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Ever since Superintendent Toni Jones entered the scene, Greenwich Public Schools have become increasingly politicized, and the political bias always leans to the left, never to the right.
So it probably shouldn't come as a surprise that the district permitted the left-leaning League of Women Voters (LWV) to conduct voter registration drives right at the entrance to Greenwich public schools on their open house nights.
The League bills itself as "a political grassroots network and membership organization that believes the freedom to vote is a nonpartisan issue."
The reality, however, is that the League is a highly partisan organization that has strayed from its original mission and has become yet another tentacle of the democrat party.
Here are ten examples:
The League is now desperately trying to "save democracy" along with the rest of the radical left, and even started a yard sign campaign with that theme.
It's worth defining what it means to "save democracy" to organizations that have been caught up in the critical social justice movement, like the LWV.
Academic James Lindsay offers an insightful translation.
"The word 'democracy' within critical social justice has a presupposition to it," explains Lindsay. "Under critical social justice ideology, in other words, the idea of creating 'equity,' if people aren't perfectly equal first, then their voice isn't perfectly equal."
People with more money or more privilege are automatically assumed to have more "voice" than others.
The social justice warriors believe the only way to have "an ideally democratic system" where everyone has an "equal voice" would be if everyone is made equal first. Another word for that is communism.
"Believe it or not, this is something that's been said by communists all the way going back Vladimir Lenin," cautions Lindsay. "So within the critical social justice movement, when they say that we have to appeal to or protect or save our democracy, they're actually presupposing that communism is necessary to have democracy in the first place."
So why is it that the League of Women Voters was permitted to hold voter registration drives during Greenwich Public School Open Houses this year?
Will the Superintendent host a series of voter registration drives from a right-leaning organization in order to balance things out a bit, and make it more "equitable"?
Should we give our friends at Turning Point a call to extend an invitation so they can set up tents at Greenwich Schools like they did at Arizona State University?
Would TPUSA feel the same warm welcome that the LWV team received?