School District Claims Its CRT Programs Not Against the Law Then Hides Them From the Public

We’ll have more on this as we dig in, but there’s never a bad time to catch a local school district, especially brand-them-at-the-prom Exeter (SAU16), doing naughty things. They’ve hidden both their CRT (DEI-J) web page and all the training material from public view.

Some among us might think, well – now that it’s illegal in New Hampshire, they just took it down. No. Anyone who has been interacting with a district that has this garbage or followed our exposure of the Exeter School District (so far) will never believe that.

The word you are looking for is “hide!”

Related: The Exeter School District’s (SAU16) BLM Bedfellows…

 

I’ve been going through the DEIJ training offered to the teachers, and they’ve been taken down.  The trainings were conducted by 2Revolutions, Toyim Augustus, and The Black Print Education Consulting.

Here’s a screenshot of the page before it was hidden from the public.

 

SAU16 DEI-J traning page - now hidden

 

Wait, how do we know it was hidden?  Because the page disappeared in conjunction with a letter from Superintendent David Ryan saying that the new law prohibiting discrimination that would make race-shaming CRT training or education illegal does not affect whatever it is that SAU 16 is hiding.

If none of this violates the new law, why is it not still public?

More to follow.

 

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, award-winning blogger, and a member of the Board of Directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor, Executive Editor, assistant editor, Editor, content curator, complaint department, Op-ed editor, gatekeeper (most likely to miss typos because he has no editor), and contributor at GraniteGrok.com. Steve is also a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, The Republican Volunteer Coalition, has worked for or with many state and local campaigns and grassroots groups, and is a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

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