More Blacks needed on school boards

By Julianne Malveaux

Guest Columnist

Critical race theory asserts that racism is woven into the very fabric of our nation’s institutions. This is not new information for those who have studied how race affects our economy, politics, education, health care and more.

Critical race theory is not an attempt to “blame” white America for its origins as much as it is a pedagogical approach to reality. Through critical race theory, we can see the many ways that the uneven application of laws allowed envious white people to destroy Tulsa’s Black Wall Street, colonizers to gentrify Black neighborhoods, doctors to experiment on Black people and more.

Critical race theory helps us understand how California stole parts of Mexico, Chinese people were imported here (without wives or families) to build railroads, and how our Constitution defined black folks as fractions of people.

Attorney and professor Derrick Bell (1930-2011wrote about the many ways our racist gendered patriarch systematically oppressed Black people and others at the periphery. He used both legal theory and fiction to amplify his points.

Critical race theory has been taught in our nation’s colleges and universities, and especially in our law schools, for decades. Now white legislators are passing laws in several states to outlaw its teaching because it hits too close to home.

Much of this legislation demonstrates how ignorant some of these legislators are. It also illustrates how heated the battle for fact and knowledge is.

Some think the South won the Civil War, which they describe as the war of “northern aggression.” Though the statues are coming down, there are still those who believe those statues were erected for heroism, not resistance to equality.

And every time you see a Confederate flag flying, you must know that those stars and bars were only added to state flags after Brown V. Board of Education became law, and white southerners wanted to communicate their allegiance to racism.

The legislators who oppose critical race theory also oppose knowledge. Now, their fearlessly foolish conservative leaders are urging them to “take over” the schools by running for school boards around the country.

Rich Lowry, the National Review editor, wrote a piece, “The Point of the Anti-CRT Fight Should Be To Take Over the Schools.” What he means is to take over young people’s brains.

Lowry is smart enough to know that the historical whitewash conservatives are attempting cannot withstand historical scrutiny. So he and his conservative minions would instead inject their ideology into our schools, using low-turnout, low-budget races to grab power.

Roland S. Martin deserves credit for lifting this. He has been looking at the damage school boards do for years. He says, and Lowry echoes, the power school boards have to choose book vendors, to shape the curriculum and to select teachers and trainers.

The anti-critical race theory crowd would shut this down. But we also shut ourselves down when we get stuck at the top of the ballot. It is essential to choose a president and vice president, a senator and congressional representative, and it is equally important to select a zoning commissioner or a school board member.

Lowry’s piece makes it clear and makes it plain. He says that “education is too important to be left to educators.” He wants rabid (he didn’t say white, but I will) parents to run for school boards and to use their passion to lock knowledge out.

So this is my plea to woke, progressive Black folk. Please run for school board. There are tens of thousands of Black women who have retired from education.

Would you please run for the school board?  There are young people of color who understand the flaws in the education that was delivered to them.

Please run for school board. There are entrepreneurs who decry the inadequate education that so many young people bring when they apply for new jobs.

Please run for school board. Many of these posts can be won with a few hundred votes and a few thousand dollars.

The right wing has its marching orders. We need to have ours, too. We can serve our communities and our nation by standing up for knowledge. Please run for school board.

Critical race theory has been taught in our nation’s colleges and universities, and especially in our law schools, for decades.

Julianne Malveaux is an economist, author and dean of the College of Ethnic Studies at Cal State Los Angeles. She also is president of PUSH Excel, the education arm of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition. You may contact her at juliannemalveaux.com.