LogGrad98
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Well the problem is we are just really waking up as a country and society here to the pervasiveness of systemic racism. And it will take a concerted effort to get this ball rolling. And frankly along the way we will swing too far one way, then too far the other, as we try to figure out how to level the playing field and get to a new status quo that truly values everyone equally. So yes, in some ways it is sad we need a month for this, but in another way it is simply the steps we need to take right now to begin to right the ship. It is like trying to eradicate metastatic cancer. It begins with heavy hitters like chemo and surgery that can seem to be heavy over-kill, then you have to work through the bits that are left, and make smaller moves, until you can say you are in remission. It is a process and will not happen overnight, but we have to start somewhere.The main problem, from a foreigner perspective, is that there is a need to have a “month” to teach kids about systemic inequality and racism. It’s the role of any government to form fully informed individuals with critical thinking. There must be a minimum standard. At least the curriculum should allow students a basic understanding of the roots of institutional racism and inequality (extermination of native americans, slavery, segregation and discriminatory policies, white supremacism, the Japanese concentration camps, etc). Such contents should be ingrained in the educational system. It’s the basis for any citizen. Having only a month (and one that you could opt out) is ludicrous. Letting parents have a major say in some topics is also dangerous (some could oppose sexual education altogether or want a particular version of history to be taught).