![]() Jim Galloway, former political columnist Atlanta Journal-Constitution Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has a few crucial rulings left on its docket.Īnthony Michael Kreis, professor of law Georgia State Universityįred Smith, professor of constitutional law Emory University Maybe the Commission should stop wasting taxpayer money and our universities’ time on nonsense and focus instead on how to address our teacher shortage, better prepare teachers and create an educational system that moves Georgia’s educational outcomes out of the bottom third relative to other states.Brad Raffensperger has spoken with federal prosecutors investigating efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Teachers will also understand that “fairness” demands that every student be given what he, she, or they individually need to succeed. They can force teachers to use their preferred words, but they cannot change the facts of American history and culture.Īnd, when students learn those facts, they are going to see that the treatment of African Americans, Native Americans, immigrants, poor people, LGBTQ+ Americans and other minority members based on “differences” and “preconceptions” is not and never has been “fair.” ![]() ![]() The Georgia Professional Standards Commission uses taxpayer money to impose politically correct speech. Preferred words don’t change facts of American history Will these rulings usher in “America’s third Independence Day” by striking a blow against unequal treatment based on race, or give us “America’s second Groundhog Day,” where we face additional months - or years - of the winter of affirmative action? ![]() As the country’s oldest private college and oldest public college, respectively, where better to put an end to affirmative action-based admissions? Supreme Court is scheduled to issue June rulings in the race-based admissions cases involving Harvard College and the University of North Carolina. Now we await additional news of freedom, as the U.S. Juneteenth is considered “the longest-running African-American holiday” and has been called “America’s second Independence Day,” says Wikipedia. Gordon Granger arrive in Galveston, Texas, and formally issue the order enforcing the emancipation of slaves in Texas, giving rise to the celebration of “Juneteenth.” Implementation varied, however, generally depending upon Union troop advancement. The Emancipation Proclamation, effective January 1, 1863, declared an end to slavery in the Confederate States. Supreme Court could put an end to race-based admissions If “1984″ symbolizes the perfect tyranny, Georgia is at 1982. Bill Nigut is one broadcaster who held the line. ![]() The GPB cave to GOP pressure is damaging. Georgia’s vote for President Biden reflects the fact that a narrow majority of voters had faith in Biden’s superior statesmanship, moderation, experience and deep patriotism - values Trump lacks or corrupts. However, although the GOP has politized and “weaponized” issues in the public sphere, all these horses and men have yet to prevail. And now, the cherry on the sundae, GOP-led pressure on Georgia Public Radio to eliminate the most evenhanded, non-polemical broadcast in the state. To meddle in the curricula and books in schools and public libraries. To refuse to extend Medicaid to citizens who need it. Media is latest victim of state GOP controlĬonsider: Georgia GOP legislative efforts to curb voting rights of individuals. ![]()
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