❌ Third, related to villains is stoked fear:
✔️ perceived threat to way of life
✔️ fear of “the other”
✔️ imagined threats to own children coupled with willingness to actually put them at risk
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❌ Fourth is fanatic-level belief in particular kool-aid schemes like #schoolvouchers that requires rejection of generally established facts/evidence in favor of alternative version of reality
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❌ Fifth is strict rejection of outside evidence:
✔️ book bans
✔️ Self-cite echo chambers like Heritage, Cato, American Federation for Children
✔️ #privateschools in general as opposed to open public spaces
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❌ Sixth is making common cause with other extremist groups. In this case with
✔️ opposition to #ReproductiveFreedom
✔️ opposition to fair elections/#VotingRights
✔️ the #Trump cult itself
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❌ Finally, hostile borderline violent rejection of opposition. This is what folks like Corey DeAngelis made his name doing on Twitter. Blowing up inboxes, riling up followers, intimidation, etc
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When you look at it in terms of cult/extremist detachment behavior, the edu-Right makes much more sense. And becomes both as ridiculousness and as dangerous as other cults have been.
ExcelInEd *seems* safe because they’re moderate relative to crazy Dixon-type book ban howls today and have impressive array of moderate funders you’d expect from a Bush-led org.
And as an org in many ways they are. I’d take them over @BetsyDeVos any day.
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🧵🪡
It’s a big edu/policy research conference week (#APPAM2022#ASHE2022#UCEA22) and here’s a short thread on ideological diversity in edu-research and edu-journalism #edchat using the Greene/Heritage studies as a hook
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Some formal edu research/journo communities have tolerated increasingly far-Right stuff for years, in part because of a genuine commitment to multi-perspectives, and also out of fear of being labeled ideological or against free speech themselves
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And in the #edchat journalism space there is some of the notorious #bothsides pressure too, to give voices to the Heritages and Catos if the world.
This is why people like Corey DeAngelis routinely are quoted as expert researchers when they’re really political activists
Voucher “empirical” research showing positive academic effects are no less a political tactic than this piece of garbage here—and by the same organizations.
Whitmer actually vetoed the plan originally a year ago. And as early as then, the state GOP didn’t expect to win the #migov (save for a more recent post-primary fever dream) in #Election2022