Exposechristianschools
Also known as: Expose Christian Schools
#ExposeChristianSchools is a viral Twitter hashtag created on January 18, 2019, by ex-evangelical writer Chris Stroop. The hashtag called on former students of private Christian schools to share stories of discrimination, anti-LGBTQ policies, anti-science curricula, and institutional abuse. It exploded after news broke that Second Lady Karen Pence had taken a teaching job at a Virginia school with explicit bans on LGBTQ students and employees, and was further boosted by the Covington Catholic High School controversy that same weekend.
TL;DR
#ExposeChristianSchools is a viral Twitter hashtag created on January 18, 2019, by ex-evangelical writer Chris Stroop.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The #ExposeChristianSchools format is straightforward. Users typically share a personal anecdote from their time at a Christian school, focusing on a specific incident of discrimination, misinformation, or abuse. The hashtag goes at the end or is woven into the text.
Common patterns include:
A brief setup naming the school type (evangelical, Catholic, etc.)
A specific story, teacher quote, or policy description
The hashtag #ExposeChristianSchools at the end
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Chris Stroop's Twitter bio at the time read: "That #exvangelical your pastor warned you about".
Karen Pence had previously taught at Immanuel Christian School for 12 years while Mike Pence was in Congress, and their daughter Charlotte attended the school.
The school's employment application asked potential teachers to explain their view of the "creation/evolution debate".
One tweet shared photos from a 5th-grade health textbook from the A Beka Christian curriculum, sparking its own mini-viral thread about the contents of Christian school materials.
Christian Learning & News argued that both public and private schools practice forms of indoctrination, writing that "every school has a culture they want incorporated into you".
Derivatives & Variations
#ExposePubicSchools and #ExposeMuslimSchools:
Counter-hashtags created by critics who viewed the original as unfairly targeting Christians, attempting to redirect scrutiny toward other educational systems[9].
Mr Atheist's YouTube video:
A January 20 reaction video reading and commenting on the hashtag's tweets, reaching 68,000 views in two days and bringing the conversation to YouTube audiences[5].
Dan Levin's NYT Twitter thread:
The Times reporter's call for stories became its own sub-conversation with 9,000+ responses, splitting into both positive and negative testimonials about Christian education[7].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (11)
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- 4#ExposeChristianSchools - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5List of Internet phenomenaencyclopedia
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