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Jul 26, 2025  |  
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NextImg:NEA Scraps Link to 2025 Handbook After Exposure on X
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Article audio sponsored by The John Birch Society

The National Education Association (NEA), the far-left hate-Trump union that controls public schooling, wiped its 2025 handbook from its website after conservative commentator Corey DeAngelis posted the document’s radical propaganda on X.

The document is a hodgepodge of crackpot anti-white racism and advocacy for reverse discrimination and “educational reparations.” It even suggests that the state should license homeschooling parents.

The document drops Jews from its “International Holocaust Remembrance Day” section, but includes those of different genders and “gender identification.”

“The nation’s largest teachers union just scrubbed their 2025 handbook from their website,” DeAngelis revealed on X. “Too bad for them, I saved the 434-page document.” The document is available at the Web Archive. Apparently, the school marms don’t know the internet is forever.

On July 22, DeAngelis posted that he found the handbook, then ran down the group’s hate-whitey and other Grade F content in a long X thread.

The handbook’s opening attack on “white supremacy,” words that appear 11 times, is in its section “Hiring Policies and Practices for Teaching Positions.”

“The recruitment and retention of a teaching staff that is representative of cultural, ethnic, and racial diversity is essential to reducing the impact of white supremacy culture and to working toward a truly just and fully integrated society,” the handbook says.

In its section on “Historic Preservation,” the union “encourages the preservation of historically significant lands and structures for the purposes of preserving our nation’s heritage and maintaining important historic resources for future generations.” Then again, “monuments that celebrate the Confederacy and other forms of white supremacy should be removed.”

But the real attack on The White Man begins in a section titled “White Supremacy Culture.”

“[T]o achieve racial and social justice, educators must acknowledge the existence of white supremacy culture as a primary root cause of institutional racism, structural racism, and white privilege,” the handbook avers:

Educators must also work to prohibit institutionally racist systems and policies that have governed our society and kept Native People, Asian, Black, Latin(o/a/x), Middle Eastern or North African, Multiracial, and Pacific Islander people from full participation in American life. 

But that’s not all. The “norms, standards, and organizational structures manifested in white supremacy culture perpetually exploit and oppress people of color and serve as detriments to racial justice.”

Whitey also gets the “invisible racial benefits of white privilege, which are automatically conferred irrespective of wealth, gender, and other factors,” the handbook claims, and “severely limit opportunities for people of color and impede full achievement of racial and social justice.”

Amusingly, the NEA also wants “to eradicate hate caused by prejudice, stereotypes, and biases.” To that end, the handbook prescribes Maoist struggle sessions for teachers that will end in “the eradication of institutional racism and white privilege perpetuated by white supremacy culture.”

That the NEA calls for “educational reparations” is no surprise. The goal: “racial and social justice for descendants of formerly enslaved peoples.” “Racial and social justice” appears 22 times in the handbook. “Racism” appears 21 times.

Reparations, the handbooks says, are to include

legislation, financial supports, educational opportunities and corrective funding formulas that seek to redress violations of Black people’s human rights by providing a range of material and symbolic benefits to individuals, families, and communities that have been negatively impacted by the influence of racialized education policies.

Thus does the union offer a list of reparations, including “bias-free inclusive curricula that include the Black Diaspora” and “student loan forgiveness,” and “free public higher and further education for descendants.”

You don’t need a doctorate in education to know who will foot that bill.

Anyway, the handbook denounces “the slaughter and displacement of indigenous people,” and says “that any attempt to deprive a group from life, land, resources, or culture is immoral.” It states that “formal apologies are long overdue.”

Another of the union’s targets is homeschoolers. NEA “believes that home schooling programs based on parental choice cannot provide the student with a comprehensive education experience,” the handbook says. And “instruction should be by persons who are licensed by the appropriate state education licensure agency, and a curriculum approved by the state department of education should be used.”

And homeschooled kids mustn’t be permitted to participate in public-school sports and other activities.

The union’s discussion of the Holocaust, DeAngelis believes, also deserves special attention. It “basically erases Jews.”

And indeed, NEA thinks International Holocaust Remembrance Day must “recognize the more than 12 million victims of the Holocaust from different faiths, ethnicities, races, political beliefs, genders, and gender identification, abilities/disabilities, and other targeted characteristics.”

What “other targeted characteristics” are, the union didn’t bother to say.

Yesterday, the NEA published a statement from headmistress Becky Pringle about the omission:

The National Education Association has opposed antisemitism throughout its history and is deeply committed to ensuring the safety and inclusion of Jewish educators and students. NEA regularly shares resources and supports educator workshops on Holocaust education, antisemitism, and ways to promote understanding of Jewish culture, heritage and history. This reflects NEA’s ongoing commitment to teach about Holocaust history and to counter the antisemitism that laid the groundwork for the systematic murder of six million Jews and the persecution and murder of millions of others by the Nazi regime. This document is not a handbook for use in the classroom, but a compilation of the more than 100 new business items adopted by NEA last year, which largely relate to the variety of materials NEA provides. These new business items also include calls to stand up against antisemitism, promote Holocaust Remembrance and education, and promote content to mark Jewish American Heritage Month. 

After DeAngelis linked to the documents at NEA’s website, the union, again, scrapped it.

“Page not found,” the website says:

We’re sorry! We can’t find the page you’re looking for. Would you like to visit our homepage or browse our resource library instead?

A search of the NEA website does not return links to the handbook.