The Chronicle of Higher Education reports that legislatures in Republican-controlled states are passing laws to restrict teaching about racism or any kind of DEI in higher education. Such state laws follow the lead of Governor Ron DeSantis in Florida, who was first to launch the war on academic freedom, but also the policies of Trump, who has declared that he too will make war on “woke” (that is, anything that is honest about the dark side of the American past.)
Teaching social work in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Cassandra E. Simon often assigns readings that describe how the families her students might one day serve have been impacted by more than a century of housing, employment, and education discrimination. The associate professor has encouraged her students to engage in spirited discussions about race, even assigning a project in which they advocate for or against a social-justice issue.
Doing any of those things today, she argues in a federal lawsuit, could get her fired from the state flagship, where she’s taught for 25 years. Last year, the state’s Republican governor, Kay Ivey, signed into law a sweeping bill that restricts what professors can teach about race. If any of their lessons veer into what conservative politicians have deemed “divisive concepts,” faculty members risk being reported, investigated, and potentially fired.
That kind of incursion into the curriculum is growing and prompting a flurry of First Amendment challenges from Simon and other plaintiffs. It’s a line state lawmakers did not cross early on in their push to dismantle DEI efforts, even as universities shuttered offices, laid off employees, canceled scholarships, and called off diversity training. But over the past two years, more than a dozen laws have been enacted that either limit which classes can be taught or imposed restrictions on what professors can say in the classroom, according to a Chronicle analysis of state legislation and a compilation of what PEN America calls “educational gag orders.”
This year especially “has been a banner year for censorship at a state level across the country,” said Amy B. Reid, senior manager at PEN America’s Freedom to Learn program. “The point of a lot of these restrictions is to put people on guard, worried that anything or everything could be prohibited so you really have to watch what you say.”
Some of the chief architects of the DEI-dismantling playbook have insisted that they’re not trying to silence anyone. In a January 26 letter to the editor in The Wall Street Journal by Ilya Shapiro and Jesse Arm of the Manhattan Institute, the institute declared that “Conservatives Have No Interest In Censorship.”
“By ending practices such as identity-based discrimination and compulsory, politically coercive diversity statements,” these laws “protect the rights of professors and students to engage freely on all topics, including race,” they wrote.
Despite such reassurances, recent bills seeking to eliminate diversity efforts are encroaching on curricula in a variety of ways. Some states, like Texas, Florida, and Utah, are giving boards more control over what goes into the core curriculum, as well as the ability to shut down programs with low enrollments or questionable work-force advantages. Others, like Alabama and Mississippi, have erected guardrails on topics that can be discussed in the classroom.
Supporters say these laws are needed to prevent liberal professors from veering off into lessons that amount to activism. Some conservative lawmakers argue that it’s their responsibility, as stewards of taxpayer dollars, to ensure public universities are offering degrees that will help students be successful and land jobs.
Critics see these incursions as infringements on free speech and academic freedom.
The intentions of those who launched “the war on woke” are irrelevant to the reality of what happens when their concerns are taken up by legislatures intent on stamping out disturbing but historically accurate discussions of race and gender. When red-state legislators restrict academic freedom, they do it with an axe, not a scalpel. The result is to instill fear in professors about what they teach and whether they will be fired for thought crimes.

While red state leadership pretends to work for freedom, most of the governors are interested in control and restriction while supporting efforts to discriminate, which they seem to believe is their inherent right to do. They use vague, subjective terms like woke, divisive concepts in order to justify their rejection of democracy, free thought, speech and individual rights. The vagueness gives these right wing leaders the maximum latitude to charge liberal thinkers with “crimes,” which are often little more than people exercising their right to free speech. These extremists like DeSantis are installing right wing leadership at state universities so they can turn these institutions into conservative ideological centers. Liberal leaning institutions of higher education in intolerant red states are under attack.
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During the backlash against the New Deal that spawned red-baiting in the McCarthy era, there was pressure on academia to preach a conservative sermon. Adlai Stevenson was called an egghead, and the country was placed in the hands of the avuncular Eisenhower, who was not nearly the leader Stevenson would have been. Still, Ike led his Republican Party with a moral compass that righted the ship in the storms of the Civil Rights era, and we got through the era of conformity.
Unfortunately, fragments of reactionary thought remained, and these seeds produced the Atwater/Gingrich revolution during the Reagan years. Add the billionaire club and it is now Katy bar the door. Demagogue the latest issue and rob the public blind.
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Ike quote: “Should any political party attempt to abolish social security, unemployment insurance and eliminate labor laws and farm programs, you would not hear of that party again in our political history. There is a tiny splinter group, of course, that believes that you can do these things. Among them are a few Texas oil millionaires, and an occasional politician or businessman from other areas. Their number is negligible and they are stupid.”
The GOP is still around and still trying to gut or destroy Social Security unlike Ike.
Ike was a very different kind of Republican from the ghouls of today. He even strengthened and expanded Social Security.
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Under Ike, the marginal tax rate for the richest was 90%.
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Roy.
Alas, conspiracy theorists have always been with us. The spirit of McCarthyism was alive in the 1930s and even earlier.
What makes them more dangerous now is the Internet, which spreads rumors and lies, as well as photoshopped images to “prove” that lies are truth and truth is lies. A conspiracy swamp.
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Like the 10-year-old images of protestors throwing bricks at and burning police cars that Fox News ran when discussing the recent protests in LA.
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Political viewpoint audits = McCarthyism s***.
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Ofc, all this material will still, for the foreseeable future, be available on the Internet and in books, but here’s a problem: without competent, experienced scholars leading kids through these materials, many will not be able to tell s–t from Shinola, as older people used to say when I was a kid.
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