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Teachers in San Diego are forced to attend 'white privilege' training where they are told they're racist and to accept the US is built on stolen land - then asked to commit to becoming 'anti-racist' activists

  Teachers in San Diego are reportedly being required to attend a 'white privilege' training in which they are asked to commit to be...

 Teachers in San Diego are reportedly being required to attend a 'white privilege' training in which they are asked to commit to becoming 'anti racist' and acknowledge that they meet on stolen land taken from Indigenous peoples.

According to documents shared by journalist Christopher F. Rufo, the training is mandatory for all teachers within the San Diego Unified School District.

As part of the training, the teachers are told to discuss how they would feel if they were told: 'You are racist.'

Teachers were also asked to discuss how they'd feel if they were told: 'You are upholding racist ideas, structures, and policies.'

The documents, which were leaked by Rufo, show the outline of the discussion and the talking points, including how teachers must become 'anti racist' activists'. 

Teachers in San Diego are reportedly being required to attend a 'white privilege' training in which they must commit to becoming 'anti racist' and acknowledge that they meet on stolen land taken from Indigenous peoples

Teachers in San Diego are reportedly being required to attend a 'white privilege' training in which they must commit to becoming 'anti racist' and acknowledge that they meet on stolen land taken from Indigenous peoples

As part of the training, the teachers are told to discuss how they would feel if they were told: 'You are racist'

As part of the training, the teachers are told to discuss how they would feel if they were told: 'You are racist' 

During the session, instructors inform teachers that they will experience 'guilt, anger, apathy [and] closed-mindedness' due to their 'white fragility'

During the session, instructors inform teachers that they will experience 'guilt, anger, apathy [and] closed-mindedness' due to their 'white fragility'

In order to do this, teachers have to 'confront and examine [their] white privilege,' acknowledge 'white fragility' and 'teach others to see their privilege'.

During the session, instructors inform teachers that they will experience 'guilt, anger, apathy [and] closed-mindedness' due to their 'white fragility'. 

In addition to the aforementioned, the seminar also included a section on 'land acknowledgement'.

'We acknowledge that we meet on stolen land, taken from Indigenous peoples. I am speaking to you from Kumeyaay land. We must acknowledge the hidden history of violence against Indigenous peoples in an effort to move towards justice,' one slide reads. 

The acknowledgement was referring to the Kumeyaay tribe of Indigenous peoples who were forced off their ancestral lands. They lived at the northern border of Baja California in Mexico and the southern border of California in the US. 


According to Rufo's article, he believes that teaching 'white fragility' will do nothing to help students improve their academic abilities.

He says 'it will only serve activist teachers who want to shift the blame to “systemic racism".'

A DailyMail.com request for comment to the San Diego Unified School District was not immediately returned Sunday afternoon.  

Such trainings stem from the reckoning that the nation faced this summer over racial injustice in policing and other spheres of American life following the Memorial Day death of George Floyd, who died under the knee of a white police officer. 

President Donald Trump condemned such trainings in September and moved to end racial sensitivity training for federal government employees, claiming it is 'divisive, anti-American propaganda'. 

The documents, which were leaked by Rufo, show the outline of the discussion and the talking points, including how teachers must become 'anti racist' activists'

The documents, which were leaked by Rufo, show the outline of the discussion and the talking points, including how teachers must become 'anti racist' activists'

In addition to the aforementioned, the seminar also included a section on 'land acknowledgement'. 'We acknowledge that we meet on stolen land, taken from Indigenous peoples,' one slide reads

In addition to the aforementioned, the seminar also included a section on 'land acknowledgement'. 'We acknowledge that we meet on stolen land, taken from Indigenous peoples,' one slide reads 

The Commander-in-chief said at the time that he wanted to cancel taxpayer funded seminars on 'critical race theory', describing them as 'a sickness that cannot be allowed to continue'. 

Systemic racism in America took center stage for discussions held on the local and national levels of government, including at the presidential and vice presidential debates.

At the first presidential debate, Trump said such training is 'teaching people to hate our country'.

Ultimately, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris won the election, partly because they had 90 per cent of the black vote.

Last month, three civil rights groups filed a lawsuit, challenging Trump's executive order that prohibits federal agencies, contractors and grant recipients from offering certain diversity training.

The NAACP Legal Defense Fund filed the complaint in federal court in Washington, DC, along with the National Urban League and the National Fair Housing Alliance. 

The lawsuit argued that Trump’s order violates free speech rights and strangles workplace attempts to address systemic race and sex discrimination.

The executive order 'unconstitutionally forces Plaintiffs to choose between censoring speech on these important issues or forfeiting any opportunity to enter into a federal contract,' the groups argued in the complaint. 

Donald Trump condemned such trainings in September and moved to end racial sensitivity training for federal government employees, claiming it is 'divisive, anti-American propaganda'. At the first presidential debate, he said these trainings teach people 'to hate our country'

Donald Trump condemned such trainings in September and moved to end racial sensitivity training for federal government employees, claiming it is 'divisive, anti-American propaganda'. At the first presidential debate, he said these trainings teach people 'to hate our country'

Trump’s executive order, signed in October, called out workplace trainings that explore deep-seated racism and privilege that the administration says could make white workers feel 'discomfort' or guilt. 

The president then ordered the Labor Department to set up a hotline to investigate complaints about training sessions.

The directive uses a 55-year-old presidential order spurred by the Civil Rights Movement that sought to ban discriminatory practices at companies that contract with the federal government. 

Critics say Trump’s order twists President Lyndon B. Johnson’s 1965 initiative into a vehicle for white grievances. 

The Labor Department is also using the 1965 presidential order to target companies, including Microsoft and Wells Fargo, over public commitments to expand or bolster black and Hispanic representation in leadership roles. 

The government opened inquiries into both companies, warning them against using 'discriminatory practices' to meet their goals. 

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