California: Public School Teacher Calls Republican Party Nazis and Fascists

The teacher also told the class that "whites and Christians are fascists and that they support a fascist government."

A public high school teacher in San Diego, California, defined the "modern Republican Party" as fascist, and noted that it is made up of "whites, Christians and heterosexuals." A student at the school, on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, revealed the situation with statements and photographs to Christopher Tremoglie of The Washington Examiner.

"Immediately, I walk into my class and notice that on the board it says: as currently constituted, the Republican Party is now a fascist organization that no longer fits into the category of a conventional Democratic party," the student said.

Image provided anonymously by a student to The Washington Examiner.

Attacks on the Republican Party

The James Madison High School student described how the teacher also made the verbal comparison of the Republican Party to the Nazi Party: "That was really offensive to me. He listed similarities between the Republican Party and the Nazi Party. In addition, on the classroom whiteboard, he wrote the word fascist, underlined it, and listed the words: Trump, straight, white, Christian, and hatred of foreigners, immigrants, and minorities. This is ridiculous. So I took a picture of it."

Image provided anonymously by a student to The Washington Examiner.

According to the student, the teacher continued to insult and denigrate different groups of people: "He just said that whites and Christians are fascists and that they support a fascist government. Immediately, he didn't even ask the class about it. He simply assumed right away that whites and Christians automatically support a fascist government."

Political agenda in schools

The student explained that learning about fascism had nothing to do with the class syllabus:

We were supposed to learn how to make an argument for an essay and the first thing it does is that. He then goes on to say what his definition of fascism is and what he thinks. He put the Nazi Party and today's Republican Party, which is just ridiculous. This caught me completely off guard. It's not a policy class or anything like that. I signed up for the class to learn how to write essays and stuff, not to have a professor try to shove his ideology down my throat.

This is the dangerous kind of indoctrination that goes on in schools today. Parents who do not have alternatives to public schools should be vigilant. What happened in this classroom was not education. It was not a teaching about the sins of our country's past, a justification that progressives often use to subtly brainwash students into repeating their own political beliefs. No, this was overt indoctrination through intimidation of students in a public school in California. Taxpayer money was used to teach that fascists are akin to whites, Christians, heterosexuals or Trump supporters.

Unfortunately, this is what many teachers do today. Their priority is to spread these radical, left-wing political ideologies. They want to indoctrinate, not educate. And they are so comfortable with it that they do it openly.

Several cases in the country

The California case has already been seen in other states across the country. Project Veritas conducts an initiative that brings to light unusual behavior of progressive groups through conversations recorded with hidden cameras. The organization has taken it upon themself to publish stories of teachers and principals in schools in different cities who apply their political agenda in the classroom or denigrate people who are not of their political persuasion.

At Voz Media we have brought to light some cases similar to these incidents. Such is the case of an assistant principal from a public school in Connecticut that refuses to hire Catholic, conservative, and conservative teachers and people over 30 years old for not being progressive enough. There is also a teacher in New York that promotes "a progressive agenda in students" and does not allow "republican perspectives on campus." Furthermore, he considers that "white guys are just awful."