Montgomery County, Maryland
School Board Trolling Names
to Cancel Culture of Freedom
11/31/23
School boards across the nation have been renaming schools to support woke fascism, trample down historical culture icons, and help create a climate of fear and hatred against Caucasians, Jews, and Roman Catholics.
SCROLL DOWN FOR KENTUCKY’S PARTICIPATION IN CANCEL-CULTURE.
Francis Scott Key is accused of owning slaves despite his activism to end slavery, a trait he shared with other contemporary figures of his era.
Montgomery County, Maryland School Board is seeking whom they may devour in the cancel-culture steam roller, including Composer of USA national anthem among other more locally known historical figures.*
First President of USA, George Washington, owned slaves and freed them in his last will and testament.
Kentucky Has Been Actively Cancelling Culture for Decades
Literally in the middle of the night, former Lexington, Ky., Mayor Jim Gray’s regime removed an historic statue from the lawn of the first Fayette County Courthouse.
Fayette County School Board abandoned their official policy of naming schools only after geographic location of the school and began naming schools after only nonwhite historic figures.
The newest high school, Frederick Douglas High School, is a shinning example of the practice.
However, before the geographic name policy was enacted (well before the new millenium) Fayette County School Boards did name schools after both Caucasian as well as nonwhite historic figures like Paul Lawrence Dunbar High School on North Upper St, Lexington, Ky.
That school is now a community center offering indoor sports and other activities including a recently established tool-loan program.
The Russell Elementary school, next door to Dunbar, has been converted into an affordable apartment complex.
Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government (LFUCG) flipped into the woke mode before Louisville which was the northern most city in Kentucky where wealthy cities owned slaves.
Central Kentucky city of Lexington had the largest population of slaves according to a Rand McNally population map of the 19th Century. It is most likely that those slaves worked on horse and tobacco farms.
The horse industry is still one of the most important economic drivers in Kentucky.
___ Ref.:
* Francis Scott Key is canceled, by Madeline Fry Schultz, 12/01/23,
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/magazine/opinion/your-land-francis-scott-key-is-canceled
Tags:
cancel culture, composer, usa, anthem, francis scott key, montgomery county, maryland, school board, trolling names, freedom, caucasians, jews, roman catholics, nonwhite, blacks, slavery, history, slave owners, slave population, george washington, lexington, kentucky, mayor jim gray, regime removed an historic statue, fayette county courthouse, fayette county school board, policy of naming schools, geographic location, nonwhite historic figures, frederick douglas high school, paul lawrence dunbar high school, russell elementary school, lexington-fayette urban county government, lfucg, louisville, central kentucky, rand mcnally population map of the 19th century, slaves, horse, tobacco, farms, montgomery county, public schools, cancel, culture, education, history, slavery
Orwellian & Machiavellian it proves the number of evil-minded people who join Government and conspire to commit seditious insurrection from inside the deep-state so they can “rule the world.”
Yeah & Clyde Lewis’ radio program (12/01/23) covered the Government’s efforts to BRAINWASH everyone using various subversive (and barely legal) techniques embedded into web sites & high tech stuff. Check out his podcasts.