If What the Teamsters Prez Told Tucker Carlson Is True It's No Wonder...
Merry Christmas: A Special Bonus Gift of Christmas Funnies Just for You
Simply ‘Wonderful’: Classic Holiday Film Reminds Generations It’s Okay to Cry at Christmas
A Lump of Coal in Her Stocking! Crypto Influencer Gets BURIED for Not...
Political Pivot? Many Question ‘Young Turk’ Cenk Uygur’s Sudden Willingness to Talk with...
'The View' Panelist Says Problem for Dems Is That Gov't Won't Regulate Social...
Man Vs. History: Bear Grylls Gets DROPPED by Community Notes for Awful Take...
Scott Jennings: Dem Party Must Flush the Fringe and Embrace Common Sense to...
HO HO OH LOL-NO! Leftist Mocked for Whining About the Midwest DAD We...
Bah Humbug! Dems Put Fetterman On The Naughty List
NewsGuard Rates the Headlines Covering Woman Set on Fire by Illegal
CNBC: Biden Administration Withdraws Student Loan Forgiveness Plans
'Mary Was An Earthworm:' J.K. Rowling Absolutely Roasts India Willoughby's Take on Christi...
University Employee Who Told Trump Supporters to Kill Themselves Sent Packing
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand Still Pushing to Publish the Equal Rights Amendment With 'One...

Hero: Sen. Tom Cotton's bill would ban critical race theory and neo-segregation from the US military

This is not the first time Sen. Tom Cotton has taken on critical race theory; last July, he was telling Tucker Carlson about his proposal to pull taxpayer funding from schools that use the New York Times’ 1619 Project in their curriculum. According to PragerU, the 1619 Project is being taught in more than 3,500 schools in all 50 states, despite even The Bulwark saying the 1619 Project “rests on bad history and misrepresented facts.”

Advertisement

As we learned the other day, the U.S. Navy has Ibram X. Kendi’s “How to Be an Antiracist” on its recommended reading list for sailors. Donald Trump had made great strides in pulling critical race theory out of the federal government and its contractors, but now Cotton is introducing legislation to ban it from the U.S. military. The bill likely doesn’t stand a chance, but we’re glad someone’s paying attention.

Christopher Rufo writes in the City Journal:

… The bill would prohibit the armed forces from directly promoting the core tenets of critical race theory: that “the United States of America is a fundamentally racist Nation;” that “an individual, by virtue of his or her race, is inherently racist or oppressive;” and that “an individual, because of his or her race, bears responsibility for the actions committed by other members of his or her race.” The bill also includes a provision against segregating members of the armed forces by race, which has become common practice in many CRT training programs.

Though the text of Cotton’s bill raises direct questions about critical race theory, its subtext asks a series of deeper questions: what is the purpose of the armed forces—to promote fashionable academic trends, or to defend the nation? If we are unwilling to prevent the armed forces from promoting the idea that America is a racist oppressor-state, then what are we defending in the first place? Senator Cotton should pose these questions to his colleagues as often as possible until he gets an answer.

Advertisement

What is the purpose of the armed forces? It would seem a simple question, but after seeing the military’s response to Tucker Carlson’s criticisms, we have to wonder. Why was the U.S. Army’s chief diversity officer triggered? Why is that even a job?

https://twitter.com/nesportsbeat/status/1374839279839547402

Advertisement

Probably not. President Trump had signed an executive order, but he wasn’t in office a week before President Biden reversed the Trump administration’s “harmful ban on diversity and sensitivity training.”

No wonder Carlson triggered them so badly, if the military thinks “sensitivity training” is part of its core mission.


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement