 Hello DroneTech here, welcome back to another peek at just how insidious and dishonest our media is. In this case, it's CNN, again, where I think the only right-leaning personality on CNN, Scott Jennings, has to refute a fire hose of lies and disinformation from the thankfully former Ohio State Senator, Nina Turner, who is just awful. And she really is just a good cautionary tale of becoming the very thing that you claim to be against. I just have to stop that because my god, the theatrics. Who thinks in their right mind any of those things are okay? I have no idea what she's talking about. She's describing an inhuman monster from a Spike Lee movie. What the hell is this? I mean, she gets to sit there and manufacture just a totally paranoid straw man that literally only exists in her head. I mean, maybe there's people out there like that, but they're on the fringes. How does that come into this conversation? Number two, Scott, critical race theory is taught in law school. It is not taught in K through 12. All right. I'm sorry. I have to stop it again. I know there's those of you out there screaming at me that you just want me to keep going, but I have to stop and address that. That is just straight up dishonest. And it's a very typical talking point that you get from both the Democrats and their media, although sometimes they will admit that it's being taught and that it's a good thing. They'll first deny that it exists, but once they can't do that anymore, suddenly they're arguing that is a good thing that you must have or else you're a bigot. And they seem to bounce back and forth from these two things depending on the circumstances, I guess. So just so we're clear on this, CRT is a legal theory itself, and it's not taught in schools. That is a college course, but the curriculum in K through 12 is being made to reflect the theory, meaning CRT derived curriculum is in K through 12 schools. As the premier expert on CRT in schools, Chris Rufo will tell you, he made this thread that's really very informative. I suggest that all of you, when you're done here, go and read this, but I'm just going to give you a few examples out of this that just blow the idea out of the water that CRT is not being taught in schools. So he starts this out, the media is doubling down on the narrative that critical race theory isn't in K through 12 schools. So I'm going to put together a thread debunking this claim and showing you exactly what's happening in classrooms across the country. Buckle up. So his first thing here is first the founder of critical race theory, Kimberly Crenshaw, recently admitted that critical race theory originated in law schools, but then migrated to the K through 12 education system, which she says is a good thing. And if you take a look at this, and this is from the document he's talking about, it's critical race theory currently being taught in K through 12. And she gets around to saying, we must support our teachers freeing to teach the truth about accurate, about our accurate history. Now, it's not accurate history. It's just history through the lens of a critical race theory Marxist. And I'll get into later why that is nefarious and dangerous. And just another example here, he says, here's another critical race theory co-founder, Richard DeLogdo, boasting that CRT has colonized education. He says, the theory is a livelier in education right now than it is in law. And this was 10 years ago. And here's another example. This doesn't emerge from nothing. The critical race theorist has spent decades writing books and applying principles of CR2 to K through 12 education. Here's a small sampling of the academic literature. Now, if you just go through these foundations of critical race theory in education, critical race theory matters, education and ideology, critical race theory in teacher education, critical race theory in mathematics education, like how does a racial theory enter its way into mathematics? Well, when you're a communist mind virus that's meant to be ideological subversion. And it just goes on and on like this. As well, you can find books like this that were being recommended by teachers and school districts all across the country, which he also gets into. However, the point that I was making was about the teaching of African American history itself, which is American history. And to teach that history, you have to teach the whole of it. You can't just teach one part of it. So it's not about making white children feel inferior. Wrong. That is exactly what it's about. That's why we're against CRT. Nobody, as far as I know, is against teaching all of American history, even the worst bad parts. CRT is all about implanting guilt in white people and making white people suspicious of and hateful of each other. By doing this, especially at a young age, they can coax kids into this ideology where they become good whites. So if they resist this ideology, then they're the bad whites. It's very easy to tell them apart that way. Just use your imagination where all of this would lead and what purpose it would serve. But it really fits in with this push for equity, which is literally systemic discrimination based on race. And the race that would be targeted here is white people. Let me just reiterate that I and nobody that I know of is against teaching American history or African American history and all of the bad stuff with it. Far from it. Instead, I think what we're saying is don't use this far left ideological lens of history to justify a broad judgment and racial discrimination of a group of people that happen to be whites in this case. This is about teaching history in the broadest way so that people can gain a deeper understanding and hopefully through that understanding things can change. I don't see Governor DeSantis doing away with AP European history or AP World History. I wonder why that is. Oh, it must be a white conspiracy to hold everybody else down, right? Have you ever noticed how these conspiracy theorists like her, these racial conspiracy, they sound a lot like anti-semitic conspiracy theorists. It's literally just like the same conspiracies, but they just retool them for white people just like CRT itself. She talks about change. What sort of change will that be? And who gets to decide? Like what evidence is there that injecting CRT into the school system will change anything for the better? Even according to the New York Times, this mind virus isn't improving anything and it's actually harming people, which should be obvious. Governor DeSantis needs to focus on governing the state and stay out of education and let the educators educate. So Scott, if you and other white people got a problem with a whole of American history being taught, then you're the ones to have a problem. This ain't about making anybody feel in fear. The Brown v. Board of Education was just that about how generations of black children have been made to feel inferior in these United States of America. And it was probably a racist. Right, and now she wants payback. I mean, it's very clear. They want to knock white people down early and continue through their adulthood with this failed DEI mind virus shit. She's got to get the reaction from the spokesperson of white people. I'd be very happy with Governor DeSantis because not only is African American history under Florida law required to be taught to schoolchildren, it has actually been expanded during his governorship. This particular class, they don't like because of some of the curriculum points they think is in conflict with Florida law, but it is an absolute state requirement in Florida that they teach African American history and it's gotten more expansive since he came in. So you sound upset with me, but the fact is the way he wants to talk to Scott, right? You say, you say, you say, no, he's not writing the curriculum, he's not writing the curriculum. Excuse me, excuse me. Nobody's speech is being taken away. We're talking about school here. He's not writing the curriculum. Excuse me, I'm just telling you the facts. Hello, television 101. No one can hear you when you talk over each other. So let's just go back to, I want to hear your response, Scott, and I'll allow you to speak, go ahead. Yeah, I'm just, I'll just wrap up and say, you know, the governor of the state is not writing the curriculum. I'm just telling you the facts. Schoolchildren learn African American history in Florida and it's gotten more expansive on his watch. So you say you want it taught. It is being taught. I think you're upset about this class, but holistically speaking, they're getting a really good education in Florida about African American history in the United States. So yeah, actually a pretty miltose response there from Scott Jennings, but we take what we can get on CNN. And they're doing their best to muddy the waters on this topic like they have always done. You know, even when they do put on opposition like Scott Jennings there, it's just, it's so weak. It's soft spoken and as always, he's outnumbered. I mean, you notice the whole time there, John Avalon on the right side of the screen there is constantly nodding at whatever Nina X says because he wants to make sure that the viewers know that he's one of the good whites, not one of the bad ones. All right, that's all I have for that one. Like I said earlier, I encourage you all to go to that Chris Rufo thread on Twitter and check that out. It's really interesting and it gives you a full scope of just how deceitful the media has been on this topic. Thanks a lot, I appreciate you all watching and I'll see you next time.