The nation’s largest teachers union—the National Education Association—decided to strap on their virtue-signaling boots and trot out an anti-Trump agenda piece claiming they’re fighting back against ‘fascism.’ One problem: they misspelled fascism. Seriously. The political brain trust responsible for educating America’s youth couldn’t even spell the buzzword they were using to accuse someone of being a dictator. Fox News caught it after social media lit this dumpster fire ablaze.
The Bullet Point Brief
- Irony overdose: They called Trump a fascist but spelled it “facsism.” That’s not fascism—that’s a spelling bee felony.
- This was in an official NEA resolution. You’d expect at least one adult with a dictionary involved.
- Social media responded like it always does—with memes and mockery sharp enough to slice through tenure contracts.
- If this is the intellectual vanguard shaping kids’ brains, we’re gonna need more prayer and less policy.
My Bottom Line
Sometimes you don’t need a punchline. These fools write it for you. The NEA just handed every conservative in America a loaded comedy shotgun by butchering the very word they’re weaponizing against the guy half the country still supports. It’s like trying to cancel someone for “racism” while spelling it with an extra Q.
Look, I don’t expect everyone with a chalkboard to win a Pulitzer Prize—but maybe knowing how to SPELL your core ideology isn’t asking too much from our taxpayer-funded intellect factories? These are the same people who complain about school choice, bash charter schools, and want more funding… meanwhile, they’re out here treating English like an optional elective. When your moral crusade includes typos that could’ve been caught by Microsoft Word circa 1998—you should maybe sit down, sip some decaf, and rethink everything.
But make no mistake—this isn’t just a typo. It’s the unintentional honesty of incompetence baked into modern academia. They aren’t threatened by real fascism; they’re threatened by differing opinions—and now they’re trying (badly) to spell that threat away one botched resolution at a time.
