April 19, 2026

Rights Watch

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The Republicans have latched on to what might be an effective bludgeon against the coercive elements, the unconstitutional elements of critical race theory being coercively taught as fact to children in public schools.  That bludgeon is to advance parental rights in a constitutional republic, through law, lawsuits, and executive orders.

Republicans Pin National Education Battle to Parents’ Bill of Rights

From freebeacon.com
2022-01-24 10:00:01
Alex Nester
Excerpt:

Republicans are growing increasingly confident they’ll retake the House in 2022—and they’re positioning themselves to make parents’ rights in education a national priority.

Rep. Julia Letlow’s (R., La.) Parents’ Bill of Rights was the focus of a Tuesday roundtable discussion among Republican members of the House Education and Labor Committee. The bill, which would pressure schools to be more transparent about curricula and spending, has garnered support in their party. A House GOP aide told the Washington Free Beacon that “most members” of the Republican Study Committee “seemed very supportive of the bill.” With 107 cosponsors and support from the largest Republican caucus, the bill could become an integral part of House Republicans’…

 

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California lines up another assault against parents

From www.americanthinker.com
2022-01-24 06:00:00

Excerpt:

In California, the most populous state in America, a proposed bill allows children as young as 12 to consent to a vaccine without parental permission.  This is yet another leftist effort to break down the nuclear family.  This is the latest front in California’s battle against parents.

According to the AP article, the proposal before the California Legislature comes from San Francisco’s Scott Wiener, a San Francisco Democrat.  The openly gay Wiener, a Harvard Law graduate, has dedicated himself to several issues revolving around sexuality and children.

While he was a San Francisco supervisor, Wiener got the Board of Supervisors to agree to bar the city from doing business with companies based in states that haven’t passed civil rights laws that, instead of just applying to all citizens equally, make special mention of people on the LGBTQ+++ spectrum.

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Covid-19: Gonzaga University suspends John Stockton’s season tickets over his defiance of mask mandate

From www.cnn.com
2022-01-24 11:21:00

Excerpt:

 

The former Utah Jazz point guard confirmed the school suspended his tickets in an interview Saturday.

“Basically, it came down to, they were asking me to wear a mask to the games and being a public figure, someone a little bit more visible, I stuck out in the crowd a little bit,” Stockton said. “And therefore they received complaints and felt like from whatever the higher-ups — those weren’t discussed, but from whatever it was higher up — they were going to have to either ask me to wear a mask or they were going to suspend my tickets.”

Stockton told the Spokesman-Review he and the school had “been in discussions about various COVID things for a couple years now.”

CNN has reached out to Stockton for comment.

 

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Monday mask mandate showdown: Va. students plan to take stand against masking in schools – WJLA

From wjla.com
2022-01-23 23:15:17

Excerpt:

With less than 24 hours to go before a new executive order on masks in schools takes effect, Northern Virginia parents are deciding what they are going to do as many school districts vow to keep mandates in place.

“I’m very frustrated,” said Carrie Lukas, a mother of five children in Fairfax County. “I feel like it’s time to rethink this and give parents more control. We’ve been following this law or this regulation for a long time now. I have a 7-year-old son who has yet to attend school where he is allowed to take off a mask and see his friends’ faces and have normal interaction. It’s heartbreaking. It’s time for them to reconsider.”

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Professor: Opposition to critical race theory is ‘rebranded Nazi-style antisemitism’

From www.thecollegefix.com
2022-01-23 14:51:03
Dave Huber – Associate Editor
Excerpt:

 

A professor of creative writing, working class literature and “changing masculine roles” believes opposition to critical race theory (CRT) is not only antisemitic, but Nazi-style antisemitic.

Georgia Southern University’s Jared Yates Sexton, who according to his Twitter bio fancies himself a political analyst, made this claims in a Friday Twitter burst which also included the invocation of QAnon and “white supremacist paranoia.”

“The ‘CRT’ conspiracy theory is rebranded Nazi-style antisemitism that’s being used by wealthy donors and their think-tanks to weaponize history for their own purposes while radicalizing people to take over local governments and clear the way for the privatization of education,” Sexton tweeted.

“Within the ‘CRT’ conspiracy theory are QAnon principles without the label or even recognition by some of believers. These ideas and white supremacist paranoia are leveraged by the wealthy to further…

 

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Deaf UChicago student begs university to lift mask mandate so he can understand professors

From www.foxnews.com
2022-01-22 19:09:16

Excerpt:

 

A deaf student at the University of Chicago is begging the school to lift its campus mask mandate.

The school has implemented rigorous COVID-19 prevention requirements for attendance. Instructors and students are not permitted to remove masks to speak, even during class.

The mandate has made school difficult for some students with disabilities.

“I am an undergraduate at the University of Chicago, a school which I love,” student Declan Hurley said. “But today, I am imploring the University of Chicago administration to lift or modify their mask mandate, which hurts deaf and hard of hearing people like me.”

UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO POLICE OFFICER INJURED GUNMAN IN SHOOTOUT, REPORT SAYS

Hurley is vice president of the independent school newspaper, The Chicago Thinker, and has a…

 

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A Swift Solution to

A Modest Proposal for the Ivy League

by 

In a recent New Yorker essay, staff writer Nicholas Lemann trembles at the thought of the end of affirmative action at the hands of a Republican-dominated Supreme Court. He assumes that non-whites (except Asians, of course) could never make it into, much less through, top schools without a helping white hand. Look out, Kipling: is this the white man’s burden in the 21st century?

Lehmann’s subhead declares: “The policy has made diversity possible.” Says who? Believe it or not, there was diversity before the Johnson Administration. Harvard graduated its first black student, Richard T. Greener, in 1870. Edward Bouchet graduated Yale in 1874. Thomas Sowell went to Harvard on the GI bill. Harvard is in Boston, a bastion of woke progressivism today, but the incubator of the eugenics movement back when that was the rationale for “progressive” race-based discrimination. Lest we forget, “follow the science” was their battle cry, too.

The trouble with affirmative action started with Plessy v. Ferguson, an 1896 decision that launched the whole dishonest enterprise. The Court, then dominated by Democrats, condoned a Louisiana law requiring trains to segregate blacks and whites in separate carriages. It was a contrived case. Plessy looked white, and it was a set-up designed to test the law. It passed. That decision upholding the “separate but equal” fantasy green-lighted Jim Crow, and the rest, as they say, was history.

Plessy was a 7-1 decision. The lone dissenter, John Marshall Harlan, was a Republican and scion of a prominent Kentucky family of former slave-holders. Harlan had a half-black half-brother, Robert James Harlan, born into slavery but reared and educated in the family. He became a successful businessman and, eventually, a member of the Ohio House of Representatives. Without affirmative action.

Brown v. Board of Education overruled Plessy in 1954. But the original Brown decision did not endorse affirmative action: it outlawed segregation, i.e., differential treatment based on race. But race-based differential treatment is precisely what the champions of affirmative action today want to perpetuate.

Has affirmative action wrought lasting change in the corridors of power? Neither side seems satisfied. Lemann plainly believes the practice needs to continue because the work is not done. But is it a good idea? Thomas Sowell has demonstrated that race preference programs worldwide have not met expectations and often produced the opposite of what was intended. (Sowell believes “diversity” is an empty magic word.) John Hindraker observes that “every major institution in the United States has engaged in “affirmative action,” which means discriminating in favor of blacks and, to a lesser extent, Hispanics, for the last 50 years. If any “systemic racism” has become embedded in our society, it is in the realm of affirmative action.”

Should we continue to place bets on such a sorry horse?

How can we fix this? Dallas Justice Now, a band of woke Texans, asks wealthy white parents not to send their children to elite schools “to leave those spots open for students from Black, LatinX, and other marginalized backgrounds.” I’m not holding my breath. Wealthy parents regularly decline opportunities to send their kids to public school even as they oppose vouchers that would give poor parents that choice.

Here’s a better idea: If you really want to achieve diversity, run a lottery.

I mean it. Set aside some spaces for legacies, athletes, and the well-connected to keep the cash coming. (Not hard, you’ve been doing it forever.) But then take that mountain of well-qualified applicants, throw them into a big barrel, and find a blind person to pull out as many names as needed to fill the remaining slots. Let fate decide. Money’s no issue. Harvard has more money than God — $41.9 billion — and could fund every student through 2050 without running low. And don’t BS me about students who might not be “prepared.” That’s woke-speak for “from the wrong side of the tracks,” another condescending socioeconomic slur. Repurpose admissions officers as mentors to help new kids navigate those ivory towers and ivied halls. If your school is as good as everyone — especially you — think it is, you can set those students firmly on the path to success.

Adopt the lottery approach, and you’ll have a bulletproof defense against discrimination. There’s no more neutral principle than the luck of the draw.

But the greatest benefit of all is that instead of a raft of entitled, snotty-nosed brats who think they’re smarter than everybody else, you’ll have an entering class who feel lucky. What passes for merit is mostly luck, anyway: the good fortune of being born in a prosperous country, to caring parents, plus (as Malcolm Gladwell explains) good timing.

So, Nick, don’t spoil that craft beer with your salty tears. If the Supreme Court finally nails the coffin shut on affirmative action, it may be the best thing that could happen to those it pretends to help. Affirmative action hasn’t worked, and it isn’t not about merit. It’s luck, a golden ticket.” So let’s just go ahead and treat it that way.

Reprinted with permission –     The American Spectator
YouTube’s CDC Bans Called Out By Rand Paul

Sen. Rand Paul Asks if YouTube Will Apologize after CDC Revises Mask Guidance

From legalinsurrection.com
2022-01-17 23:00:56
Leslie Eastman
Excerpt:

 

Of all the failed pandemic policies, perhaps the mask mandates have been the biggest losers.

They have especially proved useless during the recent surge of the Omicron variant.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday clarified its stance on various kinds of masks, acknowledging that the cloth masks frequently worn by Americans do not offer as much protection as surgical masks or respirators.

While this disparity is widely known to the general public, the update marks the first time the C.D.C. has explicitly addressed the differences. The agency’s website also no longer refers to a shortage of respirators.

Despite the…

 

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US Navy Seals won their day in court and will presumably have more days in court as the ruling by a Federal District Judge granting them the right to reject the military vaccine mandate on religious grounds is sure to be appealed and sure to end up in the Supreme Court.

Navy SEALs win religious exemption case

From www.usatoday.com
2022-01-17 10:25:58

Excerpt:

 

There is no COVID-19 exception to the First Amendment,” wrote U.S. District Court Judge Reed O’Connor. His words, directed to the United States Navy, should remind all Americans – and especially those in positions of authority – that the Constitution refuses to bend to authoritarian impulses.

Earlier this month, O’Connor issued a preliminary injunction against the U.S. Navy, preventing it from taking any further action against the 35 Navy SEALs and Special Warfare service members represented by the First Liberty Institute. It also provides hope for the thousands of members of the military who bravely raised religious objections to receiving the vaccine knowing full well their fates had long been sealed.

 

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An American University taking taxpayer dollars has just ruled that a free speech group cannot be formed because free speech space is far too dangerous to allow anyone to just wander into without ‘protections’ from potentially ‘offensive’ thoughts and ideas.

Emory student free speech group rejected to prevent ‘harm’

From www.thecollegefix.com
2022-01-17 06:59:27
Jennifer Kabbany – Fix Editor
Excerpt:

‘The rejection of the Emory Free Speech Forum exemplifies the exact reason why this club must exist’ 

Students at Emory University School of Law seeking to start a free speech group were rejected by the Student Bar Association, which argued in its denial letter there are “no apparent safeguards in place to prevent potential and real harm that could result” from the group’s various discussions.

The Student Bar Association, in rejecting the request from the Emory Free Speech Forum for official recognition, also said the group was too similar to other campus groups to approve.

The rejection letter was recently published by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, which is lobbying on behalf of the Emory Free Speech Forum to get the decision overturned. FIRE argues the decision violates the private university’s free-expression policy.

On Jan. 10, FIRE publicly called on Emory Law to approve the forum’s application, which…

 

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