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Texas Senate removes requirement to tell students that the KKK are ‘morally wrong’

In a bill that just passed the state’s Senate, Texas public school students would no longer be required to learn about the Ku Klux Klan or that the group’s white supremacy is “morally wrong.”

In the Republican-controlled state, two dozen curricula that were once required in public schools, like teaching about Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, the accomplishments of labor leader and leftist activist Cesar Chavez, the writings of women’s suffragist movement leader Susan B. Anthony and Native American history, are no longer required staples of Texas education, according to The Huffington Post.

The latest Senate Bill 3 passed last Friday, it was reported on Bloomberg Law, is seemingly a response to critical race theory, specifically The New York Times’ controversial “1619 Project.”

Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick praised the legislation for rejecting “philosophies that espouse that one race or sex is better than another.”

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3 thoughts on “Texas Senate removes requirement to tell students that the KKK are ‘morally wrong’”

  1. They don’t want the students to learn that the democrat-created KKK is really a not-good thing!

    Let the students decide!

  2. AFFIRMATIVE ACTION ( Reverse Discrimination against WHITES ) is Morally WRONG !!!!!

    Ban it NOW to have REAL Equality in America & Everyone on the SAME Playing Field !!!!

  3. Having served during this unlawful event, I would be happy to see the race riots of 1968 taught in schools. People can learn from it.

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