CRT takes center stage
We just cast our ballots for municipal offices and a citywide resolution in Princeton, Texas, along with amendments to the Texas Constitution ... as well as for seats on the Princeton Independent School District board of trustees.
It's the latter race that causes me some angst and potential worry. Yes, I worry about the Princeton ISD and whether our local school district is going to frolic down the path of examining "critical race theory" and pull back textbooks that examine seedier portions of our national history.
I do not want that to happen in Princeton. I do not want our local educators to use CRT as a cudgel to beat back any effort to provide our students with a well-rounded and comprehensive education about the path our nation has taken on its journey to greatness.
We are a rapidly growing community full of new families with small children, many of whom live in our subdivision that happens to sit next to a newly built elementary school.
The critical race theory discussion troubles me in one key aspect. It is that right wingers fear CRT because it allows teachers to instruct our children about our nation's single greatest sin: the enslavement of human beings and the associated racism, a good bit of which remains to this day.
To be clear, we do not have children enrolled in Princeton schools. Are sons are now grown men, one of whom has a young daughter living in a nearby community. Still, I do not want my school board members to shy away from teaching our children about that facet of our nation's history. Yes, we live in a great nation, arguably the greatest ever created. Greatness, though, does not preclude mistakes along the way.
Let us not forgo teaching our children about those mistakes and the measures we have taken to -- in the words of our nation's founders -- seek to create and preserve a "more perfect Union."