https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=all&geo=US&q=intersectionality&hl=en-US
According to the Gallup poll, race relations have been decreasing since 2013. At the same time, searches for intersectionality, a core tenet of CRT, have been increasing. This is no coincidence. The practical impact of looking at race through the lens of a theory rather than objectivity has always and will always be to reduce race relations. Just as the theory that some races are more intelligent than others has driven inequality and hate, so does the theory that some minority groups are inherently more oppressed than others. Yes, there have been historical examples where certain groups are mistreated by others. However, those shouldn't bee looked at through the lens of theory but through the lens of objectivity. If we had a curriculum where we focused on the oppression faced by the Irish to the exclusion of all others, I am sure that it would harm race relations just as much as the current hyperfocus on the issues of people of color. When children are allowed to come to their own conclusions based only on objective historical evidence rather than having opinions shoved down their throats, only then do we live in an intellectually free society. The push to focus on critical race theory rather than objectively presenting history only harms the left and creates a reactionary push towards White nationalism.
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