Is Louis Farrakhan Racist/Anti-Jewish?
Students Attending Classes as Critical Observers
SEND THIS EPISODE TO ANOTHER STUDENT- Keep it Moving.
Is Louis Farrakhan Racist/Anti‑Jewish?
THE CONVERSATION MANY COURSES AVOID
A critical examination of race, religion, power, and public narrative.
Students from all backgrounds attending classes as critical observers, watching how instructors handle racial discomfort, avoid certain truths, and reveal how power and fragility shape what gets taught. Students often show more courage than the institution itself, noticing what faculty fear discussing in courses labeled “Race,” “Ethnicity,” or “People of Color” history. You all know the classes. LOL
FIVE WAYS STUDENTS CAN OBSERVE, TAKE NOTES, AND NOTICE FEAR IN STAFF/INSTRUCTORS
1. Track Topic Avoidance Students note when instructors skip, rush, or redirect discussions about controversial leaders, racial violence, or institutional bias. These moments expose patterns of avoidance and institutional fear.
2. Analyze Language, Tone, and Body Cues Students listen for hedging phrases (“that’s complicated,” “we don’t have time”), nervous laughter, sudden tone shifts, or physical discomfort. These signals reveal fear of addressing real racial issues.
3. Observe Student Reactions Students document who leans in, who withdraws, who challenges, and who looks disappointed. These reactions highlight how student courage often exceeds faculty courage.
4. Compare Course Materials to What’s Missing Students review syllabi, readings, and lectures to see what is emphasized versus what is excluded—controversial Black leaders, antisemitism, systemic bias, or state violence. Absences reveal institutional fragility.
5. Reflect on Patterns Over Time Students summarize recurring behaviors: avoidance, redirection, discomfort, or openness. These patterns show how fear shapes the classroom climate and how real learning requires discomfort.
FACULTY UNDER OBSERVATION
Institutional Responsibility & Harmful Rhetoric Some instructors argue universities must confront statements that may perpetuate prejudice, raising concerns about student impact and community relations. They emphasize caution, context, and historical sensitivity.
Selective Outrage & Racialized Standards Others argue controversial Black leaders are scrutinized differently and that institutions avoid difficult racial topics. They challenge inconsistencies in how “harm” is defined and enforced.
WHY THIS EPISODE MATTERS
“Many instructors (including Black) fear this podcast because it tackles the subjects their courses avoid. Students want real conversations. Some faculty avoid the discomfort real learning demands. The Black College Achievers Podcast creates the space they won’t.”
Metro State Black College Achievers Podcast Where students confront the conversations institutions tiptoe around. I don't ask the college to validate and/or support this podcast. We don't need consent to be Black and achieve. “Can I get an Amen.”
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