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The Contradictions of Ron DeSantis [Ronald Brownstein, The Atlantic]

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  • Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida hasn’t officially decided whether he’ll seek the 2024 GOP presidential nomination – But already the contradictions are sharpening between his prospective general-election strengths and his emerging strategy to win the Republican primaries.
  • DeSantis is pursuing an aggressive strategy of keeping Florida businesses and schools open during the pandemic – This strategy has enabled him to win about three-fifths of Florida’s college-educated white voters in a year when this demographic provided crucial support to Democrats in many other states.
  • DeSantis has ignited a series of culture-war firefights – Including censoring how schoolteachers talk about race, gender, and sexual orientation, and a potential ban on abortion after six weeks.
  • DeSantis’ agenda has found a receptive audience in Republican-controlled states – PEN is tracking copycat bills in many of the other 21 states where Republicans hold unified control of the state legislature and the governorship.
  • DeSantis’ agenda may be less appealing than the sum of its parts – Many polls show that a majority of voters worry less that kids are being taught values their parents don’t like than that culture-war fights are diverting schools from their real mission of educating students.
  • The whole of DeSantis’ agenda may be less appealing than the sum of its parts – Democrats see DeSantis embracing ideas that will cast him as a threat to the values held by the coalition that turned out in big numbers to resist the Trump-era GOP in each of the past three national elections.

Published February 16, 2023
Visit The Atlantic to read Ronald Brownstein’s original post The Contradictions of Ron DeSantis

UPDATE: College Board scrubs website to cover up deceptions about AP African American Studies course [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

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  • The College Board recently deleted a statement from their website defending revisions to the AP African American Studies course.
  • The revisions removed lessons on Black queer studies, Black feminism, mass incarceration, reparations, and the Black Lives Matter movement, as well as important Black writers such as Kimberlé Crenshaw and bell hooks.
  • The revisions tracked concerns expressed weeks earlier by the Florida Department of Education and Governor Ron DeSantis (R) who said the pilot version of the course was “political” and “lack[ed] educational value.”
  • The College Board initially lied about when the revisions were made and then again in a February 11 press release, claiming there were “”no negotiations about the content of this course with Florida.””
  • The College Board’s revisions appear to be politically motivated to appease right-wing critics, which has backfired as DeSantis has used the issue as a political cudgel.

Published February 16, 2023
Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post UPDATE: College Board scrubs website to cover up deceptions about AP African American Studies course

How Florida Beat New York [Jerusalem Demsas, The Atlantic]

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• Hillary Clinton claimed in a 2018 speech that Democratic-leaning states represent the future and Republican ones the last gasps of a dying empire.
• The National Association of Realtors found that Florida and Texas topped the list for domestic migration last year, with New York and California bringing up the rear.
• Florida has gained nine congressional seats while New York has lost eight since 1980.
• The primary driver of the shift in migration preferences is housing costs, not taxes.
• The median New York home was built in 1957; the median Florida home is a full 30 years younger.
• The coronavirus pandemic has weakened office life, thus undermining one of New York City’s greatest historical advantages.
• Cities can enter a sort of doom loop, where declining revenues from taxes and user fees lead governments to cut important government services.
• Blue states aren’t doomed or dying, but even relatively small changes can still lead to acute crises for cities.
• Reversing the dynamic will require blue states to prioritize affordability.

Published February 9, 2023
Visit The Atlantic to read Jerusalem Demsas’s original post How Florida Beat New York

This book is considered pornography in Ron DeSantis’ Florida [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

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• Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) and the Florida Department of Education have imposed sweeping new restrictions on books in public schools, both in libraries and in classrooms.
• Duval County Public Schools, which includes Jacksonville and the surrounding area, has enthusiastically embraced the task of complying with DeSantis’ new mandates.
• One book reviewed in Duval County and banned from school libraries was *The Best Man*, a book about a boy’s journey into the middle school years and the male role models in his life.
• The reviewer, Michelle DiBias, believes that, based on the book’s content, a teacher or librarian that made *The Best Man* available to students could be charged with a third-degree felony.
• Common Sense Media, an independent non-profit that evaluates books and other entertainment for parents and schools, gives *The Best Man* its lowest rating for “”Sex, Romance, & Nudity,”” meaning that reviewers found nothing objectionable.
• Duval County schools are also reviewing all books for compliance with the Parental Rights in Education Act, also known as “”Don’t Say Gay.””
• Books that have been rejected by Duval County schools, according to public records, include *Separate is Never Equal: Sylvia Mendez & Her Family’s Fight for Desegregation*, *My Name is Sally Little Song*, *Pride: The Story of Harvey Milk and the Rainbow Flag*, *Stonewall*, *10,000 Dresses*, and *The Flag of Childhood*.

Published February 8, 2023
Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post This book is considered pornography in Ron DeSantis’ Florida

UPDATE: Florida Commissioner of Education attacks Popular Information [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

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• Florida Commissioner of Education Manny Diaz Jr. recently lashed out at Popular Information’s reporting on Florida classroom libraries, calling it “fake news from media activists too lazy to read [Florida] law.”
• Popular Information’s reporting was accurate and later confirmed by other outlets, including the Washington Post.
• Diaz told the National Review that teachers who packed up their classroom libraries were simply participating in a “stunt” intended to damage DeSantis politically.
• Diaz’s recommendations to teachers directly contradicts the training produced by his own agency, the Florida Department of Education.
• The Florida Department of Education will not answer basic questions about what kind of books are permitted in Florida schools.
• Right-wing activists hostile to Florida teachers are seizing on the opportunity to “get into the school Libraries” and determine whether teachers are “following the laws.”
• Chad Choate, the chair of the Manatee County School Board who was appointed by DeSantis, was the featured speaker at a meeting of the Manatee Patriots on Tuesday night.

Published February 1, 2023
Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post UPDATE: Florida Commissioner of Education attacks Popular Information

Spill it [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

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• Popular Information has exposed an extraordinary assault on academic freedom in Florida.
• Bruce Friedman in Clay County has removed over 100 books from school libraries and is seeking to remove thousands more.
• Vicki Baggett in Escambia County is trying to ban 150 books from school libraries, including one about a legendary sprinter who overcame racial prejudice. Baggett allegedly said she opposed interracial marriage in class.
• Florida schools are using the “”Don’t Say Gay”” law to justify the erasure of LGBTQ people.
• Teachers in Manatee County are being told to make their classroom libraries inaccessible to students, or risk felony prosecution.

Published January 25, 2023
Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post Spill it

Twitter can’t handle the truth [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

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• Popular Information reported that the Manatee County School District instructed teachers to make their classroom libraries inaccessible to students, or risk felony prosecution.
• The directive was issued as part of an effort to comply with new laws and regulations championed by Governor Ron DeSantis (R).
• After the report was posted on Twitter, a “Community Note” was appended stating that “all books are not being removed from classroom libraries”, which is inaccurate.
• Teachers in Manatee County have been told to remove all books from their classroom libraries.
• The Community Note feature has been championed by Elon Musk, the billionaire who purchased Twitter for $44 billion in the fall.
• Musk has argued that Community Notes will be a corrective and cannot be biased towards the right, but since taking over Twitter, he has repeatedly catered to the far-right.

Published January 24, 2023
Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post Twitter can’t handle the truth

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