bitchuneedsoap@bitchuneedsoap
Western States Center's first toolkit is called "Confronting White Nationalism in Schools." It is currently deployed in 1,400+ American schools, distributed through a "train-the-trainer" cascade model.
The October 2025 revised edition names sitting elected officials as examples of spreading "great replacement conspiracy theory." On page 11, it quotes Rep. Lauren Boebert, Rep. Brian Babin, and Senator JD Vance, now Vice President of the United States.
American teachers are being trained that the sitting Vice President is an example of the conspiracy theory they need to counter in classrooms.
Scenario B categorizes parents who object to curriculum texts containing "feminist, queer, or critical race theory topics" as scenarios of "Invocation of White Nationalist Ideology."
Parents who file FOIA requests, challenge curriculum, run for school board, or attend board meetings are grouped in the same category as the Proud Boys, Patriot Front, League of the South, and Nick Fuentes's America First.
The toolkit authorizes staff to search student devices when "probable cause" arises. The toolkit's own examples of probable cause include citing sources staff considers bigoted.
It instructs staff to contact "friendly media" and to "speak anonymously to minimize risk" against organizing parents.
It explicitly prohibits white student groups. The toolkit states the need for racial affinity groups "does not translate to white students" and tells administrators such requests "cannot be dignified as viable."
It tells teachers to revise assessment rubrics to rule out "the vast majority of white nationalist publications and figures." The toolkit does not define which sources qualify.
The toolkit cites SPLC's Extremist Files as authoritative source material and quotes former WSC Executive Director Eric Ward's SPLC-published essay in its conclusion.
Eric Ward is now a Senior Fellow at SPLC. SPLC was federally indicted yesterday on 11 counts of wire fraud, bank fraud, and conspiracy to commit money laundering.
The toolkit's own acknowledgments page lists its funders: the Ford Foundation, George Soros's Open Society Foundations, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Democracy Fund, and the Schusterman Family Philanthropies, among others.
The toolkit's co-author Jessica Acee is a 2023 Obama Foundation US Leader, personally selected by President Obama.