel305 Před 2 lety +1

    Jesus loves you and died so you can have eternal life. Repent and turn to Him because He is coming soon! He loves you!

  • @kruls1101
    @kruls1101 Před 2 lety +6

    Chicano Power ✊🏾

  • @TriKyTriXx
    @TriKyTriXx Před rokem

    Who is that Latino speaker?

    • @GeeBee212
      @GeeBee212 Před 11 měsíci

      Whoever he is, he spoke nothing but the truth! A Brotherahead of his time. He saw that the Chicanos(today's Latinos) were being used as a wedge between whites and Blacks to fulfill the white agenda. He also mentions how Chicanos were accepted into whiteness out of convenience. Exactly what is going on today.

  • @robertogranadarriba507
    @robertogranadarriba507 Před 7 měsíci

    Que buenos años aquellos, donde habia mas respeto, valores y educación. Mucho se ha perdido hoy en dia, la sociedad está degenerada.

  • @glennbrymer4065
    @glennbrymer4065 Před 9 měsíci

    Here is how it went. I went to a high school in Houston in 1969.
    It was a damned war zone.
    The blacks ganged up, they broke into lockers and stole things. They assaulted white students regularly with no repercussions.
    I could not believe how they were acting. It was very bad. So bad, I quit that school and joined the US Army. Sadly the same crap was happening in the Army. The blacks ganged up and many had terrible attitudes. There was a lot of race BS. Overseas it was the same thing. It was all a real drag.
    It was hard enough fighting the enemy when you had to fight your own fellow soldiers too.

    • @nickporter574
      @nickporter574 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Interesting. All the other comments are so positive and full of nice rainbows! Thank you for sharing your version.

    • @kennethc9996
      @kennethc9996 Před 5 měsíci

      Did they beat you? 😏

  • @sherirobinson6867
    @sherirobinson6867 Před 2 lety +4

    Well, here in Texas today... nearly every first Baptist church has a school now. So the white kid's get their bible education and are safe from the public system.

    • @iwarrior89
      @iwarrior89 Před rokem

      Only rich kids, black and white go to private schools. I wouldn't spend 10s of thousands of dollars when my kids can get a perfectly fine education in a public school as long as they apply themselves.

    • @THATBOISHAD
      @THATBOISHAD Před 8 měsíci

      Get ready to be a grandparent at an early age

  • @adamwalker2377
    @adamwalker2377 Před 2 lety

    6:09 given the arguments that the segregationists were giving, they both missed the irony that she didn't understand the idiom.
    Something tells me Charles Murray wouldn't have missed that.
    14:20 Yeah...she's not being honest about why she's worried. It's not because her daughter is mixed with older kids. The reporter clearly knows the truth but is too smart to ask.

  • @jchow5966
    @jchow5966 Před 4 měsíci

    Still a very racist state. Many of my friends who moved to TX have moved back up here because their brown kids were terribly at their schools.

  • @randysmith2866
    @randysmith2866 Před rokem +5

    It wasn't just the parents--the kids also resented it. Integration led to a lot of violence in the high schools which resulted in massive white flight in the 70's. Surrounding rural areas like Conroe, Spring, Katy, Crosby, and the Woodlands doubled and tripled in size and became the thriving communities that they are today. Meanwhile, the urban schools became the decaying dropout mills that they are today. Integration was a good thing? Yeah, right !

    • @rockyrobleedo3008
      @rockyrobleedo3008 Před rokem

      Ain’t no white people in spring buddy 😂

    • @lolomar
      @lolomar Před 10 měsíci +1

      spring, thriving?? poor people getting pushed out of the city are moving there.

    • @jreidtastic
      @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci +1

      Spring is gone now. So, are the Klein schools.

    • @jreidtastic
      @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci

      Once the State of Texas noticed that White people were moving out of major cities, The State of Texas brought in the Robin Hood Plan, 1993. That was a waste of money.

  • @jreidtastic
    @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci

    The Vietnam War was going on, during this time.

  • @tincredible
    @tincredible Před 2 lety +14

    Somewhere, a Karen is throwing a tantrum over seeing a younger version of her sweet, cookie-baking granny on camera opposing integration. Lol. And this, my friends, is the root of the opposition against teaching Critical Race Theory.

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Před 2 lety +1

      Agree, but we need some Critical Karen Theory to move America past this outbreak of Karenphobia.

    • @Tomorrison28
      @Tomorrison28 Před 2 lety +5

      CRT is the opposite of judging by character instead of color

    • @tincredible
      @tincredible Před 2 lety +2

      @@Tomorrison28 The only people who oppose the teaching of CRT are those who don't want their own character and thought processes exposed and analyzed.

    • @lc6636
      @lc6636 Před 2 lety +2

      @@tincredible We need to teach to make kids successful. The schools are failing because of the failing family.

    • @tincredible
      @tincredible Před 2 lety

      @@lc6636 Not teaching the truth about society is contradictory to preparing kids for success. The simplistic assertion that schools are failing because of failing families (and not because of historic redlining of the neighborhoods they serve and historic underfunding) is proof of the why CRT needs to be taught.

  • @pee2702
    @pee2702 Před rokem +1

    13:48 woman right here needa stfu. like girl

    • @johnnylongfeather3086
      @johnnylongfeather3086 Před 9 měsíci

      She was a rape target

    • @jreidtastic
      @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci

      You need to stfu and work a comb through your hair, if that is your hair.

    • @jreidtastic
      @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci

      There is no way that I would let my 13 year old daughter go to a combined junior/high school, either.
      It’s not racist to understand that there may be a few 17 year old black dudes that want a piece of some white girl, no matter what it takes, outside of the community she lives in, with probably no help at all.
      You might like a black schlong in you mouth or twatt, but This Lady isn’t about allowing that to happen to her 13 year old daughter.

  • @tyreejosey1137
    @tyreejosey1137 Před rokem

    Black Texan girls

  • @bondi11668
    @bondi11668 Před 2 lety +7

    This country was good not great... Until Obama made it bad. And then this stiff in the White House we have now, said to him "Here hold my beer." 🤦‍♀

    • @desertdetroiter428
      @desertdetroiter428 Před 2 lety +10

      So the country was “good” through Japanese internment and Jim Crow?

    • @delma8937
      @delma8937 Před 2 lety +1

      @@desertdetroiter428 absolutely not

    • @jocelyngardner5711
      @jocelyngardner5711 Před 2 lety +2

      Obama didn’t live in America and he’s no kin to the Aborigine of America

    • @canderson718
      @canderson718 Před 2 lety +1

      @@desertdetroiter428 It was "good" for people like RageAgainstTheMachine" and his family.

    • @desertdetroiter428
      @desertdetroiter428 Před 2 lety

      @@canderson718 exactly!

  • @Salty.Peasants
    @Salty.Peasants Před 2 lety +2

    They won. It's now a jungle. An urban jungle. Congrats!

  • @jreidtastic
    @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci

    Look at the students in all of the HISD schools, today. Just a sprinkle of white students, if that!

  • @jreidtastic
    @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci

    Look at the students in all of the HISD schools, today. Just a sprinkle of white students, if that!

  • @jreidtastic
    @jreidtastic Před 8 měsíci

    Look at the students in all of the HISD schools, today. Just a sprinkle of white students, if that!