Keeping College Campus Radicals In Check Is Possible. Here’s How We Did It In Florida
America’s academic leaders seem powerless only because they’ve spent decades promoting the ideologies now on such brutal and ugly display.
Liberal publications decrying the exodus of leftist academics from the Sunshine State have unwittingly underscored the extent to which Gov. Ron DeSantis has made good on his vow to ensure that "Florida is where woke goes to die."
The New York Times picked up Monday where the Nation left off in September, bemoaning the apparent reconquest of the academy by Americans keen on institutions that educate rather than indoctrinate.
"Many are giving up coveted tenured positions and blaming their departures on Governor DeSantis and his effort to reshape the higher education system to fit his conservative principles," wrote the Times' education reporter Stephanie Saul.
Among its education-facing accomplishments, Florida under DeSantis has pushed back against identitarian propaganda; university DEI programs, revisionist histories; men in girl's sports; LGBT agitprop in grades K-3; and discrimination based on race, color, sex or national origin in public institutions.
DeSantis also opened the year with the appointment of six individuals to New College of Florida's 13-member board of trustees. The board, which now includes Manhattan Institute fellow Christopher Rufo, has since replaced former college president Patricia Okker with DeSantis appointee Richard Corcoran, a former GOP House speaker and education commissioner; axed the school's gender studies program; and revealed tenure would henceforth be earned.
Concerning the university's previous direction and the restoration underway, DeSantis said, "The mission has been I think more into the DEI, CRT, the gender ideology than what a liberal arts education should be," reported the Sarasota Herald-Tribune.
The Times cited "liberal-leaning" economist and tax law scholar Neil Buchanan among the academics to recently leave Florida behind.
Buchanan wrote in a recent blog post, "Florida Republicans' increasingly open hostility to professors and to higher education more generally was as close to a but-for cause of my decision as one could imagine."
The economist admitted his departure as a small victory for conservatives in the state, writing, "It is fair to describe my situation as one in which 'the other guys won.'"
In a follow-up blog post, Buchanan indicated that "some fights are simply not winnable, at least not in the moment," again decrying Republicans' success in the state.
While acknowledging that the University of Florida has a turnover rate under the national average and is not experiencing "unusual" issues with hiring, the Times built an anecdotal case for why dozens of purported scholars have sought after bluer pastures.
Walter Boot, a tenured psychology professor, told the paper he left Florida State for New York in part due to a 2022 state law limiting LGBT propaganda in elementary schools.
Boot, who is non-straight, noted in an August piece for the Tallahassee Democrat that following the passage of the Florida Parental Rights in Education Act, "it became increasingly clear that LGBTQ students, faculty, and staff at Florida State University had targets on their backs."
Hope Wilson, another LGBT activist who was up until recently a professor of education at the University of North Florida in Jacksonville, took issue with the state's interest in how taxpayer dollars were being spent, reported the Times.
"It just felt very dystopian all the way around," said Wilson, who has a gender dysphoric child.
Rufo stressed in a statement to the Times, "To me, this is a net gain for Florida."
"Professors who want to practice D.E.I.-style racial discrimination, facilitate the sexual amputation of minors, and replace scholarship with partisan activism are free to do so elsewhere. Good riddance," wrote Rufo.
DeSantis certainly shares Rufo's sentiment, having noted in a speech at an American Legislative Exchange Council meeting in July, "The media will say, 'Oh, some of these professors are leaving, like New College. Like, isn't that bad? Is that a brain drain?'" reported the Tampa Bay Times.
"Well, you know, if you're a professor in like, you know, Marxist studies, that's not a loss for Florida if you're going on," said DeSantis. "Trust me, I'm totally good with that."
In addition to driving radicals out of higher education in the state, the Nation indicated Republican legislation in the state is also prompting elementary school leftists to keep their extreme views to themselves.
"Teachers don't know what to say, or what not to say, and so they're opting to not say anything, not only because of fear of getting fired but of potentially getting arrested and being charged," Nikki Fried, chair of the Florida Democratic Party told the Nation in September.
Fried was apparently referencing HB 1467, legislation ratified in March 2022 by DeSantis that requires elementary schools to make public what books are on offer in their school libraries and enables parents to file objections to obscene materials.
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Democratic Public Education Caucus of Manasota President Robin Williams has authored a piece suggesting that New College of Florida's new mascot, the "Mighty Banyan," is problematic.
The mascot, which is a human-like tree that has bulging arm muscles, a chest, and a face, is a reference to the banyan trees on the school's campus.
Williams took issue with the mascot, suggesting that it looks like an mad and threatening brown person.
"To anyone with even a cursory knowledge of racial stereotypes, the new mascot should have set off alarms. It turns out the original student version of the mascot was very different in appearance and was unlikely to have raised any concerns. Yet Interim President Richard Corcoran and the New College Board of Trustees, which includes culture warrior Christopher Rufo among its members, supported and chose an altered mascot that depicts a tree that has been anthropomorphized to closely resemble an angry, threatening brown individual," Williams wrote.
"It is an image that is also reminiscent of the historically offensive imagery perpetuated by the 'Tarzan' books, which featured a main character who lived in an African jungle and boasted of being a 'killer of beasts and many black men.' Though generations have passed, there is no getting around the reality that the 'Tarzan' literary series remains one full of vile racial stereotyping, with Black men portrayed as 'primitive natives' and 'savages,'" she continued.
"'The Mighty Banyan' mascot also appears to bear similarities to race-oriented memorabilia that was especially popular during the Jim Crow era in the United States and, unfortunately, served to ingrain racial stereotypes in the American psyche," she added.
Rufo hit back at Williams' criticism, tweeting, "Advice for white libs: if you see a tree and immediately think 'looks like a scary minority to me,' you might be the racist."
\u201cLocal affluent white female liberal claims that the New College mascot, a banyan tree, "closely resemble[s] an angry, threatening brown individual."\n\nAdvice for white libs: if you see a tree and immediately think "looks like a scary minority to me," you might be the racist.\u201d— Christopher F. Rufo \u2694\ufe0f (@Christopher F. Rufo \u2694\ufe0f) 1687194433
According to New College, the new mascot is based on a student's design. Corcoran noted that "we are proud that this mascot was born from one of our student’s designs."
The Conservative Counter-Revolution Begins in the Universities www.youtube.com
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John Dorhauer, president of the woke United Church of Christ, has issued a groveling apology for the cartoon featured on the cover of the UCC's latest desk calendar.
To the untrained eye, the image appears only to depict a circle comprising eight cartoon children. However, identitarian leftists were quick to recognize that the placement of a white character in the circle's 12 o'clock position was contrary to the UCC's "commitments to be an antiracist body."
A cartoonish figure of any other crayoned-background would have been preferable atop the circle, Dorhauer conceded in his statement.
Dorhauer is a radical leftist and alleged theologian who: previously taught "White Privilege" studies to a class of masters of divinity students at Eden Theological Seminary; accused all white men in America of social blindness and enjoying of "pernicious" privilege; and officiated at the first legal gay "marriage" in Maricopa County, Arizona.
Infuriated by the prospect that conservatives might curb the kinds of racist propaganda he regularly deals in, he recently lashed out at Gov. Ron DeSantis and his appointees to the New College of Florida board of trustees, such as Manhattan Institute senior fellow Christopher Rufo, reported USA Today.
"The long arc of history will grind you into dust," said Dorhauer, adding that the governor's appointees "will be remembered for the sycophants you are."
Perhaps distracted by the actions of a democratically-elected leader outside his own state, Dorhauer managed to overlook the problematic nature of the image on the UCC's new calendar, priced at $20.
The cover depicts eight children, ostensibly of various races, holding hands in a circle with "you shall love your neighbor as yourself" written at the center. Atop the circle is a blonde-haired white figure with a pink bow in her hair.
Dorhauer wrote in a May 23 statement, "I write to apologize for the ways in which the most recent edition of the UCC desk calendar failed to live up to our commitments to be an antiracist body. It has been brought to my attention that a slight rotation of the cover image in either direction would more accurately reflect the racial equity we seek. I am grateful for such attention to the subtleties of racism and agree."
The UCC head indicated that people had reached out to him expressing disappointment and outrage over the incorrect placement of the cartoon figures.
"The cover does not reflect our strong commitment to antiracism. I apologize for that," Dorhauer continued.
While accepting that the cartoon character was in fact a misplaced Caucasian, Dorhauer made sure not to risk misgendering her, writing, "Seeing how the image on the cover is plainly focused on the blonde-haired person makes it clear to me that there are still ways in which the centering of whiteness remains instantiated in our language, our art and our culture."
Dorhauer further stressed that his failure to relocate the blonde "person" to a less favorable spot serves as "a reminder of the kind of diligence required to fully overcome the ravages of white privilege still embedded in our system, our psyche and our culture. We will again remind ourselves and challenge ourselves to apply a level of diligence that will reduce the likelihood that this happens again."
The UCC, which Dorhauer hopes to purge of "the vestiges of white privilege," in part by peddling critical race theory, is among the leftist organizations that have hosted drag shows for minors in recent years.
UCC Strengthen the Church (Rev. John Dorhauer 2023 Promo) youtu.be
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