Fight back

Screen Shot 2020-10-13 at 7.44.52 AM.png

Barbie goes woke

Unwilling to see nursery schools be the sole indoctrinator of self-hate in the nation’s school children, Barbie joins the fray.

“…Nikki goes on to give an example of how she, as a black doll, was stopped by evil security officers (presumably also dolls), while minding her own business on the beach.

"Barbie and I had a sticker-selling contest on the beach last month," the doll says. "We split up and went our separate directions to see who could sell the most. While I was on the boardwalk, beach security stopped me three times. The security officer thought I was doing something bad, even though I was doing exactly the same thing that you were doing."

Nikki also shares how a teacher – a white, cisgendered male doll, if I had to guess – discriminated against her after a French exam, believing she "got lucky" on the test because of the color of her skin. Nikki sadly shares her realization that the system was rigged against her, and that she would always be a victim, leading her to not join the French club.

"I don't want to have to constantly prove and re-prove myself," she says.

The message is clear: kids, things only work based on the color of your skin, not on your merits, or hard work, or the content of your character. No matter how hard you try, the game is rigged. This, of course, is one of the central premises of Critical Race Theory's division of society into Oppressed and Oppressor, as well as Robin DeAngelo's profoundly disgusting book "White Fragility."

Like a Critical Race Theory "training" session where people of color share their experiences with racism, Barbie then brings these stories home with a message to your kids that they should check their privilege.

"They don't make those assumptions about white people like me," she says. "Because that means that white people get an advantage that they didn't earn, and black people get a disadvantage they don't deserve."