Kimberle’ Williams Crenshaw, Darrell Brooks, and the Power of Critical Theory

AI Generated art for the prompt Dancing Grandmas

Following the death of George Floyd, American workers of every class, education, and career level, at all Fortune 500 companies, were asked to look at their complicity in white supremacy.

A white female judge is now allowing Darrell Brooks to defend himself, despite Judge Jennifer Dorow trying to dissuade him from exercising that right.

As well as his mother, a Black Christian woman who has raised a boy with mental illness to a man with mental illness.  

The University of Wisconsin Madison specifically targeted Black children in Waukesha with a custom mental illness called Intersectionality and its adjunct idea, Critical Race Theory.

These are the bright ideas that Dr. Kimberle’ Williams Crenshaw put into legal practice.   

As you’ve no doubt heard, Critical Race Theory is the sophisticated legal theory taught in law schools.  

This American political movement showed up in the universities a decade or so ago, but they’ve been overtaking law using Title IX, Domestic Violence, Family Law, and all facets of the criminal justice system for decades.

Brookes would certainly have interactions with Waukesha professionals who are well-trained in this sophisticated legal theory spreading from Madison and beyond.

While it is his right to defend himself in court, it is ill advised.  He is clearly not a trained attorney and running over dancing grandmothers in a Christmas Parade are serious charges in Wisconsin.

Especially when the dancing grandmother’s are white and at a Christmas Parade. White supremacy on display.  Had the parade organizers not even considered that Darrell Brooks might need to use that street in a hurry?

Perhaps, Brooks is triggered by Christmas Parades because of his religious beliefs.  Some have described Intersectionality as a religion, so maybe we should all be asking Kimberlee’ Williams Crenshaw:

As the most influential Black Law Professor in history, co-creator of Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality, how do you feel about him representing your ideas in the court of public opinion?

I would never ask all Black workers to consider their responsibility in the “system that created Darrell Brooks,” but I would like Kimberle’ Williams Crenshaw to account for what she’s created.