> pushing back against those dangerous radical ideas are not going to lead to "roll back" of any rights.
I am referring specifically to Thomas looking to overturn Obergefell [1], TN trying to legalize child marriage [2], and current Republican efforts to reduce the effectiveness of the ADA. These are concrete examples of the right attempting to roll back certain rights.
> do you agree 100% with critical race theory?
It's an academic framework, not a set of policy goals, and I didn't study that in my CS curriculum, so I can't really speak to it. Can you?
> do you agree 100% with LGBTQ activists?
The vast majority of the policies they propose seem quite reasonable, yes.
I understand that's the view the article is presenting, but if you read it closely, it really doesn't sound like that's what the TN Republicans are advocating:
“What in your legislation would stop a 16-year-old from going down with someone else to the courthouse and getting this done, since there’s no age restriction within your law?” asked Rep. Harris. “I think it would be construed that minors would not be able to enter into this,” Leatherwood (the Republican proposing the bill) replied.
> current Republican efforts to reduce the effectiveness of the ADA
Would you mind providing a link for this one as you did for the others? This one particularly interests me. Granted, maybe the fact that I'm asking means I just don't follow the news enough.
I am referring specifically to Thomas looking to overturn Obergefell [1], TN trying to legalize child marriage [2], and current Republican efforts to reduce the effectiveness of the ADA. These are concrete examples of the right attempting to roll back certain rights.
> do you agree 100% with critical race theory?
It's an academic framework, not a set of policy goals, and I didn't study that in my CS curriculum, so I can't really speak to it. Can you?
> do you agree 100% with LGBTQ activists?
The vast majority of the policies they propose seem quite reasonable, yes.
1: https://www.educationviews.org/clarence-thomas-signals-willi...
2: https://www.wlbt.com/2022/04/06/proposed-legislation-could-l...