Editorial | On slavery and race, DeSantis shows his true colors

Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during the Family Leadership Summit, July 14, 2023, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during the Family Leadership Summit, July 14, 2023, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

By ORLANDO SENTINEL AND SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL EDITORIAL BOARDS | insight@orlandosentinel.com |

PUBLISHED: July 26, 2023 at 1:25 p.m. | UPDATED: July 28, 2023 at 4:43 a.m.

Long before Moms for Liberty, there were the United Daughters of the Confederacy.

Their passion and influence kept generations of Southern children ignorant of how slavery had caused the Civil War and how cruel it had been. The “war between the states” was rather over “states’ rights” and tariffs. Confederate soldiers were the heroes of a “Lost Cause.” Kindly masters had been considerate to contented slaves.

Reconstruction was bad. The Ku Klux Klan was a benevolent civic organization.

The Daughters didn’t have to pull the truth from shelves. Its influence with state boards kept offending books from ever being printed or bought. When a University of Florida professor wrote that the South had been more in the wrong in the Civil War, the Daughters of the Confederacy got him fired.

In Florida, more than a century later, Southern revisionism is at it again.

Slaves with skills

To nationwide scorn and well-deserved derision, Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Board of Education has approved a required Black history curriculum with “clarifications” that trivialize slavery and distort the record on racial violence.

Here’s one of them: “Instruction includes how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.”

Another is worse: “Instruction includes acts of violence perpetrated against and by African Americans but is not limited to (the) 1906 Atlanta Race Riot, 1919 Washington, D.C., Race Riot, 1920 Ocoee Massacre, 1921 Tulsa Massacre and the 1923 Rosewood Massacre” (emphasis added).

And by?

Feeding a fiction

From Donald Trump on down, contemporary Americans playing on race for political advantage have been trying to denigrate the Black Lives Matter movement by accusing it of responsibility for violence. The “and by” phrase, unnecessary and gratuitous and now officially part of the Florida social studies curriculum, feeds that fiction.

William Maxwell, a Vietnam-era Army veteran and an African-American resident of Ocoee for two decades, kneels at the gravesite of July Perry in Greenwood Cemetery. Perry, who encouraged blacks to register to vote, was lynched by a white mob after the Election Day Massacre.
Stephen Hudak/Orlando SentinelWilliam Maxwell, a Vietnam-era veteran and resident of Ocoee for two decades, kneels at the gravesite of July Perry in Greenwood Cemetery. Perry, who encouraged Blacks to register to vote, was lynched by a white mob after the Ocoee Massacre in 1920.

The mob that ravaged Ocoee in Orange County, where 25 homes burned and at least eight people died, was incited by two Black men attempting to vote. The massacre at Rosewood, which erased the settlement, was set off by a married white woman’s claim that a Black man had attacked her. The official state history cites Black survivors, who said the assailant was a white lover. (For a link to the Sentinel’s 100th-anniversary coverage of the Ocoee Massacre and images of our 1920s coverage, please visit our web site at orlandosentinel.com/opinion. We’re making that historic coverage, along with other fascinating local history, free for everyone this week.)

For Black history, Florida’s previous standards were extensive and objective, unlike Southern propaganda of the 1900s.


  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.
  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.
  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.
  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.
  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.
  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.
  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.
  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.
  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.
  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.
  • The Orlando Sentinel's coverage the week of the Ocoee massacre barely acknowledged the terror and destruction wreaked on the Black residents of the town after one prominent African American leader attempted to vote on Nov. 2, 1920.

1 of 5

These images reflect the contemporary coverage of the Ocoee massacre by the Orlando Sentinel.


Vice President Kamala Harris accurately described slavery in her speech at Jacksonville, which was aimed at DeSantis without mentioning him.

A defense from DeSantis

After DeSantis first said he “wasn’t involved” in writing the standards, he is now defending them.

This would be a good time for him to begin admitting he was wrong. His critics are feasting on this one.

DeSantis owns this horrific mistake, even if he didn’t personally write the standards. It is his education department, run by his appointees.

Cues are obvious in the dog whistles he’s sent. He banned critical race theory in schools (where it wasn’t even being taught.) He signed a law meant to banish all talk of the relevance of past or present racism from Florida schools and workplaces. He’s made it easier to purge school library shelves of innocuous books some people found to be objectionable because they reflected other cultures or talked about the history of civil rights.

His memoir recalled how the master, Hugh Auld, rebuked his wife for teaching him the alphabet when he was 11.

This is the hideous legacy DeSantis is trying to revive. And no matter how much he squirms and dodges, he can’t erase the stain his actions are leaving on Florida’s reputation.

Coming later this week

DeSantis’ attempts to weaponize racism are turning Florida into a laughingstock and, at long last, turning fellow Republicans and donors against him. Why did it take so long?

The Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board includes Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson, Opinion Editor Krys Fluker and Viewpoints Editor Jay Reddick. The Sun Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Steve Bousquet, Deputy Editorial Page Editor Dan Sweeney and Anderson. Send letters to insight@orlandosentinel.com.

Dear White Women

So many of the horrible things happening in America right now, like teaching our children slaves were lucky to learn skills, or allowing women to bleed out in hospital parking lots, or pushing migrants into rivers to drown, could be stopped by the women who look exactly like me.

Let’s talk about Texas libraries….

Male anti-abortion religious leaders mull murder charges for pregnant people at national event

These white men won’t quit until the US is a Christian theocracy policed by Christian Taliban moral police thugs.  Some important quotes that show their mindset.  Regardless of the legislative strategy, the panelists agreed changing the culture of America to take on a Christian biblical worldview, which will require all pastors to take the same position on abortion as their own.  Also week-long series of events hosted by Operation Save America, an anti-abortion, anti-LGBTQ and anti-Muslim religious group that wants all Americans to follow “God’s law” and their interpretation of the Christian gospel.  The panel was part of a week-long series of events hosted by Operation Save America, an anti-abortion, anti-LGBTQ and anti-Muslim religious group that wants all Americans to follow “God’s law” and their interpretation of the Christian gospel. The moderator of the panel, Derin Stidd, opened by asking, “Why do you all hate women?” to which the men laughed.  Hugs




🚨 BREAKING: SHAPIRO DICK PIC

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Raging Bee6 days ago

Um, no, if you’re STILL A SLAVE, then you really can’t do ANYTHING for your “personal benefit.”

Floriduh’s “history” books are being written by people who don’t even want to know about their history.

Fire & Smoke Crown Raging Bee6 days ago

^ That captures it in a nutshell. The education of slaves was to benefit the people holding them in bondage as property.

Some of his fans are disappointed they don’t get to see him in action.

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Texas A&M University said on Friday that its president would retire “immediately” after fallout surrounding political pushback of a new director of its journalism program because of her work promoting diversity, equity and inclusion.

DoctorDJ7 days ago

Anyone see a problem with hiring Dr. McElroy? Anyone?

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ohbear1957 DoctorDJ7 days ago edited

It sounds so familiar.

Germany’s 1933 civil service law applied to university professors as well as elementary and secondary-school teachers. … Scholars who were Jewish or supported left-leaning parties struggled to find research and teaching positions in public, government-supported German universities and often worked in private ones instead. With the passage of the new law, the Nazis attempted to root out any dissent to their policies and ideology that remained in German higher education.

https://www.facinghistory.o…

amandagirl15701 kaydenpat7 days ago

They call it other things, like “Protecting Children” or “Academic Freedom”. None of which is their actual goal, but it’s just bigotry and racism repackaged to make it more palatable.

Honestly, who would be against diversity? Racists… that’s who.

Serene Pumpkin7 days ago

Their idea of “diversity” is a mix of white Protestant men and white Catholic men.

Genitals… Genitals, Everywhere…

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Bowling for Columbine (2002) – A Brief History of the United States Scene (8/11) | Movieclips

Some morning Beau as I work on my morning postings

Rep. LAUGHED AT For Not Knowing The Law

Florida History Curriculum To Note “Benefits” Of Slavery

Remember these racist bigots are a minority.  They have been so since they lost the war to keep black people as property.  Think about what the reporting says the majority turned out against this, yet the Board of education did it anyway.  Der DeathSantis handpicked board.  Think of what he would do if president.   They are driven white supremacists who want real history erased and a fake nice version of slavery taught instead.  Ask why?  What is the gain, to not feel guilty?  That is stupid, no current white person should feel guilty of racism unless they are promoting / practicing racism.   And that is the point.  These white people want to keep practicing racism, and a lot of them want to make it worse by returning to a time before the civil rights act that gave people of color a voice and a right to some equality in the country that the constitution says they are equal citizens.  Seriously scary how deeply racism is in the red states and especially Florida and Texas.   

As a side note when we first got to Florida we had a black friend visit us.  I mention the skin color only because when we all went out to eat, the waitress at the restaurant refused to take his order, instead asking both Ron and then myself what the other (pointing to our friend) wanted to eat.  This was in 1994.  We complained but our friend who was experienced in the south did not want us to make a scene, so we agreed when management only offered to change the waitress.   It was the first time I had experienced / seen that, and it really stuck in my mind.  Totally horrible any person had to go through that dehumanizing experience that our friend did.  I can not image how it makes one feel to be treated that way in front of friends.  Hugs

The Tallahassee Democrat reports:

The Florida Board of Education approved a new curriculum for African American history on Wednesday, but not without pushback.

After more than an hour of public comment, with a majority of speakers opposed, the board voted unanimously to approve the social studies standards for African American history for kindergarten through 12th grades. Opponents say the curriculum leaves out Florida’s role in slavery and the oppression of African Americans, victim blames Black communities and uses outdated language.

In a letter to board member Ben Gibson, a group of 11 organizations, including the NAACP and the Florida Education Association, criticized the state for omitting or rewriting “key historical facts about the Black experience.”

The Washington Post reports:

More than a dozen speakers at Wednesday’s board meeting opposed the changes, including state Sen. Geraldine Thompson (D), who helped pass a law in 2020 that requires schools to teach lessons about the Ocoee Massacre. The incident in 1920 began when several Black residents attempted to vote, and ended with as many as 60 people dead, making it the deadliest instance of Election Day violence in U.S. history.

Thompson said the new curriculum “suggests that the massacre was sparked by violence from African Americans. That’s blaming the victims. ” State Rep. Anna Eskamani (D) said she was concerned about inaccuracies in the new standards, including instructing that enslaved people “developed skills” that could be helpful. “That is inaccurate and a scary standard for us to establish,” she said.

 

Um, no, if you’re STILL A SLAVE, then you really can’t do ANYTHING for your “personal benefit.”

^ That captures it in a nutshell. The education of slaves was to benefit the people holding them in bondage as property.

Floriduh’s “history” books are being written by people who don’t even want to know about their history.

Board of Miseducation.

Is “Diseducation” a word? (My spellcheck doesn’t think it is.)

Yes, there were benefits of slavery…for the slaveholders who got free labor and people they could beat and rape and even kill without any penalties. Nothing about that was good. Nothing.

Fascist regimes always rewrite curriculum to indoctrinate children into fascism. Leave our kids alone!

♪♫ “We don’t need indoctrination
We don’t need no thought control
No dark agendas in the classroom
Teacher, leave them kids alone
Hey! Teacher! Leave those kids alone!
All in all, fascism just needs to fall
All in all, fascism just needs to fall” ♪♫

Where have we heard this before?
“We took them out of the darkness of idolatry and brought them to Jesus! They are so child-like, they’re incapable of governing themselves. They need a firm hand. We’ve given them the benefit of living in a civilized country.”
Yeah, we’ve heard it all before, and it is STILL stomach turning.
I fucking HATE conservatives!!!!

Intentionally making the electorate dumber.

Mission accomplished.

Politicians should stay out of curriculum decisions, period!

And women’s health too.

Any clinical decisions, and anything that has to do with what consenting adults do behind closed doors!

(And showing those pics in congress is not behind closed doors!)

Politicians, Republican ones, seem to think they’re experts in everything from gynecology to curriculum development.
Get back in your box , fucking politicians.

The definition of consciousness is awareness with choice.

In our previous slaveholding society slaves had awareness without choice. Said lack of choice was enforced by violence and brutality.

The GQP doesn’t want anyone to know that.

LOL yeah just change everything that makes you uncomfortable.
Like native Americans were happy to give land away to get out of paying taxes.

A short round up as I start a new post to catch the Friday to Sunday bunch.

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the Republican infrastructure plan !!

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WTF. These people are not coming to hurt anyone, they are not coming to destroy the US, but to share the dream of a wonderful country. Abbott is proving to be the destroyer and despicable person, as is anyone who would follow these orders. Hey think how we look at the guards at concentration camps, Texas will be thought of in the same way. Scottie
Drag performances in Ohio could be banned from public parks, parades and other places children might be if a bill introduced by House Republicans becomes law.
House Bill 245 expands the definition of adult cabaret performers from strippers and topless dancers to include “entertainers who exhibit a gender identity that is different from the performer’s or entertainer’s gender assigned at birth.”
Diversity or diversity and inclusion programs are just words for let others than white males have a seat at the table. Seriously, this is what the republicans and MG are fighting. Why would they want to block others than whites / at one time only white males, from having a chance to be included? Racism and misogyny.

Biden got a Target Letter, too!

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The pro-life party! Right! Tell me another one.

Ta-Nehisi Coates Crashes School Board Meeting Over Removing His Book From Class

https://www.thedailybeast.com/ta-nehisi-coates-shows-up-to-sc-school-meeting-over-banning-his-book?ref=home

Thanks to Ali for leaving this link on MPS.   Hugs


 

The writer’s critically acclaimed memoir has become a flashpoint in a small South Carolina town.

Brooke Leigh Howard

Reporter

Updated Jul. 19, 2023 2:14PM EDT / Published Jul. 18, 2023 1:04PM EDT 

Ta-Nehisi Coates, Between the World and Me

A South Carolina school board meeting, in which community members railed against an African American culture writer’s award-winning memoir about racial injustice, featured a special guest appearance: Ta-Nehisi Coates, the famed author in question.

On Monday evening, the Lexington-Richland District 5 School Board met to discuss the outrage concerning Coates’ 2015 nonfiction bestseller, Between the World and Me, which has repeatedly caused political literary mayhem among reactionary right-wing communities and been placed on book ban lists.

In February, after getting approval from higher-ups, an AP Language teacher at Chapin High School conducted a lesson involving Between the World and Me. The book, written as an essay to Coates’ son to prepare him for the life he will live as a Black man, details personal accounts of Coates’ life and his first-hand experiences with racism. However, the lesson was shut down and the book was removed from the course after students filed a complaint claiming the book made them feel “guilty for being white,” local news outlet CBS 19 Columbia reported.

According to footage obtained by CBS 19, a slew of people wearing blue rallied in support for the book and for academic freedom during the board hearing. And Coates sat in the back of the room next to the teacher who assigned the book as a sign of solidarity.

“What matters most to me is that my students have the ability to hear six or seven opinions on one topic and come up with their own thesis, supported with evidence, and come up with an independent conclusion,” said Superintendent Dr. Akil Ross. “Sometimes there’s going to be topics you agree with, and there’s going to be topics you disagree with. Academic freedom says even if you disagree, there’ll be another opinion presented to our children. Our democracy needs that.”

PEN America, a literary human-rights organization, called the book’s removal “an outrageous act of government censorship and a textbook example of how educational gag orders corrupt free inquiry in the classroom.”

“We cannot become critical thinkers without being uncomfortable in some way,” one student declared while directly addressing the Lexington-Richland board. “If students can’t learn these things in a safe space, like school, how are they—we—meant to make good decisions and think critically?”

The board did not conduct a vote after public discussion.

In a statement to The Daily Beast, Lexington-Richmond District 5 wrote that it is “important to understand” that Between the World and Me “is not banned in our school district.”

“Superintendent Ross is committed to providing additional training on how to use books like Between the World and Me,” said communications director Amanda Taylor, referring to International Baccalaureate courses and policies on teaching about controversial and sensitive issues. “This training will cover how to determine if the material is appropriate for the course and the maturity of the students. District administration will also provide training to ensure materials are based on state standards and protect the academic freedom of the students.”

Coates did not respond to The Daily Beast’s request for comment on Tuesday.

Brooke Leigh Howard

Brooke Leigh Howard

Reporter

@BLeighHowardBrooke.Howard@thedailybeast.com