The FBI‘s Office of Diversity and Inclusion has launched a program that will train agents to deconstruct their own identies along intersectional lines to determine their status as oppressor or oppressed, the Post Millennial reported.
Chris Rufo, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute who has worked to expose Critical Race Theory and intersectionality, discovered documents that outline the program.
The four-step program’s goals include:
- Define ‘Intersectionality’ and review the history of the term.
- Reflect on identity and engage with our own intersections.
- Discuss the role of intersectionality in our work.
- Learn tips and tricks for increasing inclusion in the workplace.
The instructor will ask the agents which of their identites they think about the least, which ones feel invisible or most difficult to discuss with others, and which ones they want to know more about.
Under the question, “What Is Intersectionality,” a jumbled and illegible mess of words appears.
Then the instructor tells the FBI agents to “recognize and value one another’s unique identities.”
“Be aware that different situations may cause different people to feel uncomfortable because of their intersectional identities,” the training document states.
This religious exercise has spread throughout America’s top corporations, universities, government bureaucries, non-profits and public schools.
Cultural-identity-based intersectionality emerged as the USSR’s downfall showed the failure of class-based Marxism to spark a proletarian revolution or amass popular support for communism.
The new Marxist doctrine tries to incorporate more people than the working class into the oppressed side of the oppressor-oppressed narrative.
Intersectionality teaches that a person’s status in public and private life comes from a network of distinct identities that include one’s physical ability, class, education status, height, gender identity, nationality, race, sexual orientation, and religion.
The dominant oppressive force in intersectional theory is the strong, tall, middle-class, college-educated, American-born, European-descended, straight, Christian male.