General Discussion
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(3,017 posts)Got to be....
fleur-de-lisa
(14,615 posts)crickets
(25,896 posts)He's blasted on something.
Silent3
(15,018 posts)...I sure haven't seen "rational thinking" as particularly white lately. By percentages, black women are thinking a whole lot more rationally, on average, than my fellow white men.
Solomon
(12,305 posts)None whatsoever.
fleur-de-lisa
(14,615 posts)Baitball Blogger
(46,570 posts)I finally had to get passed the "Whiteness" comment to discover he opposes it.
tblue37
(64,979 posts)might have a prosthetic plate for his hard palate to cover a hole caused by snorting drugs. I looked up palatal perforation and found some horrifying images, but the idea that he is struggling to keep a palate plate in place does make sense to me.
A perforated palate could also explain that stuff that shoots out of his mouth sometimes when he speaks.
Jim__
(14,045 posts)Some law schools have classes on the theory, and other specialties in universities also have some classes on it.
From wikipedia:
By 2002, over 20 American law schools, and at least 3 law schools in other countries, offered critical race theory courses or classes which covered the issue centrally.[7] In addition to law, critical race theory is taught and innovated in the fields of education, political science, women's studies, ethnic studies, communication, sociology, and American studies.[8] Important scholars to the theory include Derrick Bell, Patricia Williams, Richard Delgado, Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw, Camara Phyllis Jones, and Mari Matsuda.
Critics of CRT, including Richard Posner and Alex Kozinski, take issue with its foundations in postmodernism and reliance on moral relativism, social constructionism, and other tenets contrary to classical liberalism.