Trump tells parents to monitor schools to prevent students being ‘brainwashed’ with history of racism in new op-ed

 (REUTERS)
(REUTERS)

In a lengthy column published the day before Juneteenth, after President Joe Biden signed into law a measure to make the day commemorating the end of slavery a federal holiday, his predecessor Donald Trump raged against the teaching of racism in US schools and blamed the current president for “extreme ideas” and “divisive messages” that are “brainwashing” American children.

The former president – weaponising opposition to “critical race theory” that has dominated right-wing discourse following Mr Biden’s presidency – accused the administration of “indoctrinating America’s schoolchildren with some of the most toxic and anti-American theories ever conceived.”

“Instead of helping young people discover that America is the greatest, most tolerant, and most generous nation in history,” Mr Trump writes in RealClearPolitics, “it teaches them that America is systemically evil and that the hearts of our people are full of hatred and malice.”

He called critical race theory, an academic theory that seeks to critically examine the role of systemic racism, a “program for national suicide.”

In his remarks on Thursday, the president, echoing a speech recognising the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa race massacre from the Oklahoma city, the first president to do so, he said “great nations don’t ignore their most painful moments. They embrace them.”

“We must learn from our history and we must teach our children our history, because it is part of our history as a nation,” Vice President Kamala Harris said. “It is part of American history.”

The former president said that “teaching even one child these divisive messages would verge on psychological abuse.”

He attacked Mr Biden for revoking a Trump-era order that prohibits federal agencies from teaching about systemic racism in diversity training. The president also abolished Mr Trump’s “1776 Commission” that sought to counter the 1619 Project, a New York Times effort that recognises the legacy of slavery in the US and centres Black Americans in the national narrative.

Conservative activists have launched an assault on local school board races in the wake of antiracist uprisings across the US and pledges from educators to address systemic racism in their institutions.

The coordinated campaign has been amplified by right-wing media and lawmakers as their latest flashpoint crisis in a political call to action.

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