On Aug. 28, 1963, one of the most important marches — and moments — of the civil rights era took place in the nation’s capital. On that warm but pleasant day, Martin Luther King Jr. stood in front of the Lincoln Memorial and brilliantly described the essence of the colorblind America he sought.
“I have a dream,” King proclaimed to the huge crowd in front of him, “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”
There was much more, of course, and any American who hasn’t read or watched tapes of the complete “I have a dream” speech has missed one of the defining events of US history.
But don’t delay in catching up: A new generation of history-erasers, radical revisionists and book-burners aims to eliminate such old thinking. King’s goals, according to the rules of these new revolutionaries, were actually perpetuating a form of white supremacy.
So the self-described woke are turning the great man’s inspired vision on its head by insisting that racial and ethnic identity matters much more than such concepts as objectivity, individualism and even right and wrong.
To the new racialists, the color of your skin is more important than the content of your character. Tragically, one of them runs New York City’s public schools.
But make no mistake: Chancellor Richard Carranza is no mere educator. Teaching kids to read and write and how to think critically is beneath him, which explains why his record in San Francisco, Houston and now New York shows no success at fixing failure factories.
Worse, it looks as if he has given up trying, for Carranza now fancies himself a commander in the far left’s social justice army. He wants educrats, teachers and students to see everything as either black or white.
And he’s putting taxpayer dollars behind his warped vision. He’s spending upward of $23 million on indoctrination programs that aim to rid schools of “toxic whiteness” and “white-supremacy culture,” according to Post reporters Susan Edelman, Selim Algar and Aaron Feis.