Texas Tech University has reportedly ended an “anti-racism” seminar that separated participants based on their skin color. “Upon reviewing materials from the ‘Deeply Rooted Conversations’ discussion series, we learned that some of the content does not align with our university values, and we have discontinued this program,” a Texas Tech spokesperson told the Daily Caller. The training session, titled “Allyship and Co-Conspirator,” was first reported by conservative college student group Young America’s Foundation (YAF) after a student told the organization about the “anti-racism” training. In video footage released by the YAF, Mica Curtis-Wilson, who is no longer employed by Texas Tech, dividing students and faculty members into two groups, the “BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) affinity space” and the “Ally affinity space.” “The point of this is to be able to identify how we experience these concepts and ideas and deeply listen to others and how they understand these …