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1 1 (April 14, 2022)

handle is hein.amenin/aeiaehn0001 and id is 1 raw text is: Key Points
s Advocates o critical race theory (GRT) are correct to point out that it was originally an
aradjrernic  rry genrerated in law schools, but CRT' a opponents have been too slow to
underst nd the L1 implications of this.
a C~l was designed to subvert the Civil Rights Act and America's constitutionai orie.
Ahen CRT praxis reaches oubic schools, what appears to be a 'culture war issue is
actualy mart of a broader constitutional var issue.
To :ight that var, more public :nterest lav firms mut see the bigger picture, and rore
parn s   U t be wil ing to step forward to fih ton every lrant necessary to preserve our
consti'utionai order.

Students of Shakespeare know that in times of
great political instability, citizens are not inclined
to look to lawyers for advice or assistance. The
first thing we do. says a character in Hlenr0y V1, Part
1!, Let's kill all the laxwyers, But right now, that
would be bad advice for anyone who cares about
American public education or the Constitution.
After more than a year and a half of public con-
troversy over critical race theory (CRT) in K--a
schools, parents and lawyers across America are
finally waking up to the true significance of the
intersection between the legal-academic CRT and
its operational implications. CRT was dreamed up
by legal scholars explicitly seeking to subvert the
Civil Rights Act and the US Constitution. This is
not political hyperhole; it is a olain reading of lead-
ing CRT lurninaries Kimberl5 Crenshaw and Rich-
ard Delgado. As this neo-Marxist praxis of subver-
sion play' out in news cycle cortroversies based on
what happens inside classrooms, it ias been

wrongly interpreted as a culture war issue. But in
truth, it is a constitutional war issue.
The question of whether government mistitu-
tions can (and should) treat people differently (or
directly antagonize people) based on race should
not be an issue up for debate in the American cul-
ture war. It is settled constitutional jurisprudence.
Tle law recognizes that a public school is not free
to segregate Blac.k and White students or treat stu-
dents differently because of skin color. Indeed, in
2? 5, the Obama aduinistration's Office for Civil
Rights (OCR) held that school-based segregation
was wrong in 2021, the 'Trump administration's
OCR reached a similar decision) But immediately
upon taking office, the Biden administration's
OCR took the essentially iprecedented sten of
rescinding that decisi mm'
When it became clear that the liden admin-
istration would not enforce civil rights law, a brave
teacher named Stacy Deemar approached my firm,
Southeastern Legal Foundation, to effectively

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