Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin still doesn’t want to reveal all of the reports — and fictitious reports — sent to the tip line he created for parents to snitch on educators who teach “divisive” topics.
But after a settlement with a coalition of news organizations that sued, the Republican’s office has released a small fraction of the responses. As you may know from previous ReidOut Blogs, Youngkin has tried to hide submissions to the snitch line from public view.
The conditions of the settlement with several news organizations — including NBCUniversal, which owns MSNBC — allowed for the release of only 350 emails that had also been forwarded to the Virginia Department of Education.
Unsurprisingly, there was evidently no there there when it comes to the released emails.
Youngkin said he set out to remove “divisive practices” and critical race theory, a college-level field of study Republicans have scapegoated to push whitewashed curricula. But according to NBC4 Washington, “after combing through 350 emails that the governor’s attorneys say were randomly selected, News4 found zero reports of critical race theory or so-called divisive practices.”
And sadly, it appears the snitch line is no more! An official told The Washington Post the administration quietly killed it in September as submissions slowed. And, what’s more, the administration doesn’t appear to have released any of the many, many prank emails that Gen-Z for Change activists helped generate.








