Miami Herald (Sunday)

Straight, white male? Florida’s GOP wants to protect you from ‘guilt’ and ‘anguish’

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Aproposed law would “prevent all kinds of discrimina­tion” at Florida public schools and workplaces, based on the principle that “all individual­s are created equal” and that teachers should teach, not indoctrina­te.

But despite the platitudes its sponsor used to describe Senate Bill 148 and House Bill 7, this is not an effort to stop real discrimina­tion. The true intent of the legislatio­n advancing in the Florida Senate is to provide state cover for students and employees offended by diversity training at private companies and by classroom lectures about racism, sexism and homophobia.

The plan is to subvert what we have historical­ly considered as discrimina­tion. And the way it’s happening is through a proposal aimed at protecting certain people — straight, white men, for the most part — whose sensitivit­ies require shielding via state policing of what teachers and diversity trainers say.

Under the proposal, it’s possible that this group of people could claim discrimina­tion if they feel uncomforta­ble during a discussion of, say, bias or racism. What an irony for a state government that often preaches against the dangers of big government and authoritar­ian regimes.

DARED TO INVOKE MLK

SB 148 puts into official words Gov. Ron DeSantis’ “Stop W.O.K.E. Act,” which stands for “Stop Wrongs Against Our Kids and Employees Act.” He announced the proposal last month at a rally-style news conference, where he dared to invoke Martin Luther King, Jr.’s call to judge people on the content of their character, not on the color of their skin.

It’s under the pretense of following MLK’s teachings that Republican­s in Florida and other states have banned critical race theory, an academic theory that looks at racism at the systemic level and how laws that appear to be neutral can propagate it.

Under the conservati­ve narrative, discussing slavery, segregatio­n and discrimina­tion is fine as long as it’s a thing of history or an abstract concept that

Being taught the history of racism in America, not so much.

BONA FIDE BEEF

Re the Jan. 20 Weekend section cover story, “Argentine flavor:” Nice to know about new restaurant­s, but the story did not mention one of the original and most authentic of local Argentine restaurant­s — Rincon Argentino, south of Coral Way on Southwest 37th Avenue in Miami.

To be authentic, an Argentine restaurant must have a vertical barbecue pit, where meats are cooked on a skewer next to a central fire pit. Rincon Argentino has this.

The article did not mention if that was the case in any of the restaurant­s reviewed, so are any of them authentic?

– Juan A. Galan, Jr.,

Coral Gables

UNRULY PASSENGERS

Re the Jan. 21 story “London-bound flight returns to MIA after woman refuses to wear mask:” Yet another flight has to turn around because of a disruptive passenger?

I was a flight attendant for many years. In the

“old days,” interferin­g

BOB MCFARLIN

doesn’t make people question whether they are complicit in perpetuati­ng bigotry.

The WOKE bill, filed by Hialeah Sen. Manny Diaz, has a veneer of social righteousn­ess. It starts off stating that no training or instructio­n should compel people to believe that “members of one race, color, sex or national origin are morally superior,” and that no “individual should feel discomfort, guilt, anguish or any other form of psychologi­cal distress on account of his or her race, color, sex or national origin.”

Sounds good, except the legislatio­n leaves plenty of room for someone to claim “discrimina­tion” based on discomfort — which is sometimes bound to be part of discussion­s that seek to make people reflect on their own prejudices.

‘ADVERSE TREATMENT’

The bill bans training that makes people feel they “bear responsibi­lity” for “actions committed in the past by other members of the same race, color, sex or national origin,” or that compels people to believe they should “receive adverse treatment to achieve diversity, equity or inclusion” — which appears to be aimed at affirmativ­e action.

The bill’s absurdity was best explained by Sen. Tina Polsky, D-Boca Raton, at a Tuesday Senate committee hearing: “You’re convolutin­g what discrimina­tion is. You can’t say people feel guilty about other people’s discrimina­tion and now they can sue — under discrimina­tion.”

White students or workers shouldn’t be singled out for the sins of slave owners. Nor is any individual man is responsibl­e for gender inequaliti­es. But beyond that, is blaming and finger pointing happening at such great levels at public schools and workplaces that we need a new state law to combat it? Diaz said at the hearing he’s heard from “individual parents with concerns” but didn’t provide any examples to justify his bill.

DRUMMING UP OUTRAGE

It’s easier to drum up outrage against esoteric enemies like critical race theory and “wokeness” than it is to outline real problems. Vague concepts (how many people actually know what critical race theory even means?) wind up with vague fixes that people with an ax to with the duties of a flight crew was a federal offense.

These idiots today should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. It’s time to stop mollycoddl­ing these people.

What kind of a sick country have we become?

– Pamela Egloff,

Coconut Grove

MENTAL HEALTH

We have witnessed in one week a homeless man pushing a young woman to her death on the tracks of the New York subway, and then the stabbing of a bright young woman working on her master’s degree in Los Angeles, also by a homeless man.

We spend billions on foreign aid to bring other societies up to snuff , while we cannot handle the problems we see on the streets of every major metropolit­an city across our land.

In 1967, then-California Gov. Ronald Reagan signed the Lanterman– Petris–Short Act, changed the practice of institutio­nalizing patients involuntar­ily to community settings

MONICA R. RICHARDSON

instead of state hospitals.

President Carter signed the Mental Health Systems Act of 1980, which eventually closed mental hospitals.

The time has come to consider the public at large, the streets with folks camping out under bridges, and the lack of necessary intelligen­ce our politician­s have to realize that something has to be done now.

– Roger Shatanof,

Coral Garbles

GHOST PATROL

Gov. Ron DeSantis has proposed the creation of an almost $6 million special police force to investigat­e election crime. He should hire the famous trio who rid New York

City of Gozer, the shapeshift­ing ancient Sumerian god, in “Ghostbuste­rs.”

Florida Republican­s have long complained of dead people voting, so who better to rid Florida of ghostly voters than the Votebuster­s?

Yes, Florida is threatened by rampant paranormal activity around

DANA BANKER

grind can then abuse.

Could a male employee file a complaint after sitting through sexual-harassment training because it makes him feel targeted by a trainer who says it is often women who accuse men of such conduct? Could training on unconsciou­s bias — the stereotype­s we are unaware of having about certain groups of people — violate the proposed law by making people believe they are “inherently racist, sexist or oppressive whether consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly?”

There were no real answers to these questions at the Tuesday hearing.

Diaz said diversity training is fine as long as it’s “objective” and people cannot be made to feel “guilty of it as an individual.” Complaints, he added, would have to be “evidence based.”

But just their simple threat would have a chilling effect on teachers and private businesses. That appears to be the real intent of SB 148.

Diaz said he wants schools to talk about the “dark parts” of American history and that his bill allows teachers to talk about sexism, slavery, racial oppression, racial segregatio­n and racial discrimina­tion. But, again, that should be done “objectivel­y” and without indoctrina­tion.

But what is objectivit­y, and who gets to define it?

In this case, it’s the party in power in Florida, and Republican­s will use every bit of political capital to redefine what discrimina­tion is and who its victims are.

‘‘ PRESIDENT BIDEN SAID THAT HIS FIRST YEAR IN OFFICE HAS BEEN ‘A YEAR OF CHALLENGES,’ BUT HE’D RATHER FOCUS ON THE POSITIVES — LIKE YOUR COVID TEST.

election time. We need the Votebuster­s. They could capture all the ectoplasm hanging around Florida’s polling places. They need to be careful, though. By the time polls close on Election Day, many poll workers seem as if they will fade, and quickly.

However, what are a few dead grannies to DeSantis, who sees old people as necessary losses in his fight to keep Florida maskless, unvaccinat­ed, and open for business?

The last major voter debacle in Florida resulted in the hanging of a guy named chad.

FREE MASKS

– Jack Dallas, West Kendall

I wonder what is the cost of sending out 500 million N95 masks to people who will use them for only five days (recommende­d usage), especially at this point in the pandemic, as opposed to a year ago?

Seems like more government waste.

– Barbara Parker,

Miami

NANCY ANCRUM

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 ?? AP ?? State Sen. Tina Polsky, D-Boca Raton, said that the W.O.K.E. Act is “convolutin­g what discrimina­tion is.
AP State Sen. Tina Polsky, D-Boca Raton, said that the W.O.K.E. Act is “convolutin­g what discrimina­tion is.

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