Netflix’s Ahistorical Ibram X. Kendi ‘Documentary’ Is More Racist And Radical Than You Can Imagine

[rebelmouse-proxy-image https://thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Screenshot-2023-11-29-at-10.31.33 AM-1200x675.png crop_info="%7B%22image%22%3A%20%22https%3A//thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Screenshot-2023-11-29-at-10.31.33%5Cu202fAM-1200x675.png%22%7D" expand=1]'Stamped from the Beginning' is a whirlwind tour through six centuries of racism to trace the origins of 'anti-blackness.'
Rutgers Professor Suggests She Wants To ‘Take Out’ White People Before Celebrating Decline In White Birth Rates

Rutgers Professor Suggests She Wants To ‘Take Out’ White People Before Celebrating Decline In White Birth Rates

'The thing I want to say to you is we got to take these motherf-ckers out but like, we can't say that right?' Cooper said.

Rutgers professor slams white people as 'villains' while defending critical race theory: 'Take these motherf***ers out'



Rutgers University professor Brittney Cooper, an outspoken advocate for feminism and critical race theory, defended the controversial teaching and said that white people need to get out of the way of its teaching.

Cooper — who made headlines in 2020 for blaming COVID-19 deaths on Trump voters — added that white people "kind of deserve" a declining white birth rate and said that they were "villains."

What are the details?

During a recent talk, titled "Unpacking the Attacks on Critical Race Theory," Cooper told writer Michael Harriot that when she attempts to teach critical race theory to college students, she asks if it's possible to "legislate [racism] and march it away," or if they think that "white people just always gonna be like this, and our job is to hold back their ability to do the most harm."

She also pointed out that white people and conservatives are so opposed to critical race theory because they do not want to admit the truth.

"The issue that the right has is that critical race theory is just the proper teaching of American history," the professor and activist insisted.

When asked if she believed that white people would ever relinquish their inherent power, Cooper responded, "The thing I want to say to you is 'We gotta take these motherf***ers out,' but, like, we can't say that, right? I don't believe in a project of violence, I truly don't."

Elsewhere she said that the white birth rate is declining "because they literally cannot afford to put their children, newer generations, into the middle class."

"It's super perverse," Cooper added, "and also, they kind of deserve it."

A recent report from Campus Reform noted that the discussion took place on Sept. 21 as part of a Root Institute initiative.

What else?

According to the Root, Harriot has been outspoken in explaining the importance of critical race theory teachings.

“One can't understand the political, economic, and social structure of America without understanding the Constitution," Harriot explained. "And it is impossible to understand the Constitution without acknowledging that it was devised by 39 white men, 25 of whom were slave owners. Therefore, any reasonable understanding of America begins with the critical examination of the impact of race and slavery on the political, economic and social structure of this country."

Campus Reform reported that Cooper did not respond to a request for comment on the inflammatory remarks, and an auto-reply email message stated that she is "not regularly checking email because she is on sabbatical leave."

Unpacking The Attacks on Critical Race Theorywww.youtube.com

Rutgers gender and Africana studies professor suggests Ma'Khia Bryant was shot because she was having a 'bad day' and 'not being perfect'



A Rutgers professor appeared on MSNBC's "ReidOut" talk show Thursday night, where she came to the overwhelming defense of Ma'Khia Bryant, a 16-year-old who was shot by a police officer as she was lunging with a knife at another girl.

A panel discussion about the Columbus, Ohio, shooting on "ReidOut" featured the Rev. Al Sharpton, psychologist Phillip Atiba Goff, and Brittney Cooper, who is a Rutgers University associate professor of gender and Africana studies.

"The argument for our movements has never been that black people have to be perfect in order for them to deserve dignity, for us to have good policing, for us to be viewed with humanity, for cops to take a breath before they literally get out of the car guns blazing," Cooper told host Joy Reid.

Cooper claimed that the prosecution of Derek Chauvin had to be "impeccable" to get a conviction against the former police officer, who was found guilty of second-degree murder, third-degree murder, and second-degree manslaughter in the death of George Floyd.

"And if that is the standard, then no black person is really, truly going to be safe if we cannot be having a bad day, if we cannot defend ourselves when we think we are going to get jumped, if we call the cops and they can't show up and tell who the victim is and who the perpetrators are and they can't use their training to adjudicate regular, old, everyday community conflict," Cooper said.

Coincidentally, Cooper lashed out last month at a police spokesperson who relayed a message from the Atlanta spa shooter who said in his own words that he was having a "bad day." Cooper attributed the "bad day" quote to the police spokesperson, but he was paraphrasing the murderer, as Reason reported.

"'Yesterday was a bad day for him.' There is no end to the capacity of law enforcement to empathize with murderous white terrorists," Cooper wrote on Twitter. "WTF!"

Cooper then argued that girls like Bryant are misunderstood, and she was "adultified."

"What are we going to do about the way that we don't understand black girls as girls. Ma'Khia Bryant was a child like Tamir Rice was a child," Cooper said. "And the way that she has been talked about as this, you know, because she was a big girl, right, and so people just see her as the aggressor.

"They don't see her humanity. They have adultified her," Cooper claimed. "We turn black girls into grown women, before they even are able to vote and then, you know, and are unable to see them as children until I have watched folks across the political spectrum really defend this and say – and empathize with the officer, say that he didn't have any other set of choices.

"If you can't figure out how to de-escalate a 16-year-old even with a kitchen knife when you have a gun and you're a grown man, you shouldn't be a cop," Cooper ranted on the cable talk show.

WHAT?! MSNBC's Joy Reid, guest blame the Columbus police officer for having somehow triggered #MaKhiaBryant into wa… https://t.co/tt1Bo3rkBn
— Curtis Houck (@Curtis Houck)1619133263.0

Cooper has received notoriety for making controversial, and at times outrageous remarks. Last April, Cooper proclaimed that Trump supporters are to blame for COVID-19 deaths. In 2019, Cooper claimed that former President Donald Trump's policies and racism are responsible for overweight black women. In 2015, Cooper asserted that Jesus Christ was "potentially queer."