I posted this article nearly 4 months ago after trying to find one of the most ridiculous and extreme examples of how people understand "racism" today:
Just saw this and it seemed relevant to what we talked about. From the article "How America’s treeless streets are fueling inequality":Trees, and the shade they provide, are actually markers of race and class...According to the data collected by the Texas A&M Forest Service, in Houston’s "medium to high" developed areas, there are an estimated 3.7 trees per person. In similar areas in Austin there are 4 trees per person and in San Antonio there are 7.5."There is disparity here. [Houston has] low tree canopy cover and high heat."This is the mindset of CRT adherents. Seek out disparities between races, attribute those causes to racism that benefits white people, then ignore any alternatives no matter how reasonable they are. Because literally everything is racist. And racist tree planting is just one more reason to tear down our entire economy and give the government more power.
(From this thread, post #63)
Racist trees...
I really wanted to believe this was just another insane conclusion of today's racial agitators. But what was once an insane conclusion is now a huge line item on our proposed federal spending plan. I've seen two things making the rounds on the internet recently reinforcing this:
1.) Kamala Harris asking about NASA tracking the average number of trees in the context of race for the sake of environmental justice (https://youtu.be/qCOxbFquP2s). I haven't seen the full context of this short clip, but I'm not sure what else she could be talking about other than studying racial tree equity with "space activity."
2.) $3 billion for "tree equity" in the new spending bill (https://docs.house.gov/meetings/BU/BU00/20210925/114090/BILLS-117pih-BuildBackBetterAct.pdf, PDF download)
(2) $3,000,000,000 to provide multi-year, programmatic, competitive grants to a State agency, a local governmental entity, an Indian Tribe, or a non-profit organization through the Urban and Community Forestry Assistance program established under section 9(c) of the Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act of 1978 (16 U.S.C. 2105(c)) for tree planting and related activities to increase community tree canopy and associated societal and climate co-benefits, with a priority for projects that increase tree equity;
These two things are excellent examples of how the same type of activism being promoted in public schools is having real effects on the level of federal government policy.
- Assume systemic racism is normal and pervasive
- Seek out disparities between racial groups as evidence of systemic racism
- Enact and enforce policies that eliminate those disparities, regardless of whether they discriminate based on skin color
So while people are playing their semantic word games about whether "CRT is being taught in schools," our federal government is proposing to spend billions of taxpayer dollars based on the same radical activist ideology that underlies what public schools are teaching regarding race and racism. Whether or not you agree with this type of spending, there is no question that there are real and significant consequences of trying to find racism in everything.
So what do you think? Should we spend billions of dollars on issues like "tree equity" to fight racial inequities?
Or should we perhaps rethink our radical redefinition of racism?