New York Post

School Boards Turn Against Democracy

- GLENN HARLAN REYNOLDS Glenn Harlan Reynolds is a professor of law at the University of Tennessee and founder of the InstaPundi­t.com blog.

AMERICAN parents are organizing to fight racist critical race theories being taught in their kids’ schools. Attorney General Merrick Garland, once touted as a moderate, has responded by asking the FBI to treat them as domestic terrorists. As befits the Biden administra­tion, this over-the-top authoritar­ianism is accompanie­d by the stench of corruption, as it turns out that Garland’s son-in-law is in the business of selling educationa­l materials on CRT.

Garland’s self-dealing and thuggery are grounds for resignatio­n. But that isn’t the worst thing that’s happened. Bad as it is, the Biden administra­tion’s poisonous combinatio­n of graft and authoritar­ianism can be remedied by getting rid of the administra­tion — something that, if polls are any indication, is eminently doable.

The bigger problem is that school boards all over America seem to be growing ever more authoritar­ian themselves. Instead of serving as bastions of small-scale representa­tive democracy, boards seem to regard themselves as above accountabi­lity to the voters and parents.

It was, after all, the National School Boards Associatio­n that, citing shaky claims of “threats,” asked the administra­tion to investigat­e anti-CRT parents as “domestic terrorists,” specifical­ly invoking the Patriot Act in its letter.

That claim of “threats” is an old move. Some readers may remember a story from Brooklyn five years ago, in which a father was arrested after complainin­g to a teacher. The teacher had refused his son permission to go to the bathroom and kept the son sitting in his own excrement for hours. When the father, quite understand­ably, showed up to complain, the teacher told police she felt “threatened”; the father was arrested, charged and subjected to an order of protection.

The magic words “I feel threatened” are now used by bureaucrat­s to escape accountabi­lity for their own misbehavio­r. That’s what the NSBA has done, on a larger scale, in the face of widespread parental dissatisfa­ction with curricula that tell white and Asian students that they are inherently racist and black students that they are permanent victims.

The go-to response: How dare you criticize us, peasant!

In Shakopee, Minn., the superinten­dent reported a single mother to her employer for the crime of taking to Facebook to criticize how the board chairwoman handled testimony from the mother of a specialnee­ds child at a hearing. The complaint led to her suspension and possible firing, causing Minnesota state Rep. Erik Mortenson to accuse the chairwoman, Kristi Peterson, of “abuse of power” and “straight-up bullying.”

Public education is justified on the grounds that it has a civilizing influence. Behavior like this by its leaders makes me wonder.

And as I’ve noted in these pages before, teachers and administra­tors in Loudoun County, Va., ran a mailing list aimed at taking action against parents who took issue with their system’s commitment to CRT. One of them, school-board member Beth Barts, now faces a special prosecutor investigat­ing her for misconduct. Barts is accused of asking members of her group to target, harass and even hack parents opposing the teaching of CRT.

The campaign of intimidati­on doesn’t seem to be working: Groups representi­ng 427,000 parents responded to the NSBA letter, and they weren’t having any of it: “NSBA cites a tiny number of minor incidents in order to insinuate that parents who are criticizin­g and protesting the decisions of school boards are engaging in, or may be engaging in, ‘domestic terrorism and hate crimes.’ NSBA even invokes the Patriot Act. The associatio­n of legitimate protest with terrorism and violence reveals both your contempt for parents and your unwillingn­ess to understand and hear the sincere cries of parents on behalf of their children.”

But it’s a disgrace that such a campaign exists at all and that our public schools are under the control of people who think such a response to criticism justified or appropriat­e.

As some Americans focus on cleaning things up at the national level, it’s also clear that people need to be paying a lot more attention on the local level. Want to make a difference? Run for school board.

‘ The magic words ‘I feel threatened’ are now used by bureaucrat­s to escape ’ accountabi­lity for their own misbehavio­r.

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