Thursday, May 19, 2022

James Whitfield: You're Black Byron Donalds!

Texas educator James Whitfield had to check Byron Donalds.

Florida's first Black Republican elected to the U.S. House of Representatives is an enabler of white supremacy. He is part of the Freedumb Caucus. He along with a carpetbagger who represents the state of Utah are the only two Black Republicans in the current session.

The Republican Party is mostly a white majority. They have very few people of color within its conference members.  

Only 12 House members are people of color. Two Black members, three Native American, four white Hispanic, two Latinx and one Asian American.

Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL) is a freshman lawmaker from Naples. He was in the photo with the look of annoyance when Rep. Idiot Karen Greene (R-GA) and Rep. Karen Boebert (R-CO) were yelling and interrupting President Joe Biden during the State of the Union address.

Donalds, 43 is one of the many hoteps who helped Washed Up 45 become the most polarizing figure in the world. Donalds is so extreme, the Congressional Black Caucus could not accept him as a member.

The Raw Story, a progressive media aggregator has got a moment where Donalds was trying to equate critical race theory into math books. His state is so fucking ridiculous.

Gov. Karen DeSantis is banning books and punishing those who dare him. Donalds love it so much he tried to intimidate the Dallas area teacher who was fired because of white nationalists complaining he was teaching critical race theory.

James Whitfield, the former Colleyville Heritage High School principal who was fired out the cannon because the state accused him having an inappropriate photo of him and his wife. They claim he was teaching critical race theory. He was married to a white woman, very athletic and professional. He was suspended and later fired out for daring to defend his photos and American society in general.

Whitfield had to check the brother.

Donalds complained that a math textbook mentioned racial bias in a lesson on graphs, and he demanded that witnesses called for a hearing of the Subcommittee on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties to discuss ongoing efforts to ban classroom discussion on American history, race and LGBTQ+ issues.

"Should material like this be in a mathematics textbook that will go before students who might be taking math lessons somewhere in middle school, fifth grade or even ninth grade?" Donalds said. "Should this bar graph talking about implicit bias or racial bias be included in a mathematics textbook, not just in the state of Florida, but in any state in the union?"

Byron Donalds is too white to be Black.

"Do we agree that racial prejudice exists?" said Whitfield, who is also Black. "Is there math in this textbook? Is disseminating a bar graph part of a student learning math? It just so happens, sir -- I would dare say they are learning math skills. It just so happens, again, this may be something that certain people view as uncomfortable, but racial prejudice is a real thing, and I dare say our students get that. They understand that."

"So to say that just because something says something about bias or racial prejudice," Whitfield added, "we can't just remove that because we're trying to talk about something that can make some people feel uncomfortable, and I dare say, if people feel uncomfortable, oftentimes there's a reason for that, and maybe that's what's needed to move forward."

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