<p><span><img width="350" height="219" src="/media/17259807/lincoln-statue-at-uwm 350x219.jpg" alt="Lincoln statue at UW-Madison" class="ImageFloatRight"/>Angry students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus have demanded the removal of an iconic Lincoln statue but their heated demands have gone unheeded thanks to level-headed and angry alumni.</span><span><br /> <! [endif] ></span></p>
Saving a Daughter vcyamerica.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vcyamerica.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
<p><img width="350" height="219" src="/media/8726154/indoctrination brain 350x219.jpg" alt="indoctrination (human brain)" class="ImageFloatLeft"/>White students at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee were instructed to “confront whiteness” on their college campus by two far-left speakers, the latest example of rampant anti-white lectures, but elsewhere the public is rising up and pushing back on the Left’s twisted version of equality.</p>
Critical race theory. That phrase is being bandied about across the country.
While the phrase is new, the ideas behind the words aren’t. Christopher Rufo, founder and director of Battlefront6, a public policy research center, in a speech given earlier this year at Hillsdale College, says “[c]ritical race theory is an academic discipline, formulated in the 1990s, built on the intellectual framework of identity-based Marxism.”1
So, what does Rufo mean by “identity-based Marxism”? Essentially, this idea formed the basis for Marxism which originally identified people as belonging to one of two groups: capitalists and workers. As this identity-based approach failed in country after country, Marxists just adapted to whatever was currently happening, including in the 1960s, a decade fraught with social and racial unrest. Instead of capitalists and workers, they now identified people by race and ethnicity, which certainly sets the stage for what is happening today.
2021 | Week of May 3 | Radio Transcript #1410
The late Phyllis Schlafly was one of my heroes. This diminutive in stature but giant in character woman fought battle after battle for our nation’s best natural resource our nuclear mom-and-dad married families. During her lifetime, Mrs. Schlafly was given nearly every conservative award, honor and recognition you can think of, but she said that the highest honor she ever received was in 1992 when she was named Illinois Mother of the Year.
Here was a lady who was an attorney, an author, a leader of a nationwide organization, a sought-after speaker, an activist, a strategist and more but first and foremost she was a wife and a mother to six children–and she delighted most in that. Mrs. Schlafly devoted much of her life to fighting feminism and other attacks on the dignity of women and the family in general saying that the most important thing in her life, the thing that brought the most honor, was being a wife and mother.