Survivor of Mao's murders shares advice: Fight and keep fighting!
Xi Van Fleet spoke at the Louden County School Board and really highlighted the path we are on.
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Xi Van Fleet spoke at the Louden County School Board and really highlighted the path we are on.
A Chinese-born U.S. immigrant, who ripped into a woke school board last year for indoctrinating students, is warning parents to be on alert for Marxist-like school teachers and is also warning the public to learn how Communists seize and hold onto power.
Xi Van Fleet, who was a child during Mao’s murderous Cultural Revolution, was applauded by grateful Loudoun County parents in June 2021 when she warned the school it was following the same pattern she witnessed in her blood-soaked homeland.
"The Communist regime used the same critical theory to divide people," she told school board members in her one minute of allotted time. "The only difference is they used class instead of race."
That criticism of Critical Race Theory was wildly applauded by the room of irate parents who were learning the buzzwords their children were learning in class, such as “equity” and “white privilege,” came from the controversial race-based theory about power-hungry whites and struggling minorities. Thanks to the Chinese-American who spoke up, those parents were also learning CRT traced its academic roots to class-based Critical Theory, which described the struggles of the proletariat to overthrow the greedy bourgeoisie.
Xi Van Fleet, who was a child during Mao’s murderous Cultural Revolution, was applauded by grateful Loudoun County parents in June 2021 when she warned the school it was following the same pattern she witnessed in her blood-soaked homeland.
"The Communist regime used the same critical theory to divide people," she told school board members in her one minute of allotted time. "The only difference is they used class instead of race."
That criticism of Critical Race Theory was wildly applauded by the room of irate parents who were learning the buzzwords their children were learning in class, such as “equity” and “white privilege,” came from the controversial race-based theory about power-hungry whites and struggling minorities. Thanks to the Chinese-American who spoke up, those parents were also learning CRT traced its academic roots to class-based Critical Theory, which described the struggles of the proletariat to overthrow the greedy bourgeoisie.
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