MORIN: “Christian (A US-Based White Supremacist Group)”

Pinterest Hidden Image

These are the words a young college student read in her public relations book, required for class at the University of North Georgia.

Libs of TikTok posted the video below:

The excerpt comes from a book called International Public Relations: Negotiating Culture, Identity, and Power. It is written by Patricia A. Curtin and T. Kenn Gauthier.

I was able to get a screenshot of the actual excerpt to verify:

I read further into the chapter, and there’s no other explanation offered for this statement. It almost appears as though an editor added it after the fact. But that it remains in the book and students are being required to read it, is abominable. It’s literally posted as if it’s a FACT.

This is the type of thing young people are being taught at colleges and universities.

What’s more racist – calling all Christians white supremacists or assuming zero people of color are Christians?


Leftist indoctrination in public schools, colleges, and universities is real. This is just one small example, but this type of bigotry breeds hatred. And hatred breeds the violence we’ve seen increasing across the United States against anyone who isn’t to the left of Mao.

UPDATE: The school posted the following on their website:

We are aware of and understand the recent concerns raised about a passage in the textbook used in a senior-level public relations course. To be clear: the textbook is not describing Christians as white supremacists. The author’s reference is to the ‘Christian Identity Movement,’ a U.S.-based extremist group that misuses Christian symbols to promote hate. We recognize how this mention could be misinterpreted, and we are reviewing the matter. The University of North Georgia respects people of all beliefs and unequivocally rejects all forms of hate.

The book does NOT explain that it’s referring to the ‘Christian Identity Movement.’ There are zero notes or discussion around this. This movement is not something that’s prevalent today, in fact, most people have never heard of anything like this. It was something that began in the 1920s and barely exists today. This is a public relations class, not a theology or movement class.

Author

  • Kimberly Morin

    Kimberly Morin is a political activist in the Granite State. She is a lifelong Independent who calls out both sides of the aisle when they screw up. She's a weekly guest on the nationally syndicated radio show, Real Side with Joe Messina, and a frequent flyer on The Independence Gang.

    View all posts
Share to...