The University of Delaware recently came under fire from FIRE, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, for its “diversity” program, in which students are educated by 7,000 RAs in oppressors vs. oppressees. Attendance at their res-life re-education sessions was mandatory, until FIRE struck and the university immediately caved.
Here’s an excerpt from the University of Delaware Office of Residence Life Diversity Facilitation Training document [e.a.]:
“A RACIST: A racist is one who is both privileged and socialized on the basis of race by a white supremacist (racist) system. The term applies to all white people (i.e., people of European descent) living in the United States, regardless of class, gender, religion, culture or sexuality. By this definition, people of color cannot be racists, because as peoples within the U.S. system, they do not have the power to back up their prejudices, hostilities, or acts of discrimination. (This does not deny the existence of such prejudices, hostilities, acts of rage or discrimination.)” - Page 3
Is our children learning?
“I can’t believe my son is a fanatic,” says the father of Dr. Mohammed Asha, one of the rage-filled terrorists who tried to disrupt daily life in Britain last week.
“My son is incapable of such acts,” said Dr Asha’s father Jamil Abdelkader Asha from his modest home in Amman, Jordan.
“My son was happy in Britain, he was always telling us. He didn’t feel he was the brunt of any negative sentiment as an Arab or a Muslim, on the contrary.
“And he is not the type to get involved in political issues – at university he wasn’t even a member of any student unions. He is a devout Muslim like the rest of us, but he is not extremely religious. He didn’t have time for religion because he was always studying.”
Obviously, the senior Mr. Asha didn’t see the 1999 movie My Son the Fanatic:

Synopsis: A Pakistani cab driver and a prostitute find their lives complicated when his Islamic Fundamentalist son decides to “clean up” their town [in Britain].
The movie, which does not have a happy ending, or even a resolution, came out in 1999—well before 9/11 and well before Iraq, which Andrew Sullivan tries to label as a “proximate cause” of the latest incidents involving Rage Boys in Britain.
Abdulla is clearly a Sunni, angered at US and UK support of Shia in Iraq. This paradigm reveals the real danger of our further enmeshment in a Muslim civil war: we can turn one or both sides against us. The imperative to get out before this compounds itself as a problem is urgent.
Sure, sure—let’s get out of Iraq. And let the Israelis get out of Israel. And then let’s us get out of Britain, too, while we’re at it, because they don’t like having us there, either.