Scott Maxwell is an excellent columnist for The Orlando Sentinel. He brings us up to date on Florida’s efforts to promote the bright side of slavery.
He writes:
Every week lately, Florida seems to make more headlines for trying to turn public schools into a political war zone. The two latest examples:
The Sentinel revealed the Florida Department of Education has hired a new political operative who’s working with the book-censoring Moms for Liberty — and won’t say how many of your tax dollars the state is paying him or even why.
Also, the state has approved new classroom videos made by a guy who admits his goal is “indoctrination.”
One video features a cartoon version of Christopher Columbus telling kids that, while slavery might not be great, “being taken as a slave is better than being killed.” Another tells students that one of the most important things kids “need to know” about slavery is that “White men led the world in putting an end to the abhorrent practice.”
White men as saviors is quite the top-line takeaway on slavery.
The Orlando Sentinel first broke the news about the new hire, revealing that the state had hired Terry Stoops, a guy who pushed GOP education policies in North Carolina, to lead its newly created Office of Academically Successful and Resilient Districts.
The office title sounds like gobbledygook. But what are Stoops’ job responsibilities? And how much are you, as a taxpayer, paying him? Well, the state wouldn’t answer either question.
Even Florida’s online employee-salary database somehow omitted Stoops.
But emails obtained by the Florida Freedom to Read Project — which is leading the fight against classroom book-banning and censorship — showed that Stoops seemed to be working as a state liaison to right-wing crusaders.
In one email, Stoops wrote a Volusia County school board member to say: “We would be happy to meet with the Conservative Coalition of School Board Members as a group to explore ways that our efforts may align.”
In another, he told Orange County school board member Alicia Farrant, a Moms for Liberty member leading Central Florida’s in-school book-banning crusade: “I just wanted to pass along a note to thank you for serving on the board and standing up for families.”
Just for argument’s sake, let’s say you think it’s a swell idea for government to use tax dollars to push a political agenda. What excuse could you possibly have for hiding from taxpayers how many of those dollars you’re using and for what allegedly public purpose?
In normal times, that secrecy would be big news. But that revelation was eclipsed by the even more disturbing news that Gov. Ron DeSantis’ education department had also decided to welcome videos into classrooms from a guy who admits his goal is indoctrination.
As the Miami Herald reported, the Department of Education said it had concluded that the controversial PragerU program “aligns to Florida’s revised civics and government standards” and “can be used as supplemental materials in Florida schools at district discretion.”
If you’re not familiar with Prager, you should first know that PragerU is an actual university in the same way Dr. Dre is an actual doctor. It’s not. Instead, it’s the creation of conservative radio show host Dennis Prager who freely admits his goal is to indoctrinate kids.
Just last month, at a Moms for Liberty event, Prager said that when critics say to him “you indoctrinate kids,” he responds that is true. “That’s a very fair statement,” he said. “But what is the bad about our indoctrination?”
In Florida, where DeSantis often decries the evils of indoctrination, we’re again reminded that every accusation is often a confession.
I encourage you to watch some of the PragerU videos for yourself.
In one video, a cartoon version of Columbus tells kids who ask about his support of slavery: “Being taken as a slave is better than being killed, no?”
That’s quite a bar you’ve set for yourself, cartoon Chris. And for the kids.
Another video — “A Short History of Slavery,” narrated by conservative pundit Candace Owens — tells kids: “Here’s the first thing you need to know: Slavery was not ‘invented’ by White people.”
Yes, that’s actually “the first thing” PragerU thinks kids need to know about human captivity. Not how slavery destroyed generations of lives to help slavemasters enrich themselves. Or that, heaven forbid, that was wrong. But that White folks didn’t pioneer the system.
So were the harsh realities of human captivity at least the “second thing” kids need to know about slavery? Nope. According to PragerU and Owens, who is Black, the second-most important thing kids should know is that “White people were the first to put an end to slavery.”
So one of PragerU’s top two lessons on slavery is basically: Yay, White people!
Bizarre? Yes. Yet it seems to work well with the new Florida curriculum standards you read about last week — the ones that tell teachers to stress the “personal benefit” some slaves received in terms of learning job skills. And also with the laws GOP legislators passed that instruct educators to censor discussion about “systemic racism” and to sanitize history lessons that might upset some children’s parents.
The Freedom to Read organization is suggesting Florida families use the state’s new “parental rights” law to opt-out of PragerU’s indoctrination.
But it seems like it might be simpler to, oh, I dunno, maybe just not indoctrinate?
Maybe just teach history like it really happened, warts and all.
And maybe be fully transparent with taxpayer money and public positions.
Unfortunately, that all seems like too much to ask.
smaxwell@orlandosentinel.com

Everything you need to know about slavery”
Whites did not invent it
Finally worked to end it
Kept them housed and fed
Better slave than dead
LikeLike
Everything you need to know about slavery” (By Ron DeSantis)
LikeLike
Harvard Law Grad
LikeLike
Or, Well …
LikeLike
I wonder: could a black parent sue their school for making their child uncomfortable by denying and belittling the suffering and loss of their ancestors?
LikeLike
Good point .
LikeLike
Absolutely! Black parents should sue the state for subjecting their children to propaganda that makes them uncomfortable.
LikeLike
DeSantis is very secretive about how he spends public funds, and the legislature creates a cover for him. He has restricted public access to meetings and documents. Nobody knows how much is spent on his travel. We do know that when his campaign had a fender bender in Tennessee, there were at least four state vehicles, allegedly carrying his security team, involved in the incident. DeSantis has covered up how he is paying for migrant flights, although most people believe it is Covid funds that were never used to mitigate Covid in public schools. Teachers had to bring their own bottle of Lysol into the classroom. DeSantis also meddled with the Covid data so residents could not rely on any of the data from the state. As for the PragerU material, I hope it is only available and not mandated in public schools as the videos are full of inaccurate right wing propaganda. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/desantis-florida-public-records-transparency-rcna91364
LikeLike
On a lighter note, Bob may get to see one of his wishes come true. Newsom took the bait. He agreed to debate DeSantis on Fox News with Sean Hannity moderating in November. It should be quite a spectacle. https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/desantis-agrees-debate-newsom-fox-news-bringing-rivalry/story?id=101985843
LikeLike
Most ridiculous event planned ever. Why in the world would two governors debate (and about what?) when one isn’t even running for office? It’s just stupid and nobody cares. Publicity stunt.
LikeLike
Transparentcy”
Transparentcy, to Ron
Means “Force them to report”
The meds their kids are on
When kids take part in sport
LikeLike
LikeLike