Leftists are melting down over Florida's civics lessons on America's Judeo-Christian heritage



A failed Democratic candidate from Maryland working out of Washington, D.C., has raised the alarm that the Florida Department of Education might be providing some teachers and students with instruction about some of the many ways America has been shaped and influenced by Christianity.

Radicals still grieving the elimination of critical race theory and LGBT propaganda from the Florida curriculum have seized upon Judd Legum's report as an opportunity to once again concern-monger about so-called "Christian nationalism" and attack the DeSantis administration.

The LGBT activist publication Them, for instance, ran an article entitled, "Under Ron DeSantis, Florida Teacher Trainings Included Christian Nationalist Propaganda," noting, "As concerning as it is that Christian nationalists are trying to warp curricula from the inside, there's a reason they're targeting teachers: education works."

The Freedom from Religion Foundation took a break from attacking Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito online to note, "We will be working to debunk these Christian nationalist lies and to protect Florida's students from indoctrination."

Legum appears to have misled his fellow travelers with his report, which Gov. Ron DeSantis' office has called "nonsense" — not only with his framing of the curricular materials but by his omission of what else was being taught.

Not only do the offending slides appear to be accurate, they are part of a broader unit identifying other historic influences underlying America's founding ideas on law and government.

Background

Sociologists Samuel Perry and Andrew Whitehead defined "Christian nationalism" in their 2020 book, "Taking America Back for God: Christian Nationalism in the United States," as "a cultural framework that blurs distinctions between Christian identity and American identity, viewing the two as closely related and seeking to enhance and preserve their union."

'White Christian nationalism is a social construction the meaning of which depends on who is doing the constructing.'

It is easy to blur the distinction, assuming a distinction can be made, given the extent to which America, like the West in general, has historically been shaped and influenced by Christianity — an influence Alexis de Tocqueville and countless keen observers have noted. Also, there is great potential for great overlap, given that roughly two-thirds of Americans today are Christians.

Kenneth Woodward, the former editor of Newsweek's religion section, recently highlighted in First Things that various exponents have given "Christian nationalism" an identitarian character — calling it "white Christian nationalism," distinct from "black Christian nationalis[m]," which Salon has ostensibly given a pass — and associated it with various "liberal mortal sins" such as support for having children, straight marriage, and "patriarchy."

"White Christian nationalism is a social construction the meaning of which depends on who is doing the constructing," wrote Woodward. "Not at all obvious is what same-sex marriage, patriarchy, and encouraging couples to have children (pronatalism) have to do with being white or Christian or nationalist."

Democrats and their allies in the liberal media and activists have seized upon this catch-all term to describe their ideological foes who also happen to be Christian. For instance, the Public Religion Research Institute characterized Christian nationalism last year as a "a major threat to the health of our democracy," suggesting that over 51% of Americans either sympathize with or support Christian nationalism.

Agreement with these statements apparently make one a Christian nationalist:

  • "The U.S. government should declare America a Christian nation" — as the Supreme Court did in Church of the Holy Trinity v. United States.
  • "U.S. laws should be based on Christian values."
  • "If the U.S. moves away from our Christian foundations, we will not have a country any more."
  • "Being Christian is an important part of being truly American."
  • "God has called Christians to exercise dominion over all areas of American society."

Educating educators

In December 2019, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) tasked former Department of Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran with implementing a new civil literacy requirement for high school students, which came to be known as the Civics Literacy Excellence Initiative.

Extra to helping students with this initiative, the Florida DOE also offers learning opportunities to educators. There is, for instance, a three-day summer civics professional learning course.

Judd Legum, a leftist who used to write for ThinkProgress, recently obtained training materials from one such three-day course allegedly presented last summer, including "a presentation on the 'Influences of the Judeo-Christian Tradition' on the founding of the United States."

"Training materials produced by the Florida Department of Education direct middle and high school teachers to indoctrinate students in the tenets of Christian nationalism, a right-wing effort to merge Christian and American identities," wrote Legum. "Thousands of Florida teachers, lured by cash stipends, have attended trainings featuring these materials."

Legum noted that in one slide obtained through a public records request executed by the liberal advocacy group Florida Freedom to Read Project, teachers were told that "Christianity challenged the notion that religion should be subservient to the goals of the state."

— (@)

Another offending slide quoted George Washington's Farewell Address, in which the archetypal American patriot noted, "Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports."

The slide also quoted Rev. Dr. Peter Lillback, president and professor of historical theology and church history at Westminster Theological Seminary, as writing, "To be free, you need a republic. To have a republic, you need a constitution. To have a constitution, you need morality (virtue). To have morality (virtue), you need religion."

Among the slides that evidently didn't sit well with Legum were two detailing various Judeo-Christian traditions and beliefs that have influenced the United States, such as the notions that government is necessary on account of man's sinful, fallen state; that man is created equal and in the image of God; and that humans, Americans in particular, are "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."

Legum had so-called "Christian nationalism" expert Andrew Whitehead weigh in on the slides. Whitehead suggested the purpose of the training was to fuse "a very particular expression of Christianity with American civic life that the government upholds and vigorously defends" and to altogether advance a key goal of Christian nationalism.

Whitehead further said the slides were ahistorical because while the Declaration of Independence references a "creator," it does not explicitly mention Christ and because George Washington did not regularly receive communion.

Amanda Tyler, the executive director of the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty — another supposed expert in "Christian nationalism" — told Legum the presentation focuses "on the mythological founding of the country as a Christian nation, this use of cherry-picked history … is very much a marker of Christian nationalism."

What Legum failed to mention was that this civics lesson on "how the Judeo-Christian ethical ideas of justice, individual worth, personal responsibility and the rule of law influenced America's constitutional republic" was part of a broader unit on the "influences of ancient Greece, ancient Rome and the Judeo-Christian tradition on America's constitutional republic."

'That "report: is a bunch of nonsense.'

Extra to learning about the influence of biblical concepts on a predominantly Christian country, teachers and students apparently also learn about Rome's influence on American civic participation, republicanism, representative government, rule of law, or separation of powers, and the influence of ancient Greece on American legislative bodies, polis, voting rights and written constitution.

Bryan Griffin, Gov. DeSantis' communications director, told Blaze News, "That 'report' is a bunch of nonsense."

'And, of course, American history is inextricable from the positive influence of the Judeo-Christian tradition.'

"Florida under Governor Ron DeSantis has stopped the left from utilizing our education system for their campaign of radical indoctrination, and they can’t stand it," said Griffin. "We're refocusing education on core subjects like reading, writing, and math, and leaning into American history and civics, which help students become informed, prepared, and engaged members of society. And, of course, American history is inextricable from the positive influence of the Judeo-Christian tradition."

"Our efforts in Florida have made the state #1 in education and #1 in higher education (for the eighth year in a row)," continued Griffin. "This civics training program is a voluntary certification for teachers and comes with a $3,000.00 stipend upon completion. We encourage every educator in the State of Florida to take advantage of it."

Chad Ragsdale, academic dean at Ozark Christian College, tweeted, "This whole thread is revealing but not in the way that Judd believes. Mostly it reveals yet again that 'Christian nationalism' has become a vacuous term used for nakedly ideological purposes."

"I would genuinely encourage anyone to read this, just to see for yourself how divorced from reality those on the left are," wrote Mark Hemingway of RealClearInvestigations. "What they fear as 'Christian nationalism' is just an inability to acknowledge basic American history."

Woodward concluded his essay on so-called Christian nationalism by noting, "Despite the vagueness of the term 'white Christian nationalism' and the difficulty of identifying its adherents, we are certain to hear a great deal more about the threat it poses to American democracy as the election cycle churns on. ... But what will we hear of the Secularists, who are more numerous, wealthier, much better educated, and more politically active than those who have been labeled WCNs? What we will hear is the sound of silence."

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DeSantis officials blast Axios for boosting claim that parental rights protections parallel Nazi persecution



Florida and other red states have enacted laws and policies protecting children from irreversible genital mutilations and sterilizing drugs as well as from sexualizing and racist propaganda in the classroom.

Axios boosted the bad faith suggestion Tuesday that these popular Republican efforts, Florida's in particular, are Nazi-esque.

Axios joined Jake Newsome, a self-described historian and California-based gay activist, in conflating protections for parents and children with antipathies for non-straight persons. The liberal publication further entertained Newsome's notion that Nazi Germany serves as a valuable analogue for the present moment in Florida.

"In 1920s Germany, a burgeoning Nazi Party looking to unite the political right targeted a group that party leaders knew was a common enemy: queer people," wrote Axios' Kathryn Varn. "They ramped up a propaganda campaign, banning publications by and about LGBTQ+ people and telling Germans the 'homosexual lifestyle' posed a danger to their children and the country's values."

"Sound familiar?" wrote Varn, quoting Newsome, who gave a recent talk to a crowd at the Florida Holocaust Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida.

Newsome has been trying to project this Nazi parallel for years, possibly because it could move product. After all, the activist has been peddling a book for two years about the identitarian socialists' persecution of gays and lesbians.

"In today's era of the Republican Party's 'Don't Say Gay' bills," Newsome said last week, "we need the pink triangle more than ever."

What Newsome and other radicals call the "Don't Say Gay" bill is in reality Florida's Parental Rights in Education Act. Contrary to activists' claims, the law merely prohibits teachers from giving "classroom instruction" on so-called gender identity and sexual orientation, straight or otherwise. Kids and students remain free to discuss their sexual preferences.

After striking the parallel between early 20th-century Germany and contemporary Florida, Axios proceeded to provide statistics on the numbers of gays persecuted by the Nazi regime.

The article also cited smears along similar lines advanced by other critics of Florida's parental rights legislation, including Wilton Manors city commissioner Chris Caputo, geriatric singer Cyndi Lauper, and the LGBT activist who refers to himself as Alyssa MacKenzie.

Officials from the DeSantis administration slapped back Tuesday, blasting Varn as a "journo-activist" for the Axios piece.

Bryan Griffin, communications director for Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), responded on X, "Journo-activists continue to repeat the lies about the Parental Rights in Education bill that — just last week — the media had to admit were all fabricated when the settlement was reached that dismisses the case against the law."

"Today, Axios actually published a story amplifying and pushing the perspective of an activist who compared removing sexual content and radical gender identity from K-3rd grade public school classrooms with Nazi Germany," continued Griffin. "Dishonest media activism at its very worst."

DeSantis' press secretary Jeremy Redfern similarly blasted Varn, writing, "This isn't news. This is propaganda, and it has nothing to do with the Parental Rights in Education Act. Equating parental rights with the Holocaust is absurd and disrespectful."

— (@)

Christina Pushaw, also part of the DeSantis team, wrote to Varn, "So, if you're against porn in elementary schools ... you are a Nazi? Good to know."

Pushaw added in a separate tweet, "It is beyond absurd to equate Florida's parental rights law, which prohibits instruction in gender ideology and age-inappropriate materials, to the Holocaust. Any historian who makes such claims makes a mockery of his profession.

While touting himself as a historian, a cursory look at Newsome's recent social media posts indicates he may be more interested in advancing a strategically advantageous narrative than in presenting facts — and not just when it comes to Republican laws protecting children.

For instance, last month, Newsome rushed to judgment in the case of Oklahoma student Dagny Benedict's Feb. 8 suicide.

Benedict picked a fight with some girls in a bathroom, later suggesting to police it had been over comments wholly unrelated to her sexuality or identity. The next day she died, not of trauma — as the liberal media and LGBT activists had suggested — but from an overdose, according to the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma.

Just as Newsome has drawn an untenable connection between Florida policies and those exterminationist initiatives engaged in by the identitarian socialists of yesteryear, he claimed late last month that Bendict's death was "the result of the Republicans' years-long coordinated attack on the LGBTQ+ community."

Not only did the Axios-boosted activist implicate Republicans in the girl's suicide, he smeared the teenage girls Benedict attacked in the bathroom.

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'This is fake news': DeSantis campaign slaps down Trump's suggestion that the Florida governor might drop out of presidential race and run for US Senate



After former President Donald Trump floated the idea that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis might drop out of the GOP presidential primary and run for U.S. Senate against incumbent Sunshine State Sen. Rick Scott, DeSantis campaign press secretary Bryan Griffin slapped down the notion as "fake news."

"Rumors are strong in political circles that Ron DeSanctimonious, whose Presidential run is a shambles, and whose poll numbers have absolutely crashed, putting him 3rd and 4th in some states, will be dropping out of the Presidential race in order to run, in Florida, against Rick Scott for Senate. Now that's an interesting one, isn't it?" Trump wrote.

It appears that an earlier version of Trump's post had included the misspelling "Roomer" instead of "Rumors."

"This is fake news," Griffin fired back when responding to Trump's comments. "Clearly, Donald Trump and his army of consultants are panicked about @RonDeSantis' winning debate performance and the strong momentum that has followed. They know this is a two-man race, and we will carry this on to a win in this presidential primary. Instead of pushing fake news from New Jersey, the Trump campaign should be focused on getting their candidate on the campaign trail in Iowa and on the debate stage before it’s too late."

— (@)

Trump, who holds a massive lead over the field of Republican presidential hopefuls, skipped the first GOP primary debate last week. While the outlook could change before the voting gets underway in 2024, polling currently indicates that Trump appears well positioned to trounce the competition and secure the GOP presidential nomination.

Scott, who previously served as Florida governor, has been in the U.S. Senate since 2019, and is aiming to get re-elected in 2024.

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DeSantis press secretary steps down 'to pursue other avenues of helping to deliver the governor's success to our country'



Bryan Griffin announced that he is stepping down from his role as press secretary for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

The announcement comes amid widespread anticipation that the Sunshine State's GOP governor may soon launch a 2024 White House bid.

Fox News Digital has reported that Griffin is stepping down to instead serve as press secretary for DeSantis' political operation.

"All of these things that Governor DeSantis has accomplished in Florida can be replicated nationwide. However, our nation is currently burdened with historic challenges," Griffin wrote. "The challenges can be overcome, and America is worth the fight. I believe that Governor DeSantis is the only leader who can see us to victory at this critical moment in American history. Because of this, I am stepping away from this role to pursue other avenues of helping to deliver the governor's success to our country. If I can be even a small part of the revival and restoration of our great nation, then I am prepared to give it my all."

Griffin described DeSantis as "a true and principled conservative" who "ensures that the people around him understand and personally hold the principles and values he leads by," which "ensures the success of his objectives."


\u201cIt has been the honor of a lifetime to serve as Press Secretary for the Florida Office of @GovRonDeSantis. Thank you!\u201d
— Bryan Griffin (@Bryan Griffin) 1684172229


If DeSantis does throw his hat into the ring during the Republican presidential primary, he will be going up against former President Donald Trump and multiple other figures who have already announced presidential bids.

Trump, who has been taking shots at DeSantis, has referred to him as "DeSanctimonious" and "DeSanctus." Trump has suggested that the governor "needs a personality transplant."

\u201cRon DeSanctimonious needs a PERSONALITY TRANSPLANT!\u201d
— Team Trump (Text TRUMP to 88022) (@Team Trump (Text TRUMP to 88022)) 1683904721

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In loaded request for comment, Forbes contributor accuses DeSantis of tapping 'into the most primitive, racist proclivities of his electorate'



Bryan Griffin, who serves as press secretary to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, shared a screenshot of a request for comment that accused the governor of tapping into voters' "racist proclivities" by using the word "woke."

"Greetings, I'm a Forbes Careers Senior Contributor conducting research for an article tentatively titled, ''Woke' Has Become an Anti-Equity Slur, and Workplaces Shouldn't Condone It.' The article references Governor DeSantis' persistent use of the pejorative, divisive term ('woke') and argues that he's adopted the famous Lee Atwater strategy of weaponinging coded language to tap into the most primitive, racist proclivities of his electorate," the comment request read, according to the screenshot Griffin posted. "If you'd like to provide an on the record comment on this issue, please email that to me by 3/28 at 2:00 pm ET," the note said.

Griffin also shared a screenshot of his own response to the request.

"Dana, you've already stated your position. You aren't truth seeking, you're participating in partisan activism," Griffin wrote. "'Woke' originated as—and continues to be—a self-assigned label from the left. Perhaps ask the 'woke' thought leaders why so many people have rejected their hateful ideology. Meanwhile, as Governor Ron DeSantis has promised, Florida will continue to be where 'woke' goes to die."

None
— (@)

Earlier this year, Politico published a piece featuring an interview with then-Politico Florida Bureau Chief Matt Dixon, who claimed that DeSantis' communications team worsens its relationship with the media by sharing screenshots of reporters' questions on Twitter.

"Calling them confrontational does a disservice to the word confrontational," Dixon said of the governor's communications team. "Under DeSantis, the institution of public communications has been upended. It previously was an area that always had some healthy tension between reporters and communications staff, but now the creation of tension is the point, as opposed to an occasional byproduct. DeSantis' communications team has openly boasted about how it's not their job to help members of the media, and are well known for taking screenshots of reporter questions and posting them on Twitter, a habit that only makes the relationship worse. Stories that they disagree with often end up as standalone headlines on right-wing websites or Fox News, and then will be endlessly retweeted and circulated by the community of Twitter trolls they have helped cultivate." Dixon is now with NBC News.

"BREAKING: @politico tells @politico that @politico isn't treated nicely enough because @politico sends emails that @politico doesn't want the world to see," Griffin tweeted at the time.

None
— (@)

DeSantis, who won a resounding re-election victory during Florida's 2022 gubernatorial contest, is widely considered a potential 2024 presidential contender. The governor has said that he thinks he has what it takes to be president and that he believes he could defeat President Joe Biden, but he claims that he has not made the "final decision" on whether he will run.

Piers Morgan vs Ron DeSantis | The Full UNCUT Interview youtu.be

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Axios reporter claims press release about DeSantis roundtable is 'propaganda'



Florida Department of Education communications director Alex Lanfranconi shared a screenshot revealing that Axios reporter Ben Montgomery responded to an email containing a press release by calling the release "propaganda."

The press release is headlined, "Governor Ron DeSantis Hosts Roundtable Exposing the Diversity Equity and Inclusion Scam in Higher Education."

"This is propaganda, not a press release," Montgomery wrote in response to the email, according to the screenshot Lanfranconi posted.

DeSantis press secretary Bryan Griffin retweeted Lanfranconi's post and commented, "This is modern journalism."

None
— (@)

"Today, Governor Ron DeSantis held a roundtable discussion on divisive concepts such as Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives, Critical Race Theory (CRT) and the impact that these concepts have had on Florida higher education institutions and the students that attend them. These concepts are in no way inclusive, and instead force exclusion and division within higher education, and do not in any way contribute to learning or knowledge; as such, no funding from hardworking, tax-paying Floridians, including the parents of higher-education students, should be spent on these divisive initiatives," a press release posted online declares.

During the roundtable event, DeSantis said that DEI has been employed at colleges in an attempt to "impose uniformity of thought" and that those who "dissent from this orthodoxy" face exclusion and marginalization.

DeSantis, who won re-election during the Sunshine State's 2022 gubernatorial contest, is widely viewed as someone who may mount a 2024 presidential bid later this year, a move that would mean challenging former President Donald Trump for the GOP presidential nomination.

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DeSantis admin slams Andrea Mitchell for 'blatant lie' and subsequent 'non-apology,' vows to shun NBCUniversal interview requests



While interviewing Vice President Kamala Harris last week, Andrea Mitchell inaccurately claimed that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has said that kids should not be taught about slavery or its aftermath in schools — but on Wednesday's episode of MSNBC's "Andrea Mitchell Reports," Mitchell said that she had been "imprecise" when discussing the governor's stance regarding the teaching of slavery.

She said that DeSantis is not against schools teaching about slavery. But Mitchell said the governor "has opposed the teaching of an African-American studies curriculum" and the utilization of "some authors" as well as "source materials that historians" and "teachers say makes it all but impossible for students to understand the broader historic and political context behind slavery and its aftermath."

\u201c@mitchellreports Saying one was "imprecise," when what they said was a blatant lie, is not an apology.\n\n@MSNBC /@NBCNews should not be viewed as an objective media organization. Stop letting the corporate media be the gatekeepers of truth.\nhttps://t.co/rGj7uc8kEm\u201d
— Jeremy Redfern (@Jeremy Redfern) 1677090768

Minutes after Mitchell's comments aired, DeSantis press secretary Bryan Griffin noted on Twitter that the governor's administration will be declining media requests from NBCUniversal-related outlets until Mitchell apologizes for claiming that DeSantis opposed schools teaching about slavery.

"To all of the bookers and producers reaching out to our office from @NBCNews and @MSNBC for @GovRonDeSantis to join your shows, this will be the standard response from our office until @mitchellreports apologizes and your track record improves," Griffin tweeted.

He shared a screenshot of a message in which he declared: "I think we need to take a step back. There will be no consideration of anything related to NBC Universal or its affiliates until and at least Andrea Mitchell corrects the blatant lie she made about the governor '[Governor DeSantis] says that slavery and the aftermath of slavery should not be taught to Florida schoolchildren'—this is false), and NBC and it's affiliates display a consistent track record of truthful reporting. Please feel free to pass this up and around the network."

Griffin described Mitchell's Wednesday remarks as "a typical non-apology response that doubles down on the original lie."

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Politico Florida bureau chief mocked for saying DeSantis team makes relationship with media 'worse' by sharing screenshots of reporter questions



Politico's Florida bureau chief Matt Dixon told the outlet during an interview that Gov. Ron DeSantis' communications team has made its relationship with the media "worse" by publicly sharing screenshots of journalists' questions.

"Calling them confrontational does a disservice to the word confrontational. Under DeSantis, the institution of public communications has been upended. It previously was an area that always had some healthy tension between reporters and communications staff, but now the creation of tension is the point, as opposed to an occasional byproduct," Dixon said, according to Politico.

"DeSantis' communications team has openly boasted about how it's not their job to help members of the media, and are well known for taking screenshots of reporter questions and posting them on Twitter, a habit that only makes the relationship worse. Stories that they disagree with often end up as standalone headlines on right-wing websites or Fox News, and then will be endlessly retweeted and circulated by the community of Twitter trolls they have helped cultivate," he added.

Christina Pushaw, who resigned from her role as DeSantis' press secretary last year to serve as rapid response director for his campaign, mocked Dixon's comments: "Politico? More like PolitiCOPE," she tweeted. "Matt Dixon should cry more," she wrote in another tweet.

\u201cPolitico? More like PolitiCOPE \ud83d\ude02\u201d
— Christina Pushaw \ud83d\udc0a \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@Christina Pushaw \ud83d\udc0a \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1675214557

Current DeSantis press secretary Bryan Griffin also mocked Politico, tweeting in response to Pushaw's post, "BREAKING: @politico tells @politico that @politico isn't treated nicely enough because @politico sends emails that @politico doesn't want the world to see."

"Is this 'crying more?'" Dixon wrote when retweeting a Twitchy story about his comments and the resulting mockery. "I'm often told to do it by many of the people in this story, but not exactly sure how it works."

\u201cIs this "crying more?"\n\nI'm often told to do it by many of the people in this story, but not exactly sure how it works.\u201d
— Matt Dixon (@Matt Dixon) 1675290125

Last week, Griffin posted a screenshot of a loaded request for comment from CNN.com's John Blake.

"I'm requesting a response from Gov. DeSantis or anyone from his office to an article I am writing about Gov. DeSantis decision to block the teaching of an high school Advanced Placement course on African American history course in Florida," Blake wrote, according to the image in Griffin's tweet. "I've talked to one of the nation's leading scholars on fascism who, along with another scholar who is an authority on fascism, say that DeSantis' decision echoes similar decisions made by fascist dictators to force what one historian calls 'collective amnesia' about the past."

\u201cResponse:\u201d
— Bryan Griffin (@Bryan Griffin) 1674834347

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CNN writer sends DeSantis admin loaded request for comment: 'Echoes similar decisions made by fascist dictators'



Bryan Griffin, the press secretary for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), shared an image of CNN writer John Blake's request for comment regarding a story about Florida's move to reject an Advanced Placement African American Studies course. In the message, Blake said that he had spoken to scholars who suggested that the move is similar to decisions of "fascist dictators."

"I'm requesting a response from Gov. DeSantis or anyone from his office to an article I am writing about Gov. DeSantis decision to block the teaching of an high school Advanced Placement course on African American history course in Florida," Blake wrote, according to the image in Griffin's tweet. "I've talked to one of the nation's leading scholars on fascism who, along with another scholar who is an authority on fascism, say that DeSantis' decision echoes similar decisions made by fascist dictators to force what one historian calls 'collective amnesia' about the past."

Griffin shared his own response to the request for comment.

"Your inquiry is absurd and, of course, false. There will always be extreme critics, but it is the media's choice whether to give them a platform and legitimize their extremism. If you choose to print such critique and amplify it as a perspective by which we are guilty until proven innocent, it will speak more to the moral bankruptcy and untruthfulness of your outlet than anything else," Griffin wrote. "If this is what CNN considers journalism, it deserves to fail."

\u201cResponse:\u201d
— Bryan Griffin (@Bryan Griffin) 1674834347

In a letter earlier this month, the Florida Department of Education's Office of Articulation asserted that the course content ran afoul of state law. "As presented, the content of this course is inexplicably contrary to Florida law and significantly lacks educational value," the letter stated.

"Despite the lies from the Biden White House, Florida rejected an AP course filled with Critical Race Theory and other obvious violations of Florida law," Florida Commissioner of Education Manny Diaz Jr. tweeted. "We proudly require the teaching of African American history. We do not accept woke indoctrination masquerading as education."

\u201cDespite the lies from the Biden White House, Florida rejected an AP course filled with Critical Race Theory and other obvious violations of Florida law. We proudly require the teaching of African American history. We do not accept woke indoctrination masquerading as education.\u201d
— Manny Diaz Jr. (@Manny Diaz Jr.) 1674254116

According to apcentral.collegeboard.org, the course was supposed to be piloted at 60 schools around the nation for 2022-2023, with plans to expand the pilot to hundreds more high schools for 2023-2024.

"To be clear, no states or districts have seen the official framework that will be released on February 1, much less provided feedback on it," the College Board wrote in a letter to its members, according to Inside Higher Ed and Education Week.

The letter indicates that this official framework will supplant the preliminary pilot course framework.

\u201cCaught between the dueling governors of Florida and Illinois, The College Board told members today (in a letter obtained by Inside Higher Ed) that a new framework for AP African American studies is coming on 2/1 after being in development for nearly a year.\u201d
— Josh Moody (@Josh Moody) 1674762100

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How Many Taxpayer Dollars Do Florida’s State Universities Drop On Bogus Racial Indoctrination? DeSantis Demands Receipts

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is demanding state universities reveal how much money they squander on programs and staff to push the racially divisive and discriminatory ideology embedded in so-called “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) initiatives and critical race theory (CRT). According to a memo released by DeSantis Press Secretary Bryan Griffin, every institution within the […]