Las Vegas Review-Journal

In his quest to climb, Desantis stepping on Black people

- Roy Johnson Roy Johnson is a columnist for al.com.

Leave me alone. Leave us alone, Ron Desantis. Leave Black people out of your failing-grade mess. Out of your cold, steely-eyed glare. Out of your hardened heart. Leave us out of your ignorance.

You want to be president, cool. You want to be the new flagbearer for the fearful right; go for it.

You wanted to hand-pick the Republican National Committee chair; sorry that didn’t work out for you.

You want to be Donald Trump, clearly. Or at least to take his place as the snarling, haughty face of the Republican Party. Take your best shot, Governor.

But leave Black people out of it. Leave us out of your feckless war against woke — a word you and your ilk have wrenched and twisted beyond its true meaning. By any insightful definition, “woke” simply means to be “alert” and especially concerned about social injustice and discrimina­tion.

Yet you and your army of fearful minions have weaponized it and put us — anyone who wants to see America live up to its creeds of fairness, freedom, and justice for all — in its crosshairs.

You’ve put Black people in your crosshairs. Because it’s like catnip to your core constituen­ts.

You bullied the National Hockey League into altering its Pathway to Hockey Summit, a recruiting event originally billed for registrant­s who are female, Black, Asian/pacific Islander, Hispanic/latino, Indigenous, LGBTQIA+, and/or disabled registrant­s. After you fired a warning shot from the anti-woke assault weapon, the league capitulate­d and opened sign-up to white men — notwithsta­nding that the league’s recruited mostly white men since its founding more than a century ago. Where have you been?

I’m almost afraid to mention this: Are you going to march over NASCAR in Daytona Beach and throw hissy fits over its Diversity Internship and Drive for Diversity Pit Crew Developmen­t programs? They’re restricted to members of specific racial/ethnic groups (women are welcome in the pit crew program) and were created to help these historical­ly white-men-almost-only sports become inclusive. Become more like America. Don’t you dare.

As you strive to climb, stop stepping on us. Stop stepping on Black people.

Leave us alone. Especially our best and brightest. Heck, the best and brightest among all students.

Stop trying to block their brains from knowledge. From knowing the full breadth of our experience­s in this nation, in the world. From knowing the good, the bad, and even the queer.

In banning Advanced Placement African American studies, you claim it “lacks educationa­l value.”

Which means to you, our journey lacks value. Our contributi­ons, our accomplish­ments, our sacrifices, our experience­s, our joys — it all lacks value. Our quest for reparation­s lacks value. What matters to us lacks value to you. Our pain lacks value.

You recruited a lackey state Department of Education to be your yes chorus, to wave the word “indoctrina­tion” like a fiery torch in defending your deed. “Our system is for educating kids, not indoctrina­ting kids,” you’ve said many times, often to crowds filled with folks who don’t know the full meaning and breadth of that word, either.

Well, take a seat and learn: Schools have been “indoctrina­ting” students for generation­s, teaching curriculum­s crafted from someone’s perspectiv­e. (Not ours) Teaching their view of what was and is — emphasis on their.

In high school, I was “indoctrina­ted” from an American history book that squished 246 years of Black enslavemen­t into a few paragraphs, that mentioned only Black Americans Booker T. Washington, George Washington Carver and the Rev. Martin Luther King.

That, in essence, left us out.

I was “indoctrina­ted” with lessons on wars, on communism, on the Ku Klux Klan, on myriad events, perspectiv­es and evils — and given the tools to discern for myself how I would view them.

You’re cool with teaching the history of communism — as it might be reflected in the approved AP courses on European and other histories — yet not the history of Black feminism.

One definition of indoctrina­tion describes it as “teaching the acceptance of a set of beliefs uncritical­ly.”

Dude, that’s been happening since long before we were born.

Thankfully, it’s changing. Thankfully, school systems and teachers nationwide are increasing­ly broadening the perspectiv­es taught in classrooms. Broadening the names of those who shaped our nation. Broadening the events that shaped our nation. Broadening the vital game-changing thoughts, ideas, and perspectiv­es — almost all of which were deemed radical at some juncture — that shaped us.

And giving them the tools to digest and discern for themselves how it shapes their thinking.

That’s teaching.

Advanced Placement courses, Governor, are meant to stretch and challenge students who’ve shown an ability to handle being stretched and challenged. Who desire to be stretched and challenged. Who don’t fear being stretched.

Unlike you.

 ?? MARTA LAVANDIER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Florida Gov. Ron Desantis gestures Jan. 26 during a news conference on new law enforcemen­t legislatio­n.
MARTA LAVANDIER / ASSOCIATED PRESS Florida Gov. Ron Desantis gestures Jan. 26 during a news conference on new law enforcemen­t legislatio­n.

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