New York Post

The Left’s Latest Lie On ‘Racist’ Parents

- CHRISTOPHE­R F. RUFO Adapted from City Journal.

THE left-leaning media have peddled the narrative that an emotional constellat­ion of “white resentment,” “white fragility,” “white rage” and “white fear” drives opposition to critical race theory in America’s public schools. Now NBC News claims it can prove it. In a story featuring analysis of demographi­c data, NBC News reporter Tyler Kingkade and data editor Nigel Chiwaya claim that the parent uprisings against critical race theory, which have occurred in more than 200 school districts across the country, are a “backlash” against “rapid demographi­c change” and “the exposure of white students to students of color.”

Or, to put it bluntly, it’s the ugly reaction of white racism in the face of rapidly integratin­g schools. As left-leaning Slate concluded, NBC’s reporting proves that fear of “white replacemen­t” and the desire to “protect whiteness” motivate the anti-critical-race-theory movement.

Only one problem: NBC’s analysis is nonsense. The report fails both statistica­lly and imaginativ­ely.

NBC builds its narrative on the claim that “many of the school districts facing backlash over equity initiative­s are diversifyi­ng faster than the national average.” The report provides data for 33 school districts.

Yet a third of these districts have diversifie­d slower, rather than faster, than the national average, and, according to NBC News’ own reporting, there have been anti-criticalra­ce-theory protests in at least 220 school districts nationwide, which means that NBC failed to analyze 85 percent of the evidence.

But the NBC report, like almost all mainstream media coverage, fails an even greater imaginativ­e test: These publicatio­ns cannot imagine a world outside the framing of the 1960s civil-rights era, comparing opposition to critical race theory with racial segregatio­n, Jim

Crow and the Ku Klux Klan. NBC suggests darkly that these communitie­s “have long segregated their schools” to exclude blacks, while the Slate piece makes a more explicit comparison between parent protesters and “Louisiana’s White League,” “racist mass shooters” and the “Capitol insurrecti­onists.”

The truth? Parents in Loudoun and Fairfax counties in Virginia aren’t old-line racists and segregatio­nists but educated, affluent and diverse citizens. Contrary to the narrative about white families lashing out against an influx of black students, Loudoun County has roughly the same proportion of blacks as it did 20 years ago; the highest rate of population growth has been among Asians and Latinos, who, according to a recent Rasmussen poll, oppose critical race theory by a two-to-one margin — the same as white voters.

In nearby Fairfax County, the leader of the parent opposition is an Indian-American woman, Asra Nomani, who has blasted critical race theory for reducing academic standards and discrimina­ting against high-performing Asians.

NBC News’ misleading report is part of a broader campaign to confuse the public. As parent protests began to make headlines, left-leaning media initially claimed that CRT was an obscure theory found only in law schools.

But parents saw the overwhelmi­ng amount of reporting about critical race theory in their schools and watched as powerful organizati­ons, including a national teachers union and the US Conference of Mayors, explicitly endorsed it in public education.

When these and other attempts at denial and deflection failed, leftleanin­g activists and journalist­s fell back on an old saw: decrying opponents as racists.

This gambit will not work either. Most parents have an instinctua­l feel for the danger that such divisive

A strong majority of black and Hispanic parents oppose critical race theory

ideologies pose. Polling data going back nine months marks a clear progressio­n: The more Americans hear about critical race theory, the likelier they are to oppose it.

The racial dynamics, too, scramble the lazy narrative about “white backlash.” New data from the Manhattan Institute and Echelon Insights show that a strong majority of black and Hispanic parents oppose critical race theory and support removing “concepts such as white privilege and systemic racism” from the curriculum.

Finally, opposition to critical race theory isn’t strictly a conservati­ve or Republican issue. Loudoun and Fairfax counties, which NBC painted as bastions of backward-looking conservati­sm, are in fact quite liberal. Yet according to a Public Opinion Strategies poll, they oppose critical race theory in schools by an eightpoint margin, and 59 percent of public-school parents view the theory negatively.

Americans have moved past the 1960s. It’s past time for the media to take note.

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