Archive for the ‘Culture Wars’ Category

The Conservatives have chosen culture wars over climate consensus – The New Statesman

The coming general election, whenever it is called, will be the most crucial yet when it comes to climate change. The time to act is running out. The choice is between Conservative climate delayers and deniers and a Labour government which can deliver the biggest investment in home-grown clean energy in British history. Labours aim is to cut energy bills for good and make our country energy-secure, all while supporting good jobs, restoring nature and making sure Britain becomes a climate leader at home and abroad.

Fourteen years of failed energy policy from the Tories, set against a backdrop of low growth, high taxes and crumbling public services, has left us beholden to dictators like Vladimir Putin for our energy needs, and exposed us to sky-high bills. It is shocking but unsurprising that at the start of this year 3.1 million households found themselves in fuel poverty.

Labour has been clear that tackling the climate crisis is the best route to tackling the energy bills crisis, because it is our reliance on fossil fuels that is driving both. This means, as one of Keir Starmers five missions, we are committed to clean power by 2030, which would make the UK the first major economy in the world to decarbonise its energy grid.

Our green prosperity plan promises green growth, energy independence, enhanced biodiversity, average savings of up to 300 on annual household energy bills, and over 650,000 new jobs in our industrial heartlands and coastal communities. It will include a warm home plan to upgrade cold, draughty homes and cut energy bills; a National Wealth Fund to invest in British industries such as electric vehicle production, ports, clean steel, hydrogen, and carbon capture and storage; and a plan to rewire Britain, unlocking billions of private investment by reforming the planning system and the grid, accelerating stalled energy projects and expediting grid connections for industry.

We already have publicly-owned energy in the UK its just not owned by the UK. According to the Common Wealth think tank, 44 per cent of our offshore wind assets are owned by state-led companies, from countries such as Denmark and Norway. Labour plans to switch on Great British Energy, a publicly-owned energy company that will invest in clean homegrown power, capitalised with 8.3bn. With our local power plan we will support community-owned and community-led energy projects: a place-based approach that puts real power back in the hands of local people.

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These plans will be part-funded by a proper windfall tax on oil and gas giants, many of whom are currently earning record profits. With Labour, economic prosperity will also mean prosperity for the environment as we improve the well-being of people and the planet. Our green prosperity plan embodies this idea, integrating economic growth with environmental sustainability, an industrial strategy with social equity.

Ive been incredibly disappointed by the Conservatives decision to opt for culture wars over climate consensus. Cross-party collaboration is crucial, as the Conservatives net zero tsar Chris Skidmore noted when he resigned as an MP in January: We should be taking the long-term decisions for the future of our country that protect our citizens, our economy and our planet, not playing short-term politics with legislation that achieves so little but does so much to destroy the reputation of the UK as a climate leader, he wrote in his resignation letter.

Yet as we see a global commitment at Cop28 to transition away from fossil fuels, the UK government has doubled down, committing instead to drilling every last drop of oil in the North Sea, watering down climate targets and blocking the roll-out of home-grown solar and onshore wind projects: the cheapest, cleanest forms of new energy. What message does this send to countries looking to the UK for leadership? This government has consistently talked down Britain in an effort to minimise or absolve our responsibility on the world stage. Its time to change that. We want to make London the green finance capital of the world and Britain a clean energy superpower, and to work with the most vulnerable and the most ambitious nations to pressure the most polluting countries to act.

This is the message Labour has been sending to communities, to businesses and to other nations around the world Labour is ready to work with you to support you on your journey to net zero. This is the thinking behind our ambition to establish a Clean Power Alliance: a global alliance of countries at the forefront of climate ambition.

Any discussion on net zero is incomplete without mentioning the natural environment. My colleagues in the shadow environment, food and rural affairs team have been setting out Labours plans to protect and enhance nature for future generations: whether that involves clearing up after the governments sewage scandal, or targeting a zero-waste economy by 2050 that will end the scourge of plastic pollution and the depletion of our precious natural resources. Together we are looking at nature-based solutions to climate change. Our peatlands, wetlands and woodlands are crucial carbon sinks, but also part of helping us combat domestic climate consequences such as flooding and food insecurity, and providing essential habitats for flora and fauna.

Ive been an MP for 19 years now but have never been so excited by an opportunity such as the one we have before us to put climate and nature at the heart of government. Never have I been so enthused by the potential social, economic and climate benefits that this scale of green investment in clean energy could deliver. The world is at a critical juncture and the time for complacency has long passed. Labour is ready to deliver change, and its time we got the chance to do it.

This article first appeared in a Spotlight print report on Sustainability, published on 10 May 2024.Read it in full here.

[Read more: Chris Skidmore The Conservatives no longer conserve]

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The Conservatives have chosen culture wars over climate consensus - The New Statesman

When a Culture War Becomes a Truth War The European Conservative – The European Conservative

I have a Polish gay friend who is a second-class citizen. This kind of a statement if said between 2015 and 2023, west of the Oder-Neisse line (Polands Western frontier), would have been understood as little more than an anodyne boutade. But deployed around the countrys last legislative race, in October 2023, to score outrage points against the social conservatism of the defeated Law and Justice (PiS) government, it attains all the persuasive power of a five-year-olds temper tantrum. If indeed homosexuality is a category against which PiS has discriminated in its eight years in office, then that second-class citizenship should correlate with the entire demographic being targeted. If true, this would turn any individual testimony, on either side, into a statistical irrelevanceone that hinders, not aids, the rhetorical frame into which that statistic is slotted.

The statement shifts focus away from the legal rudiments of the discrimination being alleged (an omission which insinuates it may not be as blatantly evident as suggested) and redirects it towards one loneand potentially impartialwitness, whose anonymity need not be mendacious, but suggests at least some degree of self-perception. This is supported by a cursory survey of Polands long-brewing culture wars over sexual mores, which long predate Law and Justices (PiS) legislative victory over the liberal-centrist Civic Platform (PO) in 2015, and which are unlikely to be decisively won by either side. This glance reveals, unsurprisingly, that a substantial segment of the Polish LGTB community is at odds with the countrys conservative majority in a tug-of-war whose battlelines dont always track with partisan cleavages.

A non-trivial segment of Polands LGBT votersto the extent a sexual orientation can be assimilated to an electoral blocfind a home within PiS, and even further to the Right. And some in the anti-PiS opposition are less amenable to the maximalist, sexually libertarian views prevalent in the West under the same LGBT rubric. Whereas the right to legal succor against homophobic hate crimes, same-sex unions, and adoption by gay couples features more prominently in the Polish agenda than in the Western European countries that have already turned these rights into law, one feature is common with the West. Other rights are being lumped into Polands ideological struggle, too, including the right to align school curricula with understandings of sexual education deemed outlandish by a majority of the electorate, the right to fly LGBT flags on public premises, the right to transgender bathrooms, and more.

There are several striking features about the quote which opens this article. It was made to a group of young professionals taking a Saturday morning class at a Catholic university in Madridan odd setting in which to import woke and socially unscientific tropes. The luncheon speaker was a young former entrepreneur, now a right-of-center member of the European Parliament (MEP), who proudly holds onto her pro-life legislative record even as her party gradually embraces abortion. This lawmakers parliamentary allies, Civic Platform (PO), are purporting to restore liberal democracy in Poland, which they allege had been suspended under PiS. It is worth noting that POs restoration of democracy is being carried out through the purging of civil servants deemed disloyal, the takeover of public media, and the storming of the presidential palace to detain and imprison two legally pardoned politicians.

Our guest MEP was naturally loath to find fault with her Polish allies so close to the June 2024 EU election cycle, even off-the-record. In the background, Spains socialist PM is staging his own coup against the rule of law through an unconstitutional amnesty for seditious Catalan politicians. In nominally opposing Snchezs coup, but not Civic Platforms, she thereby normalized the very double standard that her voters have sent her to Brussels to oppose. But whats more salient is that a self-hyped elitist of her sorta cognitive meritocrat who attended top schools and worked for the World Bankwould attempt to persuade a group of young Catholics that gays in Poland are persecuted because someone told her soand to hell with the facts. In choosing not to disclose this persons identity, I am not doing her party any favors, for her colleagues would all likely reason along the same dumbed-down lines.

It is possible to intuit that the inferior rights this speaker alleged are in part self-perceivedfueled by cultural battles unrelated to the legal possibilities of living a fully homosexual life. The conflation of LGBT rights with the right to legislate a whole-of-society agenda that is not even majoritarian among homosexuals is becoming the political norm in both Western and Central Europe. At an earlier session of the aforementioned forum, a prominent national leader of the same party, who had also been governor of a large Spanish region, took aim at the right-populist VOX party, which, in the lead-up to our July 23 general election, saw one alderman in a small village throw the rainbow flag off a balcony. This leader claimed the party had, then and there, revealed its homophobia. Naturally, she had nothing to say about the policy, decreed by that villages previous left-wing local government, to place the flag on par with Spains and the EUs.

It is not hard to see why. For this second oratoras likely for the firstthe rainbow flag snugly fills the representational space of sexual orientation, even if no other sexual orientation has waved a flag in the past, and even if breaking this millenarian pattern may open a Pandoras box of cultural conflict. She omitted that flags arent usually flown to symbolize feelings towards other human beings but instead to command loyalty and arouse political action. Theyre waved on behalf of nations, causes, lobbiesnot on behalf of pet lovers or poetry readers. She ignored arguments that, whereas the rainbow flag may appeal to the identitarian impulses of a substantial section of the homosexual community, it doesnt represent these individuals as homosexuals, but as members of a cause, a political lobby working to advance an agendaworthwhile though it may sometimes be.

By conflating homosexuality with the willpower to mold society, these two self-proclaimed liberal stalwarts blind themselves to the many tyrannical ways in which the LGBT lobby is already remodeling society. It not only crassly instrumentalizes the sexual orientation of millions of well-meaning citizens, but also risks turning their fabled homophobic stigmas into reality. If they do desire to pit society against itself over the many ways of feeling sexually attracted, they should keep treading their current path: depriving parents of the ability to teach their children sexual morality, aligning language with political correctness, and reputationally persecuting wrongthinkall while claiming its done in the name of homosexual freedoms. But even then, their disastrous endgame will be in vain, for the sleaziest campaigns of social engineering cannot bend the true meaning of freedom.

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When a Culture War Becomes a Truth War The European Conservative - The European Conservative

Q&A: Kaya Henderson on Teaching Black History During the Culture Wars – Future-Ed

Since the late 2010s, a wave of state laws has reshaped how schools can teach about race and racism in U.S. history. This legislative push has been coupled with a surge in book bans on a range of controversial topics, including books about race and racism or featuring Black characters. According to a recent RAND survey, two-thirds of U.S. teachers have chosen to limit their instruction about political and social issues of all kinds in the classroom.

But people like Kaya Henderson are finding creative workarounds. Henderson, a FutureEd senior fellow, is the CEO of Reconstruction, a curriculum and technology company that offers supplemental materials inAfrican American history and culture.She began her career teaching middle school Spanish with Teach for America, where she rose to the position of executive director for TFAs Washington, D.C. program. During her tenure as chancellor of the District of Columbia Public Schools, the system saw the greatest growth of any urban district on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) over multiple years.

FutureEd Editorial Director Maureen Kelleher recently spoke with Henderson about the origins of Reconstruction and how current political dynamics are affecting the response to curriculum focused on Black history and culture. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Why did you launch the company?

We launched Reconstruction for a few reasons. First of all, it came directly out of my work at DC Public Schools, where we instituted a district-wide curriculum.One of the key priorities for us was to make sure that our students saw themselves and their community in the things that they were learning. That was new. What we saw as a result was kids deeply engaging in the content of their academic work. We saw academic progress soaring. We saw confidence soaring, leadership soaring, agency, all of these things. Quite frankly, I could not put enough culturally-relevant content into the curriculum because we only have seven and a half hours and 180 days.

I had thought for a long time about the fact that I grew up in a pretty diverse community where my Jewish friends went to Hebrew school. My Chinese friends went to Chinese school. My Sikh friends went to Sikh camp. And these other cultures that didnt wait for school to teach their kids their history and their culture, but actually took it upon themselves to do it, reminded me of our African-American traditions around citizenship schools right after the Civil War, freedom schools in the 60s, and Sunday school and how our churches often teach Black history and Black culture.

I thought, What would it look like to take this offline, out of school, stop trying to fit it into the school box, and think about what it might look like to create supplemental classes that kids could take?We ended up starting this in the middle of the pandemic, and there was a real hunger for academics online when schools were closed.

So we developed a number of hardcore classes, you know, reading, writing, arithmetic, science and social studies classes, but also cultural classes like Cooking for the Soul, where kids learn the history of five soul food dishes and then learn to cook those dishes with a chef from New Orleans.Or games of the culture like spades and dominoes, or the history of step, which is a dance that originates with South African gumboot dancing and draws a thread all the way through to historically Black colleges and universities.

Oftentimes, when we think about African-American history, we think about enslavement, civil rights, and Obama. It was really important for us to help our young people understand that there was a super-incredible period of history called Reconstruction, which is the least-taught period in American history.

In the 12 years immediately after the Emancipation, the African-American community thrived in the United States. We owned more than 20 percent of the farmlandowned, not sharecropped or rented. We created our own businesses, banks, and insurance companies in communities all over the country. We founded 37 historically black colleges and universities. We founded over 5,000 community schools. Yet and still, were told that were a culture that doesnt value education.

You know, more than 500,000 black men voted in the presidential election which elected Ulysses S. Grant president, and he only won with 300,000 votes. People tell us that our vote doesnt count; it always has counted. We wanted our young people to have a touchpoint where they understand that weve experienced success, not just in Africa, but weve experienced success here.

We wanted to anchor the teaching of historyReconstruction, and beyondin Black excellence, in Black joy. Not in Black trauma, not in a deficit-based perspective, but to really pull through the values that make us proud as a people and have made us successful, frankly, against the odds. And we wanted to teach that to our young people. So thats why we founded Reconstruction.

As you mentioned, you launched during the pandemic, when there was tremendous demand for quality educational content online. Im curious how your customer base, your target audience, has developed since your launch. Who are you reaching and how do you get to them?

Its interesting. We thought when we started that our customers would be parents and families; that like Hebrew school, families would elect to take Reconstruction classes.

It ended up, straight out the gate, being schools. I think part of that is because I went to a number of my superintendent friends, having formerly been a superintendent, and said, How do I get this opportunity out to parents in your districts? And they said, Well pay for our kids to get on Reconstruction. Because, one, they were looking for academic content online because many of their teachers werent able to provide it straight away.

But they were also looking for enrichment and things to engage young people. If you remember, young people were deeply dissatisfied with online learning. When we started, we werent even sure that kids would be willing to take classes online. And when we were teaching spades or dominoes or Black Shakespeare or whatever, kids really just glommed onto this. We watched kids get into these Zoom rooms that look just like their regular classrooms, right, but engage at a completely different level because we create a space of belonging, because the content is different, because we try to make it feel not like school, and we saw kids really be into it.

I think over time, a couple of things have happened. One is people just are tired of being online, and we are back outside. So we have tremendous, tremendous pressure from our clients to teach our classes in person.

We are experimenting. Were a super-small shop, right? So the thought of going to a bunch of different places and running programs is a lot for us. But part of the way that we have dealt with that is to begin to license our curriculum for teachers to teach in districts.

Because were supplemental, people use us in their summer school programs. They use us in their after-school programs. They use us for electives and enrichment. And so it is fairly easy for us to share our lesson plans, our unit plans, and to train other people how to teach lessons the way we do.

We run programs year-round in Jackson, Mississippi, in person. Weve learned a lot from that, and thats been really incredible to be able to see and touch kids and teachers in a way that we dont usually. So one change is more demand for in-person engagement. The second thing that has changed since we started is the culture wars.

Right. What are you seeing, and how is it affecting your business?

We see hostility towards the teaching of accurate history and culture. We see states banning conversations about race and diversity. We see legislation that forbids teachersunder penalty of losing their jobs and their licensesfrom teaching complex and complicated pieces of our history and culture.

On the one hand, it means that we cant operate in some schools, right? We cant operate in schools in Florida without endangering peoples jobs and livelihoods. And thats not what we want to do at all.

But because we have a flexible format, it also means that in churches, Boys and Girls Clubs, or Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts or community-based organizations, we actually can operate. So we see demand coming from community-based organizations in places where you cant teach our curriculum in schools. Now its just very clear that it is important for us to teach our own history, our own culture. So theyre finding other ways to do that.

I think on the other hand, there are lots of places where there is still deep commitment to teaching accurate history, to exposing kids to the kind of content that we have. And so Im not fighting to be in places that dont want me. I just go with the coalition of the willing. There are lots of areas around the country that still want to engage in this type of learning. So we find those people.

I think the other piece that has insulated us a little bit is we are in the supplemental space. Im not fighting with school board members about what should be in the core, right?

When we first started Reconstruction, before the culture wars started, my business partner said to me, Oh, my God, this content is so good. It has to be taught during the school day.

And I said, No way. There will always be a school board member who thinks that this is not important, this is not what kids should be learning. I dont want to fight those fights.Nobody really cares about what happens in after-school or summer school as long as kids are engaged and learning. So lets stay in the supplemental space.

People ask me, Are people attacking you? Do you get death threats? Nobody is paying attention to Reconstruction because were positioned in a way that doesnt force anybody to learn this.

If you dont want to learn this, go do your thing. Thats great. But many people do, and not just African American families. Yes, we serve schools and school districts with heavy populations of African Americans. But we serve all kinds of folks who have said to us, This has helped us open up a conversation about our Mexican heritage, or This has helped me be able to tell kids our stories about our Lebanese heritage.

While the culture wars have been heating up and playing out in school boards, a lot of the same school districts now have ESAs and ways that parents have direct control over money that they want to spend on their childrens education. Has any of that come back to Reconstruction? Are folks coming to get it?

Not yet, but I think it will. Were looking into the ESA markets. They arent places where weve usually worked before. Were beginning to market in those places. But I would expect that parents will use their ESA dollars to leverage opportunities like Reconstruction.

Lets talk a little bit more about what makes Reconstructions curriculum and learning experience different. For example, tell me about your Black Shakespeare class.

Black Shakespeare is an awesome class. We created that curriculum in partnership with the Folger Shakespeare Library here in Washington, D.C. It actually won the American Shakespeare Associations Public Award. Were super-proud of that.

One of the super-cool things about Reconstruction is we can dream up anything that we want. I have a former colleague who runs the education program at the Folger, and I called her up and said, We should have a Black Shakespeare class.

She said, What is that?

And I said, I dont know. But it seems to me that if we can get African-American kids to understand that Shakespeare is relevant for us, if we can give them a positive black encounter with Shakespeare before they get to school, maybe he wont be some crusty old white dude who doesnt speak the language that kids speak. Maybe they will be able to engage in a different way.

So they took that on with us as a partner, and we co-created these five classes which look at Othello and the Merchant of Venice and Titus Andronicus and a couple more. For example, in Othello, one of the threads explored is: who are the people who have played Othello? Othello is a Moor, he is an African. And when we look at the history of actors who have played Othello, it is everything from white actors to Black actors. And what does that mean? And you know what does blackface mean and all of these kinds of things?

You cant do that in school, right? We dont have the time. But academicians at colleges and universities who studied Shakespeare and race collaborated with my curriculum team and together, they came up with these five classes that are our Black Shakespeare series.

Reconstruction offers supplemental classes. Theyre not formally graded. What are you hoping that students take away from the classes?

Theres not a formal evaluation, but the students going to walk out differently at the end than they were in the beginning. We want kids to feel like they learned something and had a good time.And our student satisfaction scores are like a 4.7 out of 5. And we see kids asking to take more Reconstruction classes.So that feels very good, right? We want kids to really enjoy and to learn.

We also want kids to have a different perspective about themselves and about African American culture. We want young people to think critically and to question when you know they hear things that dont make sense to them based on stuff that theyve learned. We hope that it incites intellectualism and continued pursuit of learning. We want our young people to also feel a sense of agency and responsibility. We want them to feel like, Oh, yeah, it is up to us to be the ones to make the changes in our community. Because historically, thats what has happened.

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Q&A: Kaya Henderson on Teaching Black History During the Culture Wars - Future-Ed

‘Crazy Plane Lady’ Tiffany Gomas Has Begun Weighing in on America’s Culture War and We’ll Be Better for It – Barstool Sports

It's hard to believe that it's been almost 10 months since Crazy Plane Lady Tiffany Gomas burst onto the internet and into America's heart:

... and possibly into the Barstool family; I still have no idea:

And while it pains me to say it, in spite of the addition of Tiffany to our popular culture, it's been a very rough time in America. A vast Culture War that was already raging has only grown worse. The divide has only gotten wider. With civil unrest everywhere. Public squares and campuses alike have been plunged into turmoil. Seeds of distrust sewn in the body politic have taken root and sprouted. There seemingly is nothing so benign that we cannot go fight over it. Every aspect of our lives is a battleground. Music. Movies. Stand up comedy. Holidays. Sports. Even beer.

Which brings me back, almost an entire paragraph later, to Tiffany Gomas. Thank goodness. That was too long to be away. It appears that she is unwilling to simply sit on the sidelines and leave the fighting to others in these conflicts. She is suiting up, coming off the bench, and wants the ball in her hands. And whether you agree with her stances or not, I hope you'll see this as a good thing. As I will explain in a moment:

NY Post - Texas crazy plane lady has now refashioned herself as a flesh-bearing right wing influencer.

Tiffany Gomas, a real estate developer who went viral after a public meltdown on an American Airlines flight last posted a revealing photo on X of herself in a shrimpy bikini holding a can of the aptly named Ultra Right Beer.

The brand describes itself as 100% woke-free American beer.

Wonder how many people Im gonna piss off with this post she warned in the post which has now been viewed by nearly 8 million people. So is now an appropriate time to tell yall men dont belong in womens sports?!

The post suggests Gomas is looking to mine additional relevancy by tapping into American culture wars.

Now please bear with me, because I truly believe that what I'm about to say is important to the future of our republic. What's important here is not what you think of the beer Gomas is drinking or her opinion about women's sports. For all I know, that stuff she's drinking tastes like it was brewed with hops, barley, and soiled diapers. And who gets to compete in women's sports is obviously one of the most divisive issues of our times. What truly matters here is not what the Crazy Plane Lady says. It's that she's the one saying it.

I'm a big believer in the Aristotle quote, "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." I'm also a big believer in the Great Man (or Woman) theory of history, which states most of history can be explained by the influence of leadership figures. Ones who often appear to rise to power out of nowhere and lead their people to success.

That, my friends, is Tiffany Gomas.

What other figure is so capable of bridging the great divide in our country and bringing us together? To prove that you can have a disagreement about major issues like whether your beer is Alt Right or Far Left, without being disagreeable? That we're all capable of respecting one another's opinions, even when we don't share them?

There is no one who doesn't appreciate and admire Tiffany Gomas. She may be the one person about which we all share a consensus opinion. And in a land where we're all so prone to "othering" those we disagree with, she can teach us by her example that the other side are not simply monsters we can never see eye-to-eye with. (That is, except for the motherfuckers in the rear of our airliners who are not real. We'll never be able to get along with them.) As the bumper stickers on all the Subaru Outbacks remind us, we all need to COEXIST. And as long as it's Tiffany in a patriotic-themed bathing suit delivering the message, it's one we can all get behind.

So while I'll be toasting you with a local New England IPA, I'm raising a glass to you nevertheless, Tiffany. Cheers.

Original post:
'Crazy Plane Lady' Tiffany Gomas Has Begun Weighing in on America's Culture War and We'll Be Better for It - Barstool Sports

Editorial: Wentzville superintendent is the latest to exit the culture-war battlefield – St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Wanted: Highly trained educator willing to be used as cannon fodder in the culture wars.

That presumably wont be how the Wentzville School District advertises to replace its second lost superintendent in two years but its a reasonable prediction for what awaits the eventual successor to Superintendent Danielle Tormala.

Tormalas surprise resignation announcement last week is the latest example of the damage the political right is doing to education in its zeal to make school board meetings and classrooms into platforms for their ideological extremism.

This time, the cost is literal: Tormalas eye-popping $1 million contract buyout indicates the district fears she would have a potentially more expensive legal cause of action for having been essentially hounded out of her job by the toxic politics swirling around the school board.

The Wentzville district, one of Missouris largest, has been buffeted in the past few years by the populist movement that swept the nations school board meetings and elections when schools resumed in-person classroom instruction after the pandemic.

As districts tried to navigate the subsequent COVID resurgences with medically reasonable mask and vaccination policies, right-wing activists dug in with opposition to such precautions. From meeting audiences and, increasingly, from seats on the boards themselves, they also ramped up efforts to ban books and scrub classroom curriculum dealing with race or gender.

For school district leaders, it created a whole new set of necessary skills. Former Wentzville Superintendent Curtis Cain was so unflappable even when people are screaming and yelling, one high school principal in the district told the National Conference on Education in 2022, the year Cain was named National Superintendent of the Year.

That was Cains last year with the Wentzville district. Not long before he left to become superintendent at the Rockwood School District, he had watched the Wentzville School Board refuse his recommendation to require masks in any schools that hit a 3% COVID positivity rate a rational recommendation based in part on the districts problems keeping classrooms staffed due to infections.

The school board during Cains tenure also embarked on a book-banning binge that included the literary classic The Bluest Eye, which is about the societal effects of racism. That book was returned to school library shelves only after a lawsuit by students.

The culture-war friction has continued during Tormalas tenure, which began later in 2022.

Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey has sued the district for allegedly violating the state Sunshine Law by discussing transgender bathroom policies in a closed meeting. While open meetings are important, Baileys inordinate focus on that one was, as usual, less about doing his job than preening for the right-wing base.

As the Post-Dispatchs Blythe Bernhard has reported, Tormalas tenure has seen police being called to a high school to investigate books and the resignations of three of the districts four librarians. A petition drive called for her ouster, based on the ironic allegation that she had created a hostile environment for conservative board members and parents.

Its clear her infraction was saying things at board meetings like, The terms diversity, equity and inclusion cannot be dirty words in this district. Former state Sen. Bob Onder, now a Republican congressional candidate, took to social media to lambast Tormala as wokester apparently the ultimate insult in his world.

While Tormalas official explanation last week for taking an immediate sabbatical and then leaving at the end of the school year was appropriately diplomatic and vague, its not hard to read between the lines.

As the St. Charles County NAACP put in a statement, her efforts to work with community leaders and stakeholders who advocate for a safe and equitable education for all students and fair treatment of staff was met with vitriol and harassment from a very vocal minority of patrons in the district for the last two years.

This is a pattern, the group wrote, that began with the previous superintendent of this district and there doesnt appear to be an end in sight.

Thankfully, thats not entirely true.

As we noted earlier this month, the sweeping defeats of right-wing school board candidates throughout the St. Louis region (including in Wentzville) in the April 2 elections was an encouraging sign.

It could be that parents and the public are finally tired of school board meetings that feel like MAGA rallies that theyre ready to get back to the business of educating kids instead of using them as political props. The question is, how many more good educators will be driven out in the meantime.

Tamara King-Krolik addresses the Wentzville school board on Oct. 19 about racist incidents in school and systemic racism in the district. Superintendent Danielle Tormala responds with an apology and review of ongoing work to address issues. Video edited by Beth O'Malley

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Editorial: Wentzville superintendent is the latest to exit the culture-war battlefield - St. Louis Post-Dispatch