Atif Qarni’s Alternate Universe

by James A. Bacon

Atif Qarni, Virginia’s recently- departed secretary of education, has penned an opinion piece for The Washington Post that raises an important question (and I’m not being hyperbolic here): Is the man who oversaw Virginia K-12 and higher-education system for four years under Governor Ralph Northam totally disconnected from reality?

The thesis of Qarni’s piece is that Governor Glenn Youngkin has “declared war on Virginia’s public education system.”

I could shred literally every line in the piece, but it would be tedious to do so. Rather, I’ll focus on the most egregious claim, one that is a common talking point on the Left: the assertion that Youngkin “expressed concern over White students feeling uncomfortable about history lessons involving discussions about race.”

It is true that Youngkin objects to schools, as a matter of school policy, teaching White kids that their race makes them “oppressors,” and that they are “racist” if they fail to acknowledge their White privilege. But he has always insisted that the full history of Virginia be taught in classrooms: the good, the bad, and the ugly.

Qarni doesn’t document his assertion because he can’t. Instead, he incoherently lists a series of historical topics taught in schools, some of which have no bearing on his argument.

“Youngkin’s attempt to ban CRT is an attempt to ban the truth about what happened in our history, starting before the arrival of the first ships to Virginia’s shores,” Qarni writes. He goes on to list the following:

  • For example, many Indian tribes resided in Virginia thousands of years before the invasion by English settlers.
  • The first Africans were brought here in 1619 in bondage and forced into slavery by Europeans.
  • Many important figures who revolted against British rule resided in Virginia.
  • Many U.S. presidents were born in Virginia, including four of the first five.
  • Richmond was the capital of the Confederacy from 1861 to 1865, and some of the bloodiest battles of the Civil War were fought in Virginia.
  • Virginia is also where 16-year-old Barbara Johns protested the poor conditions of her school, which eventually led to the famous Brown v. Board of Education case that ended segregation in public schools.
  • Virginia is also where “massive resistance” to desegregation, led by U.S. Sen. Harry F. Byrd Sr., resulted in many schools shutting down in 1958 and 1959 to block integration of classrooms.

What?

Let me rephrase that. WHAT?

Does Qarni think that Youngkin wants to ban teaching the fact that Indian tribes lived in Virginia before the English settlers? (As an aside, I thought “tribe” was pejorative, but, then pejoratives are bad, I guess, only when uttered by the wrong person.) 

Does he think Youngkin wants to ban teaching the fact that the first Africans arrived in a slave ship in 1619?

Even more bizarrely, does he think Youngkin wants to ban teaching the fact that “many important figures who revolted against British rule resided in Virginia” or that Richmond was the Capital of the Confederacy?

This is unhinged. It doesn’t even make sense on its own terms.

Youngkin has been very clear. He wants to ban “Critical Race Theory” from public schools, and by that he means ridding policies, guidelines, curricula, and standards derived from CRT axioms that public schools are systemically racist, that Whites are unfairly “privileged,” and that the antidote to racism is “anti-racism.” He wants to halt the compelled widespread “training” of teachers with the doctrine that Whites are “oppressors” and Blacks are “victims” and end the “courageous dialogues” that indoctrinate students with the same view of the world.

As for history, teachers would continue instructing students about indigenous Americans, the institution of slavery, Reconstruction and the rise of Jim Crow, and Massive Resistance, all of which are included in the Standards of Learning — even if it makes some White students uncomfortable to revisit the history. What Youngkin wants to ban is compelling White students to accept the view that they are collectively guilty for the actions of their ancestors.

Who’s the real racist here? Who is the person engaging in invidious stereotypes based on skin color? In one sentence, Qarni accuses Youngkin of manufacturing a crisis in K-12 education that does not exist. Then in the next, he refers to “racist” White parents who are Youngkin’s “foot soldiers.”

That wasn’t a slip. In the closing paragraph of his piece, he writes, “Racist parents are showing up in droves to school board meetings, threatening members and superintendents with recalls, firing — and worse.”

That is precisely the kind of sweeping characterization that has become shamefully common in many public school districts and precisely what many voters rebelled against. To Qarni, those who protest his vision for education are violent racists…. Just one step removed, one might surmise, from being domestic terrorists.

Qarni’s rambling tract is not only factually impoverished and intellectually incoherent, but scary. Thankfully, Qarni is no longer teaching history to high school students, as he did before joining Team Northam. He now works as director of external affairs at the Hope Center for College, Community, and Justice, where he can do far less harm. 


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47 responses to “Atif Qarni’s Alternate Universe”

    1. Larry, Sometimes, you are a wonder in distorting plain English. What in the world are you finding to support Qarni’s statements in this? “Inherently divisive concepts, like Critical Race Theory and its progeny, instruct students to only view life through the lens of race and presumes that some students are consciously or unconsciously racist, sexist, or oppressive, and that other students are victims. This denies our students the opportunity to gain important facts, core knowledge, formulate their own opinions, and to think for themselves..We must equip our teachers to teach our students the entirety of our history – both good and bad. From the horrors of American slavery and segregation, and our country’s treatment of Native Americans, to the triumph of America’s Greatest Generation against the Nazi Empire, the heroic efforts of Americans in the Civil Rights Movement, and our country’s defeat of the Soviet Union and the ills of Communism, we must provide our students with the facts and context necessary to understand these important events.”

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        geeze louise Carol. All I said was that there appears to be disagreement , right?

        that’s a ‘distortion”? you guys have issues, as they say.

        do you not agree there is disagreement as to what Youngkin intended?

        Do you think that SOME people might consider ANY teaching of the uglier part of our racial history – as “divisive”?

        AND to then “report” such things to the “tip line”?

        1. Disagreement is based on looking at the same set of facts and coming to another point of view. It’s not looking at a random set of unrelated facts and attributing those to another’s statements.

          1. LarrytheG Avatar

            Yep – and ya’ll fail big time on that…

            It’s the SAME issue..

            A Tip Line to report teachers being divisive. This is like catnip for the crazies!

        2. I can’t speak for the rest of the state, but I’ve yet to hear of one person in my little county who would consider reporting in that way. They were quite vocal for optional school masking–which the school board granted–but not one has said a word about not teaching history. In fact, where it’s been discussed, they expect history to be accurately taught.

          Even if someone somewhere did make a report, don’t you trust Youngkin’s office to handle it appropriately? I do.

          1. LarrytheG Avatar

            I’m going by what Younkgin said as well as what I’ve read here in BR especially with regard to equating DEI with CRT.

            the only “distortion” here is the consistent and enduring conservative lie about CRT and DEI in the schools IMHO.

          2. VaNavVet Avatar

            Regardless of how it is handled in the Gov’s office, the snitch line is divisive and is making the rest of the country look at the Commonwealth with a big Whiskey Tango Foxtrot. It serves to keep parents from reaching out to and cooperating with the teachers and administrators. It is like calling the district central office without first contacting the school. It was a self-inflicted wound not the first shot in a war. It does IMHO further pit parents against teachers which can not be good for their child’s education.

          3. LarrytheG Avatar

            I can only imagine what folks like JAB and Carol would have said if Northam had set up a “snitch” line for teachers who did “racists” things..

            The whole concept give insight into how conservatives think these days IMHO.

            And it’s the reason why , even after they get elected, they often last just one term once the electorate gets a whiff of how they want to govern.

            Does anyone remember Cucinelli “investigating” professors?

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attorney_General_of_Virginia%27s_climate_science_investigation

            it’s just the way they “think” I’m afraid.

          4. I agree with you on this. Setting up that “tip line” was a stupid thing to do.

      2. John Harvie Avatar
        John Harvie

        Well said. And then there’s this which while off topic, is outrageous:

        https://www.theepochtimes.com/fourth-school-accused-of-secretly-helping-children-turn-transgender_4243398.html?utm_source=newsnoe&utm_campaign=breaking-2022-01-29-3&utm_medium=email&est=7eOzTzyX2qvvu0x6EewoKuTXj2BgF%2BRLw%2BxI4CWEPJOV2NcXpBQxUZ1eGDIz6A%3D%3D

        My daughter, an attractive lady with a very common feminine name, when registering to visit her grandson in his school had to check a box at Indian River School in Chesapeake specifying whether she wished to be listed/referred to as he, she, or it.

        1. vicnicholls Avatar
          vicnicholls

          Indian River High School?

          1. John Harvie Avatar
            John Harvie

            Thanks for the correction.

            Yes, Indian River High School.

          2. vicnicholls Avatar
            vicnicholls

            Go Braves!! Wanted to verify before I spoke. LOL.

        2. LarrytheG Avatar

          And THAT question IS being asked at other venues besides schools just to be honest about it.

        3. Virginia Gentleman Avatar
          Virginia Gentleman

          Ha! – the epoch times claims teachers are grooming kids to be gay. And your “attractive” daughter has to check a box. I assume that this would be more understandable for parents if they had ugly daughters.

          1. John Harvie Avatar
            John Harvie

            I’m sure you understood, at least I hope you could, that there was no doubt about her gender.

            Would you let go of my leg now, please?

      3. James McCarthy Avatar
        James McCarthy

        We defeated the Soviet Union and Communism? I missed that in history class after reading this week’s newspapers about Russia and China. Neither CRT nor its progeny instruct student “only: through “the lens of race.” Nor do they “presume” racist attitudes of students. The discomfort alleged about CRT emanates from parents and politicians. Without discomfort learning and education are failing. When students and parents were first apprised that the world was round, it was very discomforting.

  1. Virginia Gentleman Avatar
    Virginia Gentleman

    Since there appears to be confusion on what is allowed and not allowed, it would be helpful for people to explain what is not allowed. What is written above suggests that public schools can’t say that “systematic racism” exists. Is that accurate? Can you say that racism exists? Can you say that there are pockets of systematic racism that exist? Or can you just never utter the words “systematic racism”? Furthermore, it appears that can’t say that Whites are “privileged” and blacks were “oppressed”. Is that only true when talking about current day? Can you teach that in our history, whites did have privilege and blacks were oppressed? Is that not allowed? It makes sense if you want to ban what can and can’t be taught, the burden of defining what can’t be taught is on the complainant.

    CRT obviously means different things to different people – depending on what side you are defending. Please draw the lines carefully for us. I don’t know anyone who wants to teach that all white people are bad and that all blacks are oppressed, but I certainly think that there are people who would like people to be aware that slavery and discrimination against blacks has been an ugly scar on America for a very long time. Yes – there has been progress, no – not everyone is racist, but yes – it would be wonderful for people to self reflect to ascertain if they have any conscious or unconscious unhealthy bias.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar

      Apparently if it makes white folks feel bad, it’s problematical.

    2. tmtfairfax Avatar
      tmtfairfax

      How about Senator Hirono and former Senator and now Vice President who attempted to apply an on-its-face unconstitutional religious test on a nominee for a federal district court seat? Does that fit the definition of conscious bias?

  2. The “disagreement” about what the governor intended in his EO comes from people who choose to intentionally misinterpret or mischaracterize the plain language it contains.

    1. Kathleen Smith Avatar
      Kathleen Smith

      Good point!

  3. I thought CRT is not being taught, thus banning it is meaningless. What’s the Brew-ha ha from the Left? If you are against the banning, you thus acknowledge it’s teaching….. a truly leftist box on contradiction [but we’re use to it.

    1. Virginia Gentleman Avatar
      Virginia Gentleman

      who acknowledged anything?

    2. Kathleen Smith Avatar
      Kathleen Smith

      CRT is not a curriculum; it is a way of looking at a curriculum and making changes in the way it is taught. You may or may not agree with any of the changes, it is a theory, not something that is taught. It is the HOW it is taught.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        okay. Please explain HOW it is taught…. perhaps where you are?

      2. LarrytheG Avatar

        I’m not in your face on this. I think you may well have some personal experience with this and I really want to hear your experience – and opinion.

  4. tmtfairfax Avatar
    tmtfairfax

    Every student is taught early on that generalization is wrong. Before one can make a generalized statement, at a bare minimum, the speaker must have sufficient statistically valid data to support a conclusion about the group.

    To draw conclusions that a specific individual or “class” individuals is privileged, an oppressor, victim or oppressed, one must have individual data or, to further, sufficient data about a group that demonstrates the conclusion and that the defining factor causes the result.

    Proponents of racism, such as the KKK or proponents of CRT, don’t have sufficient data to support their generalized statements.

    People are ready to challenge “medical advice” given about COVID vaccines, masking and other remedies, but too few people both now and in the past are ready to challenge racist generalizations.

    Moreover, if Northam believed he was privileged, why didn’t he resign when his blackface conduct was exposed? A black man would have succeeded him as Governor. Resigning from being Governor such that a black person would have become Governor clearly gives up one’s privilege.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar

      re: Northam. He did not resign because he KNEW he was NOT a life-long racist and that what he did was wrong but not part of a racist viewpoint.

      Instead, he decided to make amends for it – real changes that addressed real systemic racism – like the Confederate Monuments and VMI’s issues.

      He got condemned for that also by the same folks who accused him of racism… I’d call that systemic hypocrisy.

      1. tmtfairfax Avatar
        tmtfairfax

        The F___r admited he did the deed and the next day he denied it. Then instead of making personal amends, Northam used the power of his office to cover himself with wokeism. If he knew he did wrong, why did he retract his confession?

        If you were on an HOA board and somehow greatly offended a neighbor by making a false statement about the neighbor at a board meeting, after realizing it was false, would you apologize personally and take ownership of the false statement or tell the person that she/he didn’t have to follow an HOA restriction on the color of shutters?

        Somehow, I suspect you’d take ownership and apologize. You wouldn’t use the HOA to remedy the wrong. But that’s just what Northam did. He refused to take ownership of his conduct but used the power of office to cover it up. Northam’s act of repentance was to allow Virginians to have purple shutters. What’s admirable about that?

        The problem is not that he made policy changes with respect to the statues of Confederates in public parks. Maybe that was overdue. The problem is that he used removing Confederate statues to pay for his earlier racist behaviors.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar

          He clearly made a mistake in the way he handled it but it’s also crystal clear he is not a life-long racist by any stretch of the imagination.

          You guys opposed him and wanted him out and this is your excuse.

          In terms of what he did – in total – on the race issue – there is no contest. He did MORE than any governor in Va ever – every.

          To the point where it was way too much for many Conservatives – and for his ONE – SOLE racist act – none others that we know of.

          I think he more than made up for that and most Conservaties agree!

          1. tmtfairfax Avatar
            tmtfairfax

            You don’t know whether Northam has been a life-long racist “stopping” only when he was caught (and then released). There was no MSM scrutiny of Northam and his past until the photo and related information came to light.

            He may have seen the light sometime early in his practice of medicine or still may harbor the beliefs today. I’d be more inclined to believe he changed over time had he owned his earlier conduct and made personal amends. But he didn’t do that. He exploited the power of his public office to signal virtue, rather than make personal amends.

            Instead of offering to fix the window he broke, Northam used public money to install a new sidewalk in the neighborhood. He’s just perfect for the MSM.

          2. LarrytheG Avatar

            Pretty sure we do. The folks that found the yearbook picture were looking hard for more stuff.

            He just has no history of it – from any source, so, at this point, you’re playing what-about-ism here.

            Like I said, you were opposed to him from the get go and wanted him to resign no matter what.. there was never any fair and objective perspective… your words like _ucker and others prior pretty much show your views.

            You latch on to one thing guy and you ignore everything else … not only Nortyam but Harris and others…

            It’s not a reasonable approach to politics nor life unless you yourself have never screwed up either and were expected to live your life condemned for your errors.

            give it up guy.

          3. tmtfairfax Avatar
            tmtfairfax

            Why do you think it’s appropriate for Northam to have admitted he was in the photo, only to deny it the next day and then, instead of making personal amends, using the power of his office to toss woke glitter around the state?

            The problem is not that Northam made bad decisions. As you note, we all do. But normally, most of us admit we were wrong and try to make personal amends. Northam did not do that. He did not put on sackcloth and ashes, come clean, admit his conduct was outrageous under the circumstances and ask for forgiveness. He didn’t have to as he is part of the Virginia Plantation Elite, whose other members would give him cover. He also knew that, because he was a D, the media would cover for him, as it did.

            I’ve never argued that his effort supporting the removal of Confederate statues in public parks was wrong. What I’ve argued consistently is that this does not make personal amends. Had he done both, one would have a strong argument that society should put Northam’s past behind him.

            And we don’t know what else happened in Northam’s past because the MSM ignored it. Look at the Post. It spent big bucks sending reporters to Alabama to cover a special Senate election. It covered former Senator Allen’s stupid macacca remarks for months and months. But it did no investigation and reporting on Northam’s past and not just when he ran for Lt. Governor but also four years later when he ran for Governor. Why was the Alabama senate election more newsworthy than executive officer elections in Virginia?

  5. LesGabriel Avatar
    LesGabriel

    I think he forgot to put a big “D” behind Sen Byrd’s title.

  6. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    “Youngkin has been very clear. He wants to ban “Critical Race Theory” from public schools…”

    But keep it in his kid’s private schools….

  7. James C. Sherlock Avatar
    James C. Sherlock

    Good to hear from “too many Asians” Qarni on the subject of racism.

  8. James Kiser Avatar
    James Kiser

    Critical race theory is based on Critical Theory which was pushed by Marxists fleeing Nazi Germany (thanks for nothing Hitler).

  9. Elliott Webb Avatar
    Elliott Webb

    It’s my understanding that the first Africans arrived in Virginia on a pirate ship in 1619. They were “bounty” plundered from, presumably, a Dutch slave trader and the pirates didn’t know what to do with them, so upon arriving in Virginia, they forced the colonists to take them. They were designated as indentured servants and were eventually freed. This is what I read some years back, and would welcome input from anyone in a position to confirm or refute. No one disputes that VA was full of slaves in later years, but I don’t think the 1619 date is accurate, which would be ironic considering that a whole curriculum in based on it being fact.

  10. LarrytheG Avatar

    I strongly suspect that if a teacher assigned for reading, ” A People’s History of the United States” they would be “reported” and the new AG would “investigate’.

  11. James McCarthy Avatar
    James McCarthy

    JAB, for a blogger who in a companion education discussion admits to a lack of familiarity with details, your deconstruction of CRT is amazingly detailed – and perhaps loaded with unfounded allegations. Consider the simple fact that the absence of discomfort in the learning process likely signals morose curricula. Is the barrier to teaching the effects of race upon a minority any less divisive than not teaching it? Intellectually and emotionally, anyone may reject the existence of systemic racism – however, few can articulate the reasons for disparities created by redlining and other “invisible” barriers.

    It is not necessary to validate Qarni’s thesis by any rhetoric in the same way unnecessary deconstruction only serves to void the spleen. CRT is the academic tool in cultural evaluation of systems in the same way disparate effect is in legal evaluation of discrimination. What we can agree upon is that either method of inquiry will create discomfort unless carefully taught as the song from South Pacific suggests.

  12. Qarni’s defenders in a nutshell: CRT is not taught in schools. But if it were, it would be totally justified!

  13. VaNavVet Avatar

    So hyperbole is not the sole domain of the right.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar

      apparently. ;-0

  14. Elliott Webb Avatar
    Elliott Webb

    It’s my understanding that the first Africans arrived in Virginia on a pirate ship in 1619. They were “bounty” plundered from, presumably, a Dutch slave trader and the pirates didn’t know what to do with them, so upon arriving in Virginia, they forced the colonists to take them. They were designated as indentured servants and were eventually freed. This is what I read some years back, and would welcome input from anyone in a position to confirm or refute. No one disputes that VA was full of slaves in later years, but I don’t think the 1619 date is accurate, which would be ironic considering that a whole curriculum in based on it being fact.

  15. LarrytheG Avatar

    Youngkin has pretty much screwed the pooch in terms of governing Center Right, IMHO.

    He’s not where Abbot and DeSantis are but he’s headed that way and I’m
    seeing some discomfort in the GA from his own party.

    Virginia is still a purple state and Youngkin has a 2% mandate – a Center Right mandate and risks ceding to the GA decisions on goernance.

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