Dr. Esther Choo notes in her Twitter bio that she provides medical commentary for CNN, MSNBC, and the BBC. None of that is surprising when you hear her new idea: what if anti-racism were made a foundational competency in medical school, and if you fail it, you don’t move on in your education?
What if anti-racism were a foundational competency in medical school. And you didn’t move on if you failed it.
— Esther Choo MD MPH (@choo_ek) November 28, 2021
Choo does acknowledge a solid counterpoint, in her opinion: wouldn’t it be hard to teach anti-racism in institutions like medical schools that are built on systemic racism?
Great idea, huh? Medical schools could pay Ibram X. Kendi $20,000 an hour for a Zoom session and make students buy his books.
✍🏼uh✍🏼oh✍🏼 pic.twitter.com/77KFdtAM3w
— The List (@ListComesForAll) November 30, 2021
More people would die
— Fred Zang (@fmzang) November 30, 2021
There would never be another qualified physician and all medicine would become mere faith healing.
— Robert Herring (@bobherringiii) November 30, 2021
— Jerry Durham (@Jerry_DurhamPT) November 28, 2021
One way to destroy trust in your institution perhaps.
— Russell Hogg (@hogster) November 30, 2021
I’d avoid any doctor with a degree from said school.
— President-Elect Andrew (@JamesAMalone) November 30, 2021
Do you think you’d pass it, Dr. Choo?
— No-Face (@NoFaceLocal) November 30, 2021
What if doctors focused on their patients' health, and, ideally, you had a real job?
— The Red Quest (@TheRedQuest) November 30, 2021
“CNN, MSNBC” all you need to know
— Lucas Biachi (@lucas_biachi) November 29, 2021
Blue check mark, pronouns in bio, consultant for fake news = surreal talking points.
— MMA Vader (@bangkokfrog) November 30, 2021
But how dare you say that leftists believe the role of academia is to act as taxpayer-funded indoctrination centers? https://t.co/UGnhXr2dOF
— Max (@_hmsp) November 30, 2021
How can anti-racism be foundational when it is flimsy doctrine rather than anything well argued, profound or remotely stable?
— Phil Taylor (@philjvtaylor) November 30, 2021
What if embrace of conspiracy theory were the foundational competency in medical school? What if dissent from the ravings of antiracist gurus or rejection of Critical Race Theory barred you from medical practice, no matter how talented or how many lives you might save?
— Ian (@IanAdAstra) November 30, 2021
Agreeing with your politics is not a "competency".
— No try = no fail (@StillTr05207382) November 30, 2021
In which a doctor calls for the practice of medicine to be contingent on practitioners having a specific, government sanctioned, religious belief https://t.co/wf75VBILgE
— libby emmons (@libbyemmons) November 30, 2021
Yes what if we applied to ruling party's purity tests to people in crucial professional roles https://t.co/FMDkgf8jNf
— Supreme Leader of Soymalia (@s0ymalia) November 30, 2021
What if [insert arbitrary ideological proposition] were a foundational competency in medical school. And you didn’t move on if you failed it. https://t.co/0noPqFIgsk
— Peter Boghossian (@peterboghossian) November 30, 2021
What if Christianity was something you had to pass to get a degree? That would be a terrible idea. So why is indoctrinating students in your religion a good idea?
— Charlton Burton (@DylanHeydon) November 30, 2021
What if anti-Communism we're a foundational competency in every school? And you didn't move on if you failed it. Would save a lot of lives! https://t.co/HIqbsOFjdR
— James Lindsay, BDE variant (@ConceptualJames) November 30, 2021
What if patient care were a foundation competency in medical school instead of inane ideological gibberish? https://t.co/rlDej1kCX0
— Rembrandt van Rijn (@RembrandtvanRi9) November 30, 2021
What if healing the sick was the only foundational competency in medical school. https://t.co/TiZ2mBOlw8
— Jose Prince of Peace (@ImperialLuis1) November 30, 2021
Forcibly indoctrinating clinicians into pseudo-scientific race essentialism — what could possibly go wrong? https://t.co/qGtTGfvH60
— BC (@Baconalanche) November 30, 2021
Rather than comfort crying toddlers as they are stuck with needles, we should lecture them about the insidious power of white tears instead https://t.co/2bXam00XSv
— Indeed it Is (@Thisway100) November 30, 2021
Yes!
Also, we must go further!
Let's implement an antiracism competency for patients too!
"Oh, you're not at least a Level 5 antiracist? Sorry, no kidney transplant for you!"
Then we can make them take antiracist courses by "scholars" approved by us that teach our views.
— Serghei Popescu (@SergheiPopescu) November 30, 2021
I don't give a damn if my doctor can parrot leftist talking points
In fact, I prefer he or she didn't
I just want people to be good at their jobs and treat customers/clients equally
Why is that so hard https://t.co/sAr8TYgqVa
— Lauren Chen (@TheLaurenChen) November 30, 2021
The people racking up credentials today are the dumbest and most destructive people this nation has ever produced. https://t.co/X6ygelR0ul
— Dunn Fumble (@artyoan) November 30, 2021
The smallest minority group is the individual. There’s an ill person in front of you. Treat the needs of that individual. Or, for our sake, leave medicine.
— BillyPilgrim (@willypilgrim) November 30, 2021
What if those who’ve become the richest off of “anti-racism” had to engage in honest debate to prove their theory? Why not make that a common competency for them?
Related:
Ben Shapiro and Donald Trump make the ‘White Supremacy Pyramid’ in Google’s anti-racism initiative https://t.co/yycDuqKuio
— Twitchy Team (@TwitchyTeam) September 8, 2021