
Critical race theory has become the philosophic foundation supporting a Marxist communist agenda sweeping American society, according to philosophy professor Jason Hill.
Acting as racial managers or agents for African Americans, practitioners of critical race theory (CRT) are after power and aim to โdestroy all those foundational values, all those codified values, and principles that we use in times of crisis,โ Hill said in a recent interview with Epoch TVโs โAmerican Thought Leadersโ program.
Critical race theorists โwant to first erase personal identity, then erase history, erase those codified values to usher in a new, what I would call, Marxist communist agenda in our society,โ he added.
CRTโs view of America as systemically racist is โa misperception of reality,โ Hill said. This central propositionโthat the oppression of African Americans still persists todayโis then used to justify CRT practitioners speaking on behalf of all black Americans, depriving the community of their own agency, according to Hill. But these activists donโt actually care about uplifting the black population, he added.
โIt befuddles me to see how someone who's living in Appalachia in a trailer park, who has no access to water, healthcare, is a walking practitioner of racism."
— Jan Jekielek (@JanJekielek) November 13, 2021
@JasonDHill6 on reparations, white guilt & the "age of post-oppression"
๐ดWATCH @EpochTVus: https://t.co/PbGmw7U6dT pic.twitter.com/2ereoU1nJn
Hillโs own experience in America, detailed in his 2018 book โWe Have Overcome: An Immigrantโs Letter to the American People,โ presents an alternative view to CRTโs portrayal of racism in the United States.
With $120 in his pocket, Hill immigrated to the country from Jamaica at 20. He worked to earn tuition for his degrees, including a doctorate in philosophy from Purdue University, and eventually became a tenured professor of philosophy at DePaul University in Chicago.
โWhen I came to this country, I promised that, in the name of the best within me, I would cultivate the American virtues of individualism and personal excellence and take advantage of the opportunities that lay before me,โ said Hill in anย opinion articleย published in 2018.
In his view, as the 1964 Civil Rights Act became effective, American society entered an โage of post-oppressionโ because the legislation gave African Americans legal equality.
Byย Terri Wuย andย Jan Jekielek