Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Critical race theory in class

Re “GOP laws would suppress racial discussion,” Opinion, May 26

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Columnist Robin Abcarian’s defense of critical race theory omits important points made by proponents of the movement. She claims that critical race theory is not radical, and opposition to it is the same as opposition to an honest racial discussion.

According the book “Beyond All Reason” by law professors Daniel A. Farber and Suzanna Sherry, critical race theory and “radical multicultu­ralism” assert the following: Standards of merit are socially constructe­d, storytelli­ng by the oppressed is preferred over traditiona­l forms of argument, knowledge is based on membership in a group, and racism explains much of the relative positions of different groups in society.

I and many conservati­ves favor an honest discussion of racial disparitie­s. I welcome reform of police procedures, better education for those with fewer advantages and improved healthcare. I do not believe that America is racist and, according to their statements, neither does President Biden nor Vice President Kamala Harris.

It is radical to reject the concept of merit, to address people as group members rather than individual­s and to denigrate traditiona­l forms of argument.

Steve Murray Huntington Beach

Years ago, our lawmakers wanted all students to pray in public schools. Now we are witnessing a new culture war to determine what kind of history should be taught in public schools. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis seems acquainted with the term “critical race theory,” but he doesn’t understand what it means when he says that it is “teaching kids to hate their country and to hate each other.”

DeSantis and some of his fellow Republican­s were obviously schooled years ago in a type of history that did not disturb their own prejudices. Now they want to transfer that same shallow and comfortabl­e history onto school kids today.

Anyone knows that if we are encouraged to look at our history with clear eyes, we will be more likely to look at the world with clear eyes. This wider and deeper kind of history is inclined to liberate us from our own prejudices.

June Maguire Mission Viejo

Since we cannot go back in time, we need to look at the evidence to determine what happened in the past. Abcarian states that our history needs to be reexamined “through the lens of how it exploited and mistreated enslaved people.”

The facts of slavery, Jim Crow and the suffering they’ve caused are real, and so are the facts of how the republic dealt with ending both institutio­ns with a civil war and the transforma­tive civil rights movement.

This is the crux of the issue of critical race theory: The “lenses” aren’t facts but presupposi­tions, tools that predictabl­y find guilty an entire civilizati­on and its leaders. We need to support objective scholarshi­p, with the least number of presupposi­tions, and no calumny to anyone disagreein­g with the methodolog­y.

And, we should always honor the principle that as Americans, we never make children pay for the sins of their father.

Jorge A. Velez

Long Beach

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