South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

A ‘woke’ calculatio­n: Hurt millions, so DeSantis can win

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It shows rare talent when a politician’s actions appear both chilling and silly at the same time. Gov. Ron DeSantis — who has built his personal political brand by resurrecti­ng and weaponizin­g bigotry that most people believed had been laid to rest — pulls it off regularly.

But he hit a new benchmark with a recent speech, which he wrapped up with a polemic featuring his favorite word, one he apparently assumes Floridians don’t know the meaning of.

The word, of course, is “woke.”

“The state of Florida is the state, is the place, where woke goes to die,” DeSantis said at the end of a rambling speech on education and teacher recruitmen­t, delivered earlier this month in New Port Richey. “We are not going to let this state descend into some type of woke dumpster fire.”

We need to know, at this point, exactly what DeSantis means when he slings this word around. We think we do know — and it’s an ugly explanatio­n, one that slanders Floridians as people of narrow minds, hard hearts and hateful intent.

Not who we are

And it is a slander; fundamenta­lly untrue. Florida has always been one of the most diverse states in the union, and for the most part, we live and let live in peace, if not perfect harmony. Why are so many people suddenly flocking to DeSantis’ flag of “antiwoke” when it doesn’t reflect Florida’s reality?

To answer this question, start with the real meaning of “woke.” Merriam-Webster’s definition, added in 2017, reads: “Aware of and actively attentive to important facts and issues (especially issues of racial and social justice).”

That doesn’t sound bad to us, especially those of us who grew up in the South, born to parents — of all skin tones — who saw the vicious toll that bigotry exacted on society and started to question its inevitabil­ity. These were the stalwart Americans with the moral courage to spark a great cultural shift, redefining America as a place where it was no longer acceptable to reject fellow human beings on the mere basis of race — or gender, or language, or other things they could not control. That generation was not perfect, progress was slow and painful, but they strove to impress upon their children the horror and injustice of winnowing humans by attributes they could not control.

In minority families, that meant urging their children to stop submitting to countless indignitie­s, to speak up when belittled, disadvanta­ged or physically threatened. In white households, parents began to correct their children when they expressed racist or — much later — homophobic views. More recently, the vast majority of Americans having agreed that bigotry was wrong and destructiv­e, the focus shifted to areas where unconsciou­s bias and unthinking prejudice dwelled. We started talking about things like diversity in public life and equality of opportunit­y, of the value of considerin­g other points of view. All too often, it boiled down to a simple directive: Treat other humans with courtesy, dignity and empathy. See the potential in every human. Investigat­e disparitie­s, knock down barriers and seek redress.

That’s where the concept of “woke” emerged. It meant realizing that everyone carries the seeds of prejudice and that bigotry isn’t always easy to spot. It meant acknowledg­ing how we all suffer from the great waste of human capital and potential that took place while we slumbered to the reality of prejudice.

What, of that, does DeSantis think should go away?

The governor’s game

We don’t think DeSantis is calling for a return of the days of Jim Crow, or even the end of “press 2 for español.” What we do believe, however, is that the governor wants people to consider this battle won. To stop striving to do better. To say “good enough,” when manifestly, we are not. Minorities still face worse health outcomes, lower lifetime earning potentials and higher incidents of incarcerat­ion and violence. Minorities and LGBTQ+ youth are still at far greater risk of bullying, addiction and suicide.

The governor wants to rally those people — many of them unlikely voters who first thrilled to similar messages from Donald Trump — who believe a little racism is OK.

That’s why DeSantis’ signature “Stop WOKE” legislatio­n instructs schools to stop suggesting students should “feel guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychologi­cal distress” because of their race, color, sex or national origin. It’s why his “Don’t say gay” legislatio­n was carefully marketed to resurrect the old canard of LGBTQ+ people as predatory pedophiles.

A blinding selfishnes­s

DeSantis is playing to a crowd of voters who are convinced that other people are lazy and shiftless but getting ahead by reaping unfair advantages. To people who view any mention of sexual orientatio­n as an affront. People who would appreciate the latitude to voice their retrograde views out loud, but fear the inevitable backlash.

Where would catering to that narrowmind­ed minority take us?

Backward.

Why would we want to go there? We don’t. Most Floridians seem to appreciate the impulse toward inclusion and community. We have more friends and less fear. We acknowledg­e our slip-ups, make amends and move on. We don’t just get along. We explore each other’s cultures, talk about our experience­s — and thrive.

Gov. DeSantis wants us to believe our way of life is at risk. But for the most part, we’re talking about the ability of a small group of jerks to be, well, jerks. We’re talking about putting people we know, and get along with, in fear. We’re talking about hurting people we have already welcomed into our workplaces and schools and families.

It’s a calculatio­n; one that paints DeSantis less as a racist or homophobe and more as a supremely selfish politician who cares more about his own future than Florida’s present reality. He’s weaponizin­g hate, not because he’s a hater, but because it’s good for his prospects.

In a way, that’s almost worse.

A federal judge has already shut down much of DeSantis’ Stop WOKE legislatio­n for good and rational reasons — foremost among them that it is blatantly unconstitu­tional. While the courts do their job, let’s shut down the governor. Tell him Floridians are woke, proudly so. And not inclined to go back to sleep.

This editorial originally appeared in the Orlando Sentinel.

 ?? FILE ?? Ron DeSantis reacts after signing HB 7, “Individual Freedom,”also dubbed the“stop woke”bill, at Mater Academy Charter Middle/ High School in Hialeah Gardens on April 22.
FILE Ron DeSantis reacts after signing HB 7, “Individual Freedom,”also dubbed the“stop woke”bill, at Mater Academy Charter Middle/ High School in Hialeah Gardens on April 22.

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