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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'Book banning': CNN's Don Lemon scaremongers over Florida book policy, pushes debunked narrative



CNN anchor Don Lemon accused Florida of engaging in "book banning" for protecting young school children from being exposed to graphic, hyper-sexualized books without parental consent.

What is going on in Florida?

There has been much scaremongering in the media about Florida HB 1467, which became law last year.

Specifically, the law requires that each "book made available to students through a school district library media center or included in a recommended or assigned school or grade-level reading list must be selected by a school district employee who holds a valid educational media specialist certificate."

The law states that approved books must be "free of pornography," "suited to student needs and their ability to comprehend the material presented," and "appropriate for the grade level and age group."

Outrage against the law increased this week after pictures went viral showing teachers in parts of Florida covering their classroom bookshelves because they had not yet been vetted. The teachers reportedly took such precautions because they were warned that violating the law could result in third-degree felony charges.

One journalist even reported, "Florida teachers must now remove all 'unvetted' books from their classroom libraries or face felony prosecution. The policy is based on the premise that teachers and librarians are using books to 'groom' students."

What did Lemon say?

Reporting on the controversy Thursday, Lemon condemned Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) for the "outrage" and "ridiculous" policy.

"What are we doing here? I feel like we're going back — I feel like I'm watching a bad version of, like, 'Pleasantville,'" Lemon said. "I don't get what's happening, it feels like the 1950s all over again with, like, book banning.

"This is cancel culture from people who are, I guess, they just want our kids to be ignorant and to control the teachers," he added. "This is outrageous. I really don't even know how to explain what's going on here. It's just ridiculous."

'Outrageous': Don Lemon reacts to Florida book law championed by DeSantis www.youtube.com

After back-and-forth conversation with his co-hosts, Lemon declared, "Ron DeSantis, stop it."

"You're not helping, you're hurting," he added. "These things totally just get me riled up. And you know what? Everybody should be riled up. We got to stand up against this stuff — it is outrageous."

Anything else?

Florida Education Commissioner Manny Diaz said it is not true that teachers could be subject to felony charges if they do not immediately remove unvetted books from their classrooms.

According to Diaz, the statute makes clear that criminal charges only happen in cases when teachers — or any adult — "knowingly" distribute "egregious" materials to children.

"More fake news from media activists too lazy to read FL law," he said. "A teacher (or any adult) faces a felony if they knowingly distribute egregious material, such as images which depict sexual conduct, sexual battery, bestiality, or sadomasochistic abuse. Who could be against that?"

\u201cHere is the full statute from law for those interested in seeing the truth for themselves.\u201d
— Manny Diaz Jr. (@Manny Diaz Jr.) 1674661607

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Horowitz: Ron DeSantis succeeds on education where other Republicans failed for decades



When was the last time you saw Republicans leading Democrats in any opinion poll on education? Likely never in this generation, not unlike their dismal polling on health care. Education and health care are probably the two most impactful issues on human life, liberty, culture, and economy, yet Republicans have ceded them to the left forever. They tepidly play their “me too” game of acceding to the same socialist policies, merely with less enthusiasm and slightly less funding, rather than offering a new vision altogether. This is where Ron DeSantis has upended the paradigm. He has already offered transformative change on many of the medical freedom issues; now he is doing the same on education.

As he declared Florida the “Education State” at his Monday press conference, DeSantis did something that no other Republican would have had the guts to do: he blocked the implementation of a college AP course on African-American studies.

Just as a farmer erects a scarecrow to protect his produce, the cultural Marxists erect political human shields around their most divisive and destructive agenda items that are usually messaged as “black studies,” “women’s health,” “curing diseases,” or “protecting poor people and puppies.” That immediately scares off all Republican resistance, no matter how pernicious the underlying policy and agenda are.

Undaunted by the scarecrow, DeSantis categorically rejected the program and had no problem articulating how this harms our culture and children and is actually offensive and insulting to Americans who happen to be black. “If you read what’s actually in there, they’re advocating things like abolishing prisons,” said the Florida governor in a press conference.

“Now that’s a radical political position. … It’s also not fair to say that somehow abolishing prisons is somehow linked to black experience. … They want law and order like everyone else wants law and order,” declared DeSantis. “So that is more ideology being used under the guise of history.”

The Florida Department of Education rejected the College Board’s AP African-American studies course because the syllabus contains various critical race theory principles comparing slavery of the past to different political grievances the left has today. Feminism, “queer” theory, and anarchist movements like BLM also wind their way into the syllabus.

\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

DeSantis was undeterred by the race card played against him and turned it right around on detractors in explaining his support for studying impactful black American figures in history, which is a part of Florida’s mandated curriculum. “I view it as American history, not as separate history.”

The point is he refuses to acquiesce to the premise of the left on a single issue, which frees him up to speak directly to the logic and common sense of the actual policy. He did the same when a reporter asked whether his opposition to teaching gender ideology in schools is born out of anti-gay animus.

\u201cREPORTER: "People feel [that] you want to appeal to a crowd who are really, really anti-gay."\n\nDESANTIS: "It has nothing to do with that [...] Having any sexual content in elementary school is inappropriate [...] 'Well what gender would you like to be?' No!"\u201d
— Florida\u2019s Voice (@Florida\u2019s Voice) 1674489417

Notice he never got defensive, nor did he pander. He spoke directly to the policy in a way most parents, except for the blue-haired hippies, would appreciate.

The press conference itself was about his announcement of a “teacher’s bill of rights” in an effort to weaken union monopolies and coercion against teachers, parents, and students.

\u201cToday, I unveiled my plan to empower Florida educators by:\n- Securing a $1 billion increase in teacher pay\n- Implementing a Teachers' Bill of Rights\n- Enacting paycheck protection and other reforms to school unions\n- Term limiting school board members to 8 years\u201d
— Ron DeSantis (@Ron DeSantis) 1674514250

In the past, Republicans have shied away from leaning in this hard against the state’s public-sector unions out of fear of appearing to be anti-education. Instead, DeSantis announced a set of reforms prohibiting automatic union dues, limiting union boss pay, upending the relationship between the unions and the school boards, and barring all unions in school districts unless they garner 60% support, among other reforms.

And as always, he is willing to use the boot of the government for freedom the way the left uses it for tyranny. “We will be establishing a new process for individuals to notify the state if a teacher’s rights have been violated, and we will ensure that our Florida Department of Education can investigate those complaints very quickly,” DeSantis announced. He was referring to the issue of teachers getting punished for trying to infuse basic discipline and control into the classroom. So not only does DeSantis lean in on the cultural issues, he also makes cultural issues out of simple, traditionally non-political ideas that transcend political lines.

DeSantis, with his strong electoral margins in places like Tampa, Jacksonville, and Palm Beach County, clearly has resonated with many suburban (and even urban) voters who have recently fled the Republican Party. He has largely accomplished this on the education issue by standing up for parental rights, bodily autonomy of students not to be masked, and extirpating grooming and sex studies from the classroom.

Thus, when he announces a massive pay raise for teachers, something indeed other Republican governors often do, he is ensuring that, unlike in other red states, it is actually going to the teachers and not to lining the pockets of those who campaign against our values in the classroom.

Too many red-state governors have been content to cede education to the left. Their own departments of education are indistinguishable from the education officials in California. This is how states like Idaho have sexualized curriculum being taught in their public schools. Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb has been so favorable to union demands that for the first time in recent memory, the Indiana State Teachers Association declined to endorse the Democrat candidate against him during his last election in 2020.

These diffident Republicans feel as if our views are somehow foreign and should be confined to our homes and that somehow the left gets to own public education as its perpetual home-field advantage. But if we believe in the truth of our values, shouldn’t our values be the ones that prevail in our states? Shouldn’t we have the home-field advantage in red states?

The question for other GOP governors is how much of civilization are they willing to cede because they are too scared to stand their ground against the barking dogs of cynical identity politics.