Denver Elementary School Hosts Event That Excludes White People

Segregation used to be a bad thing, but in the era wokeness it’s making a comeback. Many top universities offer black’s only dorms and safe spaces for people of color. An elementary school in Denver, Colorado is running with this by hosting an event that excludes white students and parents. Soon black people will have their own bathrooms and water fountains and racism will be totally fixed.

Christopher F. Rufo is a researcher who exposes Critical Race Theory. He recently found this in front of Centennial Elementary School in Denver:

This is legitimately a school activity, not some photoshopped picture:

And it has the blessing of the Denver Public School System:

Racial unity through segregation seems like a contradiction. It also seems a little illegal. In fact, in 1954 the Supreme Court ruled that segregation in public schools was Unconstitutional because it violates the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment. Then in 1964 the Civil Rights Act was passed which banned, among other things, racial segregation in schools.

Denver University law professor, Dave Kopek, pointed out that “Families of Color Playground Night” also violates the Colorado Constitution:

Rufo learned that this racial segregation event was organized by Centennial Elementary School’s “Dean of Culture” Nicole Tembrock (Yes, she’s white). How absurd is to for an elementary school to have a dean of culture? How absurd it is for universities and even the U.S. military to have diversity officers and inclusion czars?

The school also has a “Diversity and Inclusivity Committee.” Do they have anyone who teaches academics or is it an all-woke indoctrination re-education camp?

I’m completely aware that this kind of crap goes on all over the place now but I’m still struggling to understand how “whites only” is bad but “no whites allowed” is good. Civil right leaders fought and died to integrate this country and now guilty white liberal douchebags are re-segregating it.

I’m going to assume that this school doesn’t teach the kids about Martin Luther King Jr. His “I have a dream” speech would be terribly confusing at their monthly “no white folks” event:

I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.

It’s a good thing that MLK’s kids are grown and don’t attend Centennial Elementary in Denver because they would definitely be judged by the color of their skin and not the content of their character.