Thursday, December 2, 2021

CRT - Critical Real Thinking

 

 

CRT 


       I had decided with all the uproar over the teaching of critical race theory to weigh in on the subject. I then realized that CRT in and of itself means different things to different people. To history teachers like me, also a liberal, it means laying the facts of history out and teaching in the Socratic method, when possible, how to critically evaluate those facts and evaluate their impact on society.

        To others, teaching critical race theory carries the scary connotation of giving their children sufficient skills and critical thinking to possibly change their mind about the biases and bigotry they've been taught at home. This puts the educator in the position of having to critically evaluate how they present information. For me it was simple, primarily because I already taught by the Socratic method. Obviously, this is not new. In fact, the parables attributed to Jesus (many of which are actually Buddhist tradition), are exactly the Socratic method in action. First the story, then the question, such as “Who was truly this man's neighbor? Like modern educators, Socrates was criticized for teaching his students to think critically and evaluate based on facts and ultimately forced to drink hemlock and commit suicide. Fortunately, Socrates prize student Plato and, in turn, his prized student Aristotle, carried on the tradition of critical and analytical thought hundreds of years before Jesus was even born.

 

        I said that to say this: it is possible without throwing around trigger words like CRT to change the way people, especially students, think by simply teaching them to think in the first place. Before we ever heard of CRT, schoolboards in places like Kansas and Oklahoma were lamenting the inclusion of critical thinking skills into Common Core standards. It was almost as if they understood that teaching their kids to think rationally and critically might make them reevaluate what they've been sent to school believing, because they've been taught it at home. Many various religious observers have the same fear of the critical evaluation of dogma

        Much of what far too many Americans believe seems to stem from some mystical belief that everything we as a nation have ever done has been perfect, or at least better than anyone else has ever done. Of course, the corollary to that is that any other point of view is (insert trigger word here) Commie, Socialist, Liberal, etc.

         One of the differences when critical race theory is involved is that we forget, sometimes, that immigrants from central Europe and the Mediterranean were treated with significant bias and prejudice simply because of their origins or beliefs. At one point simply being Catholic and Irish was cause for such things as the Bible riots 0f 1844 in Philadelphia. The only “crime” of Irish immigrants was that they were Catholic, generally poor and in the mid-19th century, even considered as “non-white” in some circles. But, to the stolid Protestant nativists of Philadelphia, they were also Catholic and coming over in large quantities and that threatened their status quo as dominant ethnic group in the city. Quaker and pacifist, William Penn. would have been mortified. Anti-immigration/nativist Philadelphians killed a significant number of Irish before peace was restored, but as late as the late 1850s, many New York Times want ads contained the phrase “Irish need not apply”. Later, Italians were treated little better. Of course, both ethnic groups were quick to discriminate against Blacks, principally because discrimination based on pigmentation was so ingrained in the land of the “free”. The difference in pigmentation meant that, if so desired, a second- generation immigrant Caucasian could fit in because they looked like any other Caucasian. This removed the instant perceived stigma of skin tone.

        Historically, Blacks are not the only group to be blatantly socially disadvantaged based on color. This is another reason some fear CRT – because it may bring up formerly poorly known unpleasantness. Take Asians, for example. The case of The People vs Hall, an 1854 California case is instructive. A Chinese miner was shot by a White man (Hall) in front of three witnesses, also Chinese. The relatively new California code already stated that: “No Black, or Mulatto person, or Indian shall be allowed to give evidence in favor of, or against a White man.” On appeal to the State Supreme Court, two of the three justices allowed Mr. Hall to go free, writing, in part:  “The anomalous spectacle of a distinct people, living in our community, recognizing no laws of this State, except through necessity, bringing with them their prejudices and national feuds, in which they indulge in open violation of law; whose mendacity is proverbial; a race of people whom nature has marked as inferior, and who are incapable of progress or intellectual development beyond a certain point, as their history has shown; differing in language, opinions, color, and physical conformation; between whom and ourselves nature has placed an impassable difference, is now presented, and for them are claims, not only the right to swear away the life of a citizen, but the further privilege of participating with us in administering the affairs of our Government” 

        This anti-Asian sentiment recurred nationally in the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, and again, in 1942, on an even grander scale in the Internment and confiscation of property of American citizens of Japanese ancestry. Without any actual cause other than wartime hysteria and prejudice. German Americans were, of course, being white, spared such treatment, as pigmentation was the Golden ticket.

        Native Americans (I’m going to use “Indians” for brevity, But I actually prefer the term “First Nations” which Canada uses) have fought the same biases since 1607, when Jamestown was established. Their apparent crime in Virginia, and then later in Massachusetts and the rest of British North America, was being in the way. In New England, Indians fared a bit worse because of the religious fervor of the Pilgrims, themselves fleeing religious persecution, only to dish it out to the Wampanoags and other regional tribes. In fact, the first actual “Thanksgiving,” proclaimed in 1637, was an event announced by the governor of Massachusetts to celebrate the massacre of several hundred Native people from the Pequot tribe.

        An example of the way Indians were regarded even if Christian, was the Gnadenhutten massacre, where in 1782, a group of militiamen from Pennsylvania killed 96 Christianized (Moravian pacifist) Delaware Indians, illustrating their growing contempt for native people. The converted Delawares, who had been falsely blamed for attacks on white settlements, were ordered to go to the cooper (barrel maker’s) shop two at a time, where militiamen beat them to death with wooden mallets and hatchets.

        Later, at Fort Utah, Governor (actually de facto dictator) Brigham Young issued an order to exterminate the Timpanogos in Utah Valley. The Mormon militia approached the Timpanogos, telling them that they were friendly. The militia proceeded to line them up and execute them. Dozens of Timpanogos women and children were enslaved. Other examples of unprovoked armed brutality against Indians are too numerous to mention, but the curious reader might look up the Sand Creek, Washita, and Wounded Knee Massacres.

        In all, U.S. government would go on to authorize over 1,500 wars, attacks, and raids on Indians, the most of any country in the world against its Indigenous people. Not included as “attacks” is the systematic planned extinction of the Plains Indians’ primary food source, the American bison. By the close of the Indian Wars in the late 19th century, fewer than 238,000 Indigenous people remained, a precipitous decline from the estimated five million to 15 million living in North America when Columbus arrived in 1492. As an aside, every single treaty ever enacted between the native Americans and the US government has been broken by the government. Of course. Indians were even darker skinned than most Asians,

        I do not have the room to begin to describe all the atrocities committed against Black Americans, by US citizens and by their government. The distinct difference between Black Americans and other non-Caucasians is the fact that, for Indians, slavery, as such, was relatively limited and situational, while it was the raison d’etre for the involuntary forced immigration of Blacks to this continent. Black Slavery was initially based on the European assumption of the supposed innate inferiority of the Black man, compounded by greed and the lure of cheap labor, facilitated by the willingness of a small minority of Africans to sell their own into servitude. It was compounded by the early silence of the Church on the subject. Unlike most other forms of this vile traffic, Race, and by race, I mean pigmentation, not social position, or national identity, was the sole determinate.

        While the Government and a somewhat more enlightened portion of the populace have made efforts (and strides) in chipping at the wall of bias which still disproportionately hampers Black Americans, there are far too many who, through ignorance and familial tradition, see the bad old days as the nostalgic past. They, and to a lesser extent immigrant Hispanics, have become the external focus of much of the internal self-loathing of the MAGA crowd, who see an America where we are truly equal as brothers and sisters as threatening to their own misplaced sense of racial superiority. The fear of change compounded in many cases by religious extremism, eats at these folks like acid, so they oppose such initiatives as teaching CRT or critical thinking.

        Fortunately for those of us who know better, CRT is simply an acronym for what good teachers have done for years. And finally, in the interest of candid disclosure: as in any other movement, there is a danger of extremism which can cripple the achievable effort of more organized practitioners. The individual who hates an entire group because of the actions of some of its members is less effective than they might be otherwise. And that statement is operative in both directions. Telling an impressionable student that they are responsible for the condition of others they have never met, assumes, without proof, that the student has been fed a diet of racism and bigotry at home. While this certainly can be true, it is far from a universal condition, as some militant CRT advocates proclaim.   

        To posit that, as is stands today, America still struggles with racism, is undeniable. To further state that all Caucasians   are responsible for that sad state of affairs is hypothesis, conjecture without fact and not universally valid. In a succinct nutshell, institutional racism has affected every ethnic minority in America to some degree. Perhaps examining the mistakes and evils of the past with an eye to non-repetition is more valid than “paying the blame forward.”

        As for as the crippling effects of racism: “Anger is an acid that can do more harm to the vessel in which it is stored than to anything on which it is poured.” 

                     Mark Twain

       

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