As Twitchy reported, the National Education Association held its Representative Assembly last week to vote on certain budgetary issues, and the union members approved an additional $56,500 to the budget to “research the organizations attacking educators doing anti-racist work” and $127,600 to promote critical race theory and create a study that “critiques empire, white supremacy, anti-Blackness, anti-indigeneity, racism, patriarchy, cisheteropatriachy, capitalism, ableism, anthropocentrism, and other forms of power and oppression at the intersections of our society.”
A few people have noticed that those issues appear to have vanished from the NEA’s website:
Jessica Anderson is executive director of Heritage Action — the organization the NEA mentioned as an example of the anti-CRT organizations it wanted to research:
Tyler Olson reports for Fox News:
Dozens of pages of assembly resolutions and proposed resolutions disappeared from The National Education Association’s (NEA) website Tuesday, some of which included highly-controversial items on critical race theory, anti-racism, and mandatory vaccines.
The pages on the website for the largest teachers union in the United States were visible as recently as Tuesday morning, a few days after the conclusion of the NEA’s 2021 Annual Meeting and Representative Assembly.
…
One resolution that disappeared from the NEA’s site was New Business Item 39, which conveyed the NEA’s desire to “fight back against anti-CRT rhetoric.” That resolution passed.
Another resolution that passed – New Business Item 2 – said the “NEA will research the organizations attacking educators doing anti-racist work and/or use the research already done and put together a list of resources and recommendations for state affiliates, locals, and individual educators to utilize when they are attacked.”
Hmm…
Don’t forget math.
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