Texarkana Gazette

Give peace a chance in America’s culture wars

- Lynn Schmidt

I have a confession when it comes to the culture war our society is mired in: I consider myself a pacifist on this front. As the battles rage on between the woke left and the anti-woke right, it seems clear to me that there will be no winners, only losers. Those losers are the majority of Americans, in the middle, who want a government that actually governs.

In March, Florida’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, signed the “Parental Rights in Education Bill,” which reinforces parents’ rights “to make decisions regarding the upbringing of their children.” The bill prohibits classroom instructio­n on sexual orientatio­n or gender identity in kindergart­en through third grade and prohibits instructio­n that is not age appropriat­e for students and requires school districts to adopt procedures for notifying parents if there is a change in services from the school regarding a child’s mental, emotional or physical health or well-being. Critics of the bill started calling it the “Don’t say gay” bill, even though there is no mention of the word gay in the bill.

After DeSantis signed the bill, woke employees of Disney World — the top employer in central Florida — demanded that the Walt Disney Corporatio­n condemn the bill, and Disney Chief Executive Bob Chapek vowed to fight for its repeal. DeSantis retaliated by asking Florida lawmakers to repeal a provision, known as the Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District, that gives Disney the right to govern itself like a city since 1967. Disney can raise its own revenues to pay for municipal infrastruc­ture at Disney World. Reedy Creek also issues bonds and levies taxes on properties within its boundaries effectivel­y on behalf of Disney. Those bonds total $1 billion.

If it’s revoked, the state of Florida acknowledg­es it will not be able to cover the improvemen­t district’s bond obligation­s.

The big losers in this current battle are the improvemen­t district’s 300 employees, who could lose their jobs, and the taxpayers who were warned that their property taxes may jump by 20% to cover the cost of the district’s services.

As an old-school conservati­ve, I have a nuanced take on the Florida situation, which I am quite aware no longer fits into the current, populist Republican Party’s beliefs. I believe in parental rights but think the conversati­ons about curriculum should be taking place at the local, school district level. I am suspicious of a strong central government, so I think the Florida governor and legislatur­e overreache­d.

I also prefer, probably unrealisti­cally, that corporatio­ns stay out of political fights.

I am by no means suggesting that our society should not be debating how to deal with change, to decide what is important to our communitie­s, and to decide the values we want to hold. I am proposing that the culture wars be removed from politics.

When politician­s and elected officials spend their time engaging in culture war issues, they stop spending their time on the pragmatic tasks of governing. I imagine there are plenty of Floridians who could identify far more urgent issues worth addressing.

So how can political culture war pacifists give peace a chance? We can refuse to engage in culture war combat, we can work to build back our local communitie­s, start to trust our institutio­ns again, encourage that trust to grow, and reward politician­s who refuse to engage in culture war battles with our votes.

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