07/01/2016
Political correctness and anti-White racism donât just affect the working class. Even the most privileged people in our society are paying outrageous amounts of money to indoctrinate their children about how evil they are.
An elite Manhattan school is teaching white students as young as 6 that theyâre born racist and should feel guilty benefiting from âwhite privilege,â while heaping praise and cupcakes on their black peers âŚ
âEver since Ferguson, the school has been increasing anti-white propaganda in its curriculum,â said a parent who requested anonymity because he has children currently enrolled in the school.
Bank Street has created a âdedicated spaceâ in the school for âkids of color,â where theyâre âembracedâ by minority instructors and encouraged to âvoice their feelingsâ and âshare experiences about being a kid of color,â according to school presentation slides obtained by The Post.
Meanwhile, white kids are herded into separate classrooms and taught to raise their âawareness of the prevalence of Whiteness and privilege,â challenge ânotions of colorblindness (and) assumptions of ânormal,â âgood,â and âAmericanââ and âunderstand and own European ancestry and see the tie to privilege.â
[Elite K-8 school teaches white students they're born racist, by Paul Sperry, New York Post, July 1, 2016]
On the one hand, this is an effect of our own occupied status. Even (especially) the wealthiest, most powerful people in the country are paying outrageous amounts of money to be told how worthless and racist they are. One wonders how aware the parents who are cutting the checks really are about what their children are being taught. And itâs impossible not be angry at them for subsidizing people who utterly despise them. I feel the same about conservative businessmen who donate to their old colleges and universities, paying the bills of left wing professors and activists who have dedicated their lives to destroying them. It shows how even the powerful have essentially outsourced their morality and sense of values to people to hate them.
But this may also serve as a way for the wealthy to actually protect their status. Elite schools have always been about manners as much about being given knowledge. You go to an elite school partially to learn about what it means to be part of the governing class.
The dominant ideas of the Western world are anti-White posturing, multiculturalism, and navigating concepts of "privilege." These concepts can be used as weapons against competitors within the elite class. One suspects many of the children learning these concepts are also considering what new forms of identity they can conjure up to keep them from being labeled "privileged," or, conversely, how they can showily counter-signal against their "privileged" condition to actually increase their status.
After all, we all recognize that when some celebrity participates in a charity or puts up a trendy hashtag, itâs not because he or she is making a sacrifice. Itâs because he or she is actually working to increase his or her value.
These classes are equivalent to the complicated court rituals of 18th century Versailles or at the Court of St. James. You learn these concepts so you can protect your own status, intrigue against your competitors, and build barriers against the lower classes who you want to keep in their station. After all, nothing can destroy the competition like a well formulated accusation of racism.