Kath wrote:Okeefenokee wrote:I used your words.
You can only use my words if you believe that people can only understand things they agree with. If this is the case, it makes a boatload of your posts make more sense.
Over here in reality-ville, people have the ability to understand something they don't agree with or they can learned why something is bad without automatically feeling the need to do the bad thing themselves.
You want kids in their 20's to stop acting like precious little snowflakes? Hey, maybe stop treating them like special snowflakes who can't handle reality? A junior or senior in high school who can't learn a little about the human psyche without turning into a murderous loonbag is definitely not prepared for being 18.
This is where I think you are wrong, Kath. These kinds of lesson plans are designed to create the snowflake mentality. Learning to put yourself in the shoes of your enemy is a rite of adulthood. Forcing that upon kids erodes their in-group biases and destroys their sense of belonging to an ethnic group.
Caring about other ethnic groups should not come at the expense of your own group, but that's exactly what indoctrination practices like this involve.
We are stuck with this multicultural civic nationalism in America. The only viable strategy, if you want to at all preserve this, is to raise these kids as good civic nationalists. Start bombarding them with this cultural marxism and pro-Islamicism stuff, and presto, you just undermined the basis of our civic nationalism.
The people producing these kinds of lesson plans know this. It's the intent. It's the rest of Americans already compromised by this ideology who defend it without understanding what it does, and what it has done to them, that needs to be addressed. I don't think you really understand how truly dangerous this is.