Posted on 10/02/2020 1:45:45 PM PDT by PoliticallyShort
We at the Claremont Institute are dedicated to proving, emphatically and without qualification, that a full endorsement of our countrys principles is not only a patriotic act but, intellectually and morally, an unimpeachable one. That entails insisting that the history of our country is one of dedicated human striving toward the highest ideals, and the most prudent political enactment of those ideals, possible on this earth.
Our country was not founded in racismit was in fact conceived as a uniquely ambitious effort to abolish racism and destroy its intellectual foundations in the West once and for all. That project, over time and through much tragic hardship, has been successful beyond even what its architects may have dared to hope. The cost of that successin patient intellectual effort, in wrenching expenditure of blood and treasurehas been enormous. But it was worth the cost and would have been worth more. America is a wonder of the world.
This is not what many Americans today think, because it is not what they have been taught. The results of a dedicated, decades-long effort to undermine the foundations of Americas faith in itself are now visible. Today that effort is led most visibly by Nikole Hannah-Jones of the New York Timess 1619 Project, but insidiously supported by Critical Race Theory training sessions in board rooms, small businesses, and until recently the halls of federal government agencies around the country. There is a diabolical genius to the way this effort has proceeded, in that it has involved both brute intimidationin the form of cancel culture and its attendant threats of unemployment or unpersoningand psychological subversionin the form of an attack on our nations history.
(Excerpt) Read more at americanmind.org ...
bump
Bump
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.