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Opinion

Calls for death. Anti-Muslim. Dissing public schools. Morrow a wild pick for NC schools chief

Myron B. Pitts, Fayetteville Observer
5 min read

Michele Morrow is the strongest statement that North Carolina Republicans have made yet on their real thoughts on public education. It is not a good statement.

Republicans in the state legislature, including Rep. Diane Wheatley of Fayetteville, voted to give billions in taxpayer money to private schools through school vouchers, aka Opportunity Scholarships. Even the state’s richest folks will eventually be able to Uber their freshly scrubbed offspring to the private schools of their choice — using yours and my money for the tuition. Fun!

More: Wrong again, Mr. Robinson: Republican NC governor candidate misleads on education spending | Gary Pearce

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This comes after the many years state lawmakers ignored a court ruling to fund public schools in line with the state constitution, which says every student deserves a “sound basic education.” Teacher pay in our state meanwhile wallows near the bottom for starting teachers and 34th in the nation on average.

Michele Morrow, Republican candidate for 2024 North Carolina race for superintendent of public instruction
Michele Morrow, Republican candidate for 2024 North Carolina race for superintendent of public instruction

So already, our state’s attitude toward public education is sad and lacking.

Now along comes Morrow to say, figuratively: “Hold my beer.”

More: Pitts: Roy Cooper visits Fayetteville's E.E. Smith, criticizes school vouchers and he’s dead right

Morrow of Cary has called public schools “indoctrination centers” and home-schools her kids. She yet won the Republican nomination for NC Superintendent for Public Instruction, i.e. head of public schools, having defeated incumbent Catherine Truitt 52% to 48%. In November, Morrow will face Democrat Mo Green, a former Guilford County Schools superintendent and former director of the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation.

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Morrow has made numerous hateful or out-there statements on social media. She deleted the personal Twitter account where most of her wild statements live. But the internet, as ever, is forever, and the screenshots live on.

2024 candidate for superintendent of public instruction in North Carolina Mo Green
2024 candidate for superintendent of public instruction in North Carolina Mo Green

Calls for execution

The other day, Morrow posted from her campaign Twitter/X account a link to a story about disorder in New York schools and pledged to bring “civility” back to education.

That’s wonderful except that Morrow has many times publicly called for people’s death. Am I off-base to believe that calling for executing people is a radically uncivil position?

The tweet that has received the most attention comes to us from Morrow’s May 2020 Twitter feed, in which she expressed her deep thoughts on former President Barack Obama:

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“I prefer a Pay Per View of him in front of the firing squad … I do not want to waste another dime on supporting his life. We could make some money back from televising his death.” 

Michele Morrow, who is running for NC Superintendent of Public Instruction, called for former President Barack Obama's execution in a post on X, formerly Twitter, in 2020.
Michele Morrow, who is running for NC Superintendent of Public Instruction, called for former President Barack Obama's execution in a post on X, formerly Twitter, in 2020.

It’s not just the first Black president in Morrow’s crosshairs: She has called for executions for President Joe Biden as well as “vaccine-mongers” Bill and Melinda Gates, as CNN reported.

Who even sits around thinking such thoughts?

At some point Morrow might have gently shut the laptop lid, pushed the machine away and went out to touch grass. She chose Plan B: run for the highest office in the state that deals with other people’s children and their futures.

Scapegoating Muslims

Morrow claims on her campaign website that “Some schools even teach children to stereotype, scapegoat, and shame others based on their ethnicity, religion, or sexuality.”

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This is pretty much made-up, since public schools would get into big trouble if they tried it. However, private schools can, and some do, deny enrollment to LGBTQ+ families, as happened right here in Fayetteville. Unlike publics, they are not obligated to offer specialized programs for students with physical or developmental disabilities.

More: Pitts: Fayetteville private schools: Millions in taxpayer funds, a Christian worldview

Private schools are now free to discriminate on the public dime. Discriminatory faith-based schools are drawing down millions in voucher money, a fact frequently highlighted by former Charlotte schoolteacher Justin Parmenter, who is a frequent critic of GOP education policies on his Twitter/X feed.

Also, I ask rhetorically: Is Morrow the best messenger for an anti-discrimination message?

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In 2020, she wrote that Muslims should be barred from public office. She said the goal of Islam was “evil” and bent toward world domination. That sure sounds likes scapegoating and shaming others based on their religion.

She walked back some of the anti-Muslim sentiment but only when asked about it by WRAL during her failed run in 2022 for Wake County school board.

Lover of conspiracy theories

In past tweets, Morrow espoused the false conspiracy theory that Obama was a Muslim plant sent to destroy America.

She was anti-vaccine during the COVID-19 pandemic. She bought into Trump’s false theory the election was stolen.

President Barack Obama claps as the First lady Michelle Obama speaks to troops at then-Fort Bragg, N.C., now Fort Liberty, on Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011. Michele Morrow, 2024 Republican candidate for state schools superintendent, tweeted over several posts in 2019 and 2020 that Obama, the first Black president, was a Muslim operative who sought to destroy the U.S. and deserved execution.
President Barack Obama claps as the First lady Michelle Obama speaks to troops at then-Fort Bragg, N.C., now Fort Liberty, on Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011. Michele Morrow, 2024 Republican candidate for state schools superintendent, tweeted over several posts in 2019 and 2020 that Obama, the first Black president, was a Muslim operative who sought to destroy the U.S. and deserved execution.

She promoted the pro-Trump QAnon cult’s theories and its hashtag, “WWG1WGA," which means “where we go one, we go all.” Morrow posted it more than seven times, according to CNN.

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She tweeted that actor and Trump critic Jim Carrey was “… searching for adrenochrome.” QAnon people believe Democrats and Hollywood celebrities drink children’s blood for this substance, adrenochrome, to stay young.

I have no snark for this one: It is completely bonkers. It is also based on anti-Semitic tropes that go way back.

Morrow was on the Capitol grounds on Jan. 6, 2021, the day Trump supporters launched their failed insurrection. She was not arrested, as more than 1,200 defendants others have been. She has said she didn’t go into any buildings or do any rioting.

Shrug.

The real Morrow

Morrow at her website touts her experience teaching high school in a “micro-school” setting, which she describes as a bridge between traditional schooling and home schooling. She projects more as a typical, conservative candidate on the site. But cleaning up for the campaign trail is what candidates do; it’s like a defendant wearing a suit to court.

Myron B. Pitts
Myron B. Pitts

Her prior incautious remarks and actions likely give us a better view of how she might make decisions.

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Like how she tried to get books banned in Wake County Schools. Or the fact that she wants to abolish the state Board of Education.

Personally, I don't want to hold her beer and see what she might do to public education, which is already hurting in our state.

Opinion Editor Myron B. Pitts can be reached at [email protected] or 910-486-3559.

This article originally appeared on The Fayetteville Observer: NC schools chief candidate Morrow cannot outrun unhinged Twitter posts

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