The New York State Education Department on Friday issued a defiant response to the Trump administration’s threats to pull federal funding from public schools over certain diversity, equity and inclusion programs, a remarkable departure from the conciliatory approach of other institutions in recent weeks.
Daniel Morton-Bentley, the deputy commissioner for legal affairs at the state education agency in New York, wrote in a letter to federal education officials that “we understand that the current administration seeks to censor anything it deems ‘diversity, equity & inclusion.’”
“But there are no federal or state laws prohibiting the principles of D.E.I.,” Mr. Morton-Bentley wrote, adding that the federal government has not defined what practices it believes violate civil rights protections.
The stern letter was sent one day after the federal government issued a memo to education officials across the nation, asking them to confirm the elimination of all programs it argues unfairly promote diversity, equity and inclusion. Title I funding for schools with high percentages of low-income students was at risk pending compliance, federal officials said.
New York’s stance differed from the muted and often deferential responses across academia and other major institutions to the Trump administration’s threats. Some universities have quietly scrubbed diversity websites and canceled events to comply with executive orders — and to avoid the ire of the White House.
How old are you, 95?
This is the dumbest “the youth are bad!” scaremongering I’ve ever seen.
I live in the Rochester area. dryfter isn’t wrong.
Scaremongering you say?
11-year-old boy driving stolen car hits woman in Rochester
Teen accused of shooting and killing another teen during robbery on Flint Street
Four juveniles charged in Greece stolen vehicle crash
Teenager arrested for carjacking involving loaded ‘ghost gun’
And while not strictly teenager related, I get to hear these idiots ride in a pack and go up and down the city streets during the summer.
I’m not saying all teenagers are bad but when schools are the worse in the country, there’s not really any other options for kids.
I will admit I should have put these links in my origami comment, but I assumed this was an issue in many urban areas. 🤷🏻♂️
News articles are for fear mongering. They report on salacious cases. You can’t use them to make generalizations or arguments about crime as a whole, unless you’re doing some thick description full on qualitative research and analysis. (Even that can be doubtful. Gang Leader for a Day is a famous piece of bullshit - also probably the inspiration for that Xavier : Renegade Angel episode).
The data says there was a bump up during COVID, which is explained by COVID (schools closing is an obvious factor). But as far as larger trends.
Literally all of these are anecdotal evidence. Youth crime is down massively since the 90’s, and beyond the very real gun violence (for which y’all have tried nothing and are all out of ideas) none of the stories you linked demonstrate or try to demonstrate a systemic problem except the systemic problem of news organisations optimizing for clicks rather than information.
Lmao