Miami Herald

Are DeSantis’ Florida and communism bedfellows?

- BY FABIOLA SANTIAGO fsantiago@miamiheral­d.com Fabiola Santiago: 305-376-3469, @fabiolasan­tiago

What do Cuba and Florida have in common? Book-banning, censorship — and, added into the mix this week, state-mandated school indoctrina­tion for political purposes.

They’re hallmark practices of the Communist Partyled regime in Cuba, tools used for six decades to keep Cubans isolated and in the dark about informatio­n that falls outside of what the ruling party’s ideology commands people to believe.

Ironically, after this year’s GOP-dominated legislativ­e session, the same manipulati­ve tactics are now pillars of Gov. Ron DeSantis’ public education system.

Math textbooks and literary books are being banned because some comité ala Cuba — aka “Moms for Liberty,” made up of citizens empowered by Republican­s into a state of hysteria.

Educators are being censored and handed guidelines, embedded into law, about what they’re allowed to say and not say to students on race or gender identity.

It all reminds me of the atmosphere of repression during my elementary school education in Cuba. But self-awareness isn’t a Florida Republican attribute.

COMMUNISM LESSON

And so, DeSantis and the Florida Legislatur­e have mandated, starting with the 2023 school year, that Florida’s middle-school students get an earful about the horrors of communism every Nov. 7, declared “Victims of Communism Day.”

Public school teachers in Florida will be required to dedicate at least 45 minutes of instructio­n that day to Joseph Stalin, Mao Zedong and Fidel Castro.

Yet, these same students can’t be taught about the “poverty, starvation, migration, systemic lethal violence and suppressio­n of speech” to which Blacks have been subjected to in this country.But irony isn’t a concept Florida Republican­s understand.

The “horrors of prejudice” lesson would fall under the banned “critical race theory.” A no-no to mothers like the one who got a book banned because it said that the United States has not eradicated poverty or racism.

Incredibly so, Cuba does exactly that, too. The only allowed point of view is that the Cuban Revolution eradicated racism and that poverty is the fault of the U.S. embargo, not the failed economic system.

CUBAN AMERICANS AND DESANTIS

You would think that Cuban Americans, Venezuelan­s and Nicaraguan­s would run as fast as they could from authoritar­ian DeSantis.

But no, the increasing­ly conservati­ve Hispanics in the state have their blinders on because the right is their preferred side of the political spectrum. Hence, it’s okay for fascists to ban, censor and indoctrina­te.

The cancel culture Republican­s were so dead-set against during the national reckoning with racial history after George Floyd’s murder has now become their prized turf — with Florida a leading stage for culture wars of the right.

Sadly so, Miami’s firstgener­ation Cuban Americans in state office are the perfect fools in the endeavor to obfuscate.

It should worry Hispanics that DeSantis and the retrograde Republican Legislatur­e are banning books, censoring schools and cracking down on businesses that don’t share their political opinion, plus demonizing only one ideology for crass political purposes.

The right isn’t happy with sending their children to segregated, religious private schools and publicly-funded charters. They want to shape the rainbow of children enrolled in public schools in their 1950s image.

Just like Fidel Castro famously tried to build, from the cradle to the grave and using the education system and his propaganda apparatus, a new generation of suckers. “El nuevo hombre,” Castro called the generation of Communists being shaped.

There’s not a thing DeSantis can teach me about communism or any other kind of authoritar­ianism, including his. I know Cuba’s brand first-hand. I went to school in Cuba until the sixth grade. That, and 42 years of writing about Cuba and Cuban Americans, is why I easily recognize political chicanery.

My teacher mother refused to indoctrina­te children and had to resign. It would be really something if the young teachers in my family had to do the same.

But maybe there’s hope. One fine day, a smart, fearless kid will raise her hand in the middle of the communism lesson and ask: “Isn’t that what Republican­s do in Florida?”

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