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Celerity

(53,132 posts)
Wed Nov 19, 2025, 07:22 AM 17 hrs ago

The Trump Administration Is Quietly Preparing to Bring Back School Segregation


It starts with vouchers and the destruction of the Office for Civil Rights.

https://prospect.org/2025/11/19/trump-administration-quietly-preparing-to-bring-back-school-segregation/


President Trump signs an executive order with Secretary of Education Linda McMahon at left, July 31, 2025, in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. Credit: Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo

Not so long ago, the days of racial segregation were thought to be long past. Jim Crow apartheid was firmly part of America’s shameful past—and few episodes were more despicable than bestial white adults throwing objects and screaming death threats at a six-year-old Ruby Bridges for attending a previously whites-only school. But there have always been enemies to school integration, and they are making moves to bring it back. At least for now, the tactics are quieter, using tools like school vouchers and selective destruction of federal law enforcement. Donald Trump is making Jim Crow great again by pushing “school choice” and gutting the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights. The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) functions as the Department of Education’s civil rights watchdog. Advocates, students, or parents can file complaints to the office, which then investigates to determine if a complainant’s civil rights (based on race, color, national origin, sex, disability, or age) were violated.

At its best, OCR is a transformative institution, providing long-overdue justice and helping schools protect their students—and not just from racist abuse. In 2014, the Obama OCR played a critical role in reforming the sexual assault prevention policies at Princeton University. It found, after a four-year probe, that the school “failed to provide a prompt and equitable response” to three students who had filed sexual harassment or assault complaints, and violated students’ rights by using a standard of proof higher than the federal recommended standard for sexual harassment or sexual assault. The university had to pay fines and reimburse the tuition of some of the survivors of the assaults. More recently, in 2024, OCR found the Owasso School District in Oklahoma was in violation of Title IX when a trans student’s assault at the hands of two students resulted in their tragic suicide.

OCR, like any agency, has its flaws—its process is quite slow, for instance. But on balance, it is a safeguard for all students on campus, and especially women and minority groups. And that is precisely why it has been targeted by the Trump administration. Last year, the far-right Heritage Foundation’s white nationalist blueprint to reshape America—also known as Project 2025—outlined a troubling plan for OCR in which it would be moved to the Department of Justice and transformed into a weapon to “punish schools for teaching critical race theory” and “transgender insanity.” Sadly, as with much of Project 2025, this vision is coming to pass. In addition to cutting half of OCR’s staff (who are now set to be reinstated after some court battles), from March 11 to June 27 of this year Education Secretary Linda McMahon and Donald Trump dismissed over 3,400 discrimination complaints with either settlements or claims the evidence was insufficient.



Instead of spending time on those complaints, McMahon and her team are now targeting schools whose diversity, equity, and inclusion programs are allegedly violating civil rights law—specifically, the alleged civil rights of white students who didn’t get into a given selective school in favor of students of color, who are assumed to be less deserving by definition. All of this comes out of the 2023 Supreme Court case Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, which effectively found race-based affirmative action programs in higher education unconstitutional. That decision’s logic—that attempting to rectify historic injustices and account for the effects of centuries of discrimination is the real civil rights issue—is the pretext for much of McMahon’s assault. Thus do laws meant to rectify the lasting legacies of racism become tools of legal bigotry.

snip


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The Trump Administration Is Quietly Preparing to Bring Back School Segregation (Original Post) Celerity 17 hrs ago OP
There's no more "quiet" about it, they have been screaming it at the top of their lungs for several months now. mwmisses4289 14 hrs ago #1
DURec leftstreet 14 hrs ago #2
Seems like a good issue for us to bring up. Kid Berwyn 14 hrs ago #3
Nice religion you got there Fat Jesus (Jehoshaphat), be a shame if something happened to it. RedWhiteBlueIsRacist 14 hrs ago #4
Republicans have been resegregating public schools for decades. Lonestarblue 13 hrs ago #5
K&R BlueWavePsych 10 hrs ago #6
Woah. Crazy racist! electric_blue68 8 hrs ago #7
She's a sick fuck. spanone 8 hrs ago #9
These are wicked fucks running our government these days. spanone 8 hrs ago #8
I didn't know about the ORC (Dept of Ed) electric_blue68 8 hrs ago #10

mwmisses4289

(2,803 posts)
1. There's no more "quiet" about it, they have been screaming it at the top of their lungs for several months now.
Wed Nov 19, 2025, 10:04 AM
14 hrs ago

Kid Berwyn

(22,338 posts)
3. Seems like a good issue for us to bring up.
Wed Nov 19, 2025, 10:49 AM
14 hrs ago

Just like we stood in unison against Drumpff dismantling Civil Rights…Affirmative Action…DEI…Voters’ Rights…Obamacare…

Lonestarblue

(13,131 posts)
5. Republicans have been resegregating public schools for decades.
Wed Nov 19, 2025, 11:21 AM
13 hrs ago

Using charter schoolS, vouchers, and school choice as mantras for “improving” public education, white families in many states are able to exclude or severely limit minority students in “their” schools. They have also been able to change school district lines and thus exclude students living in a higher preponderance of minority neighborhoods, in effect a form of gerrymandering school districts. Studies have repeatedly shown that schools with majority minority students are under-resourced and lower performing, thus denying minority students the same resources to learn as provided to white students in better financed school districts. Using property taxes, even when supplemented by state taxes, usually results in schools with fewer resources in poor areas. White supremacy and white privilege are alive and well in the US.

ABC published an article on public school segregation last year.

“More than a third of students attend schools where 75% or more of those in attendance are of a single race or ethnicity, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office's most recent investigation into K-12 education.”

Snip

“According to data collected by the Department of Education between 2022 and 2023, among 100,000 public schools across the country, about 83% of all Black public school students and 82% of all Latino students attended a majority non-white school. At the same time, 75% of all white public school students were enrolled in a majority-white school.”

https://abcnews.go.com/US/us-schools-struggle-segregation-70-years-after-brown/story?id=113837729

electric_blue68

(25,014 posts)
10. I didn't know about the ORC (Dept of Ed)
Wed Nov 19, 2025, 04:44 PM
8 hrs ago

Without kids, I pay less attention to educational issues, but I don't totally ignore them either.

Never thought of school vouchers, charter schools, etc as tools for resegregation, but yeah.

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