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Roberto Clemente Banned in Florida
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What isn't banned in Florida these days?
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That's pathetic.
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The Liberal funded media making a mountain out of a molehill again.
Gee, I wonder what popular politician resides in Florida that is driving the Democrats nuts because he is trying to bring some normalcy back to schools and some common sense everywhere else? "According to Duvall County Schools, the book was pulled as part of its effort to do the state require review of books. The district said all books must be certified by a media specialist" https://www.cbsnews.com/pittsburgh/n...hool-district/ |
LOL “normalcy”
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A media specialist. LOL.
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Government "thought police" whether coming from the left or the right is never a good idea. The sooner we get liberal and conservative agendas out of schools the better.
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I wish I was able to do that much earlier before you foolishly decided to get vaccinated. |
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What are some aspects of Clemente’s life that would be problematic for a child to learn about?
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All books have not been removed though for this review, have they? That someone would even need to closely review a biography of Clemente to see if it was lawful is a disgrace in and of itself. And who decides what discussions of race are OK and which aren't, a media specialist? Give me a fucking break. This is America. Or used to be. Stop making it sound neutral and innocuous, it isn't.
Totalitarianism always starts with censorship. And as Phil said it goes both ways, cancel culture from the left has gone way too far too IMO. I am fine keeping sexually explicit material out of the schools. I am fine waiting for kids to be a little older before getting into sexual and gender identity. But banning books for what ultimately is a political value judgment? Noooooooooo thank you. |
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It is no different up here with Trudeau at the helm. Like I've said numerous times in various threads, the Liberals are all in bed together worldwide. Cancel culture, censorship, the media in their back pockets, etc, etc, etc. All Liberalism, imo. It amazes me how many have forgotten history and I'm afraid we are going to repeat it. WW2 was won but the dream never died with it. It is still an agenda and they are not even trying to hide it anymore. |
Dale, I don't like it any more from the left than from the right.
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I am pretty sure he is an advocate for free speech as well but he knows/recognizes being a certain age to be able to understand such things, especially of a sexual nature, is important too. These drag queens and the like reading and dancing for these toddlers is something I never imagined would ever happen. It's insanity, and guess what party is pushing it? |
I would not give a public official authority to decide what is or is not race baiting. If a kids' book on Roberto Clemente is under scrutiny, something is wrong with that picture. BTW I went to school with Kim Crenshaw, credited with being one of the founders of critical race theory.
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https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/...ools-rcna70081 They are going through and looking at titles first apparently, to then see if the books can possibly have some topics they feel are not age appropriate or otherwise unallowable for students under enacted Florida state standards, and if any questions, pulling them from the shelves for "further review". In other words, no K through 3rd grade books can discuss gender identity or sexual orientation, no public grade school books can teach critical race theory, which may discuss or examine systemic racism in the U.S., and books may not include references to pornography and discrimination. The Clemente book was one (of between 100-200) that was specifically pulled for "further review" (ie: it is currently banned), while approximately 2,800 other book titles were already passed so far and not ever pulled or banned. They have around 1.5 million book titles in total in the Duval County public school's library system to eventually be reviewed apparently, and they have hired 52 certified media specialists to do the review. None of the other remaining books that have not yet been looked at by the media specialists have apparently been specifically pulled or banned yet either. If nothing else, were I a taxpayer in Duval county, I'd like to know how much of my tax money was being wasted on these 52 specialists rather than going towards actual education and other more critical school district needs. In the case of the Clemente book, it apparently talks about the racism and discrimination he faced while playing in the U.S., and apparently the State of Florida doesn't want public school students to hear about the racist treatment someone like him received through the public schools. Makes perfect sense as a lot of states, especially Southern ones, back in Clemente's day supported and upheld Jim Crow and other racist laws and rules. Such states likely don't want to admit and let their kids learn what effing POS's they were back then by allowing such crap to happen. At least not if they can help it. |
Double post.
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Sometimes it helps to remember that what politicians (for or against a bill) and the media say are not really true. The wonderful thing about legislation is that it is all documentary, there is an actual text of the bill and nothing not in that text is in the bill. It's an issue that can be entirely resolved by looking at the document. What is actually in a law that is passed and what everyone is screeching about are often very, very different.
The text of the bill is only 496 lines, it’s not one of the thousand page confusing ones that is a genuine pain to decipher. The actual law is here: https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bil...ext/Filed/HTML. If you are really lazy, 51-78 are a pretty good TL;DR of the thesis. It does not discriminate between races in any way, it sets a standard for all that is exactly the same. It says that one cannot teach that a race is morally superior to another, that an individual is inherently racist because of their race, that moral character is determined by the color of their skin, that a person deserves to be discriminated against because of the actions of people of the same skin color in the past who have nothing to do with them, that a person should feel guilt, anguish or discomfort because of their race. It does not, in any way, “force schools and libraries to remove literature about people of color or with LGBTQ themes.” Not only is this a complete lie, the bill specifically states that schools are required to teach: “167 The history of African Americans, including the history 168 of African peoples before the political conflicts that led to 169 the development of slavery, the passage to America, the 170 enslavement experience, abolition, and the contributions of 171 African Americans to society. Instructional materials shall 172 include the contributions of African Americans to American 173 society.” This, of course, is the exact opposite of what this article and so many others are saying. “Certified”, “media”, and “specialist” are three words that never appear in the bill anywhere in any context whatsoever. Obviously, a book celebrating Roberto Clemente is not banned, unless it argues that Clemente was morally superior to others because of his skin color (what we would call racist if it was about a white male). It’s a smart move to do this though, people are by and large not going to read the actual bill or do any research whatsoever, they’ll just follow whatever articles that preach their views to them say without any inquiry. Announcing they’re pulling an unobjectionable book that obviously is not banned by this law is just optics politics. It’s rage bait for their base, regardless of how absurd it is on even cursory inspection. People should actually read the bill instead of the clickbait articles before they rage. One can certainly for or against the law, but one should actually look at it first. That's a probably a hot take in 2023. |
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Also, history is written by the winners! |
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I wonder how many still believe Jan 6th was an actual insurrection? I wonder how many still believe the Russian Collusion narrative? Trump called Neo-Nazi's fine people? The Steele Dossier? Mostly peaceful protests? Hunter's laptop was Russian disinformation. The FBI, CIA and DOJ are honest and unbiased? It goes on and on. https://twitter.com/RepStefanik/stat...I4sjgA26s%3D19 |
Am I the only one who really hates when politics enters Net54 chats? This is hobby is one of my favorite escape from some of the world's ugly realities...
But then I tune into threads like this one and get to see the same vile talk and opinions here and honestly, it impacts my willingness to interact with some member/posters. It's too bad - like others, I tune into "new posts" to see what great new hobby talks may have started. And every now and then, threads take a turn like this one. It's too bad. I suppose i will just ignore "water cooler talk" moving forward... but my daughter is a new elementary school librarian, so the topic got my attention. |
Ah The Joys of Politics
Sadly Politicians on all sides seems to forget about the people and the effects they have on us |
Florida has also pulled some books about Jackie Robinson. Guess they don't want kids to hear how their wonderful state wouldn't alow Jackie and Rachel to shop in the local supermarkets only a few decades ago. "Normalcy" is back indeed. What's old is new again.
https://detroitsportsnation.com/duva...7/2023/393722/ |
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What's their moto, "The Intellectualist, a site for the unintelligent" and people still sign up? https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/the-intellectualist/ These media sources are moderate to strongly biased toward liberal causes through story selection and/or political affiliation. They may utilize strong loaded words (wording that attempts to influence an audience by using appeal to emotion or stereotypes), publish misleading reports, and omit information reporting that may damage liberal causes. Some sources in this category may be untrustworthy. See all Left Bias sources. Overall, we rate The Intellectualist Left Biased based on story selection that consistently favors the left. We also rate them Mixed for factual reporting due to a couple of failed fact checks and the use of misleading headlines that entirely match the story. Unbelievable what some people will believe today. :( |
Did the state remove the Jackie book or not? That is the subject of the post. The report also came from Penguin, the publisher of the books removed.
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Walton County identified two books by Toni Morrison as violating the statute. Yes, Toni Morrison.
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This claim that these books were banned appears to be completely false. Furthermore, anyone who has read the short law would know that such books are not banned from school libraries whatsoever, and that the law very explicitly requires the achievements of and problems experienced by African Americans to be taught to children. This is just fake rage bait for people who are unable or unwilling to to put even 1 minute into checking if it’s true, or reading the law. |
The law does say critical race theory cannot be taught, n'est-ce pas?
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The bill is less than 4,000 words. If one does not want to read all of it, 51-78 are a good general summation of what it does not allow. The talking points of right or left do not equal actual reality. |
The updated Pen letter includes a disclaimer that says they are looking into the precise details of why, when, and for how long the books were removed. I don’t see any challenges to them being removed for a period of time.
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Whether it is a good bill or not, I am not so sure. But the claims made appear to be contradictory to the text and to the evidence of what has actually happened. |
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Here's 51-83 with what it actually doesn't allow instruction of. What part do you think is a problem and want to debate instead of the books that it obviously doesn't ban? 51. 1. Members of one race, color, sex, or national origin are 52 morally superior to members of another race, color, sex, or 53 national origin. 54 2. An individual, by virtue of his or her race, color, sex, 55 or national origin, is inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, 56 whether consciously or unconsciously. 57 3. An individual’s moral character or status as either 58 privileged or oppressed is necessarily determined by his or her 59 race, color, sex, or national origin. 60 4. Members of one race, color, sex, or national origin 61 cannot and should not attempt to treat others without respect to 62 race, color, sex, or national origin. 63 5. An individual, by virtue of his or her race, color, sex, 64 or national origin, bears responsibility for, or should be 65 discriminated against or receive adverse treatment because of, 66 actions committed in the past by other members of the same race, 67 color, sex, or national origin. 68 6. An individual, by virtue of his or her race, color, sex, 69 or national origin, should be discriminated against or receive 70 adverse treatment to achieve diversity, equity, or inclusion. 71 7. An individual should feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or 72 any other form of psychological distress on account of his or 73 her race, color, sex, or national origin. 74 8. Such virtues as merit, excellence, hard work, fairness, 75 neutrality, objectivity, and racial colorblindness are racist or 76 sexist, or were created by members of a particular race, color, 77 sex, or national origin to oppress members of another race, 78 color, sex, or national origin. 79 (b) Paragraph (a) may not be construed to prohibit 80 discussion of the concepts listed therein as part of a course of 81 training or instruction, provided such training or instruction 82 is given in an objective manner without endorsement of the 83 concepts. |
By signing this legislation, which is the first in the nation to end corporate wokeness and Critical Race Theory in our schools, we are prioritizing education not indoctrination,” said Lieutenant Governor Jeanette Nuñez. “We will always fight to protect our children and parents from this Marxist-inspired curriculum.”
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The actual story itself isn't about politics, it is actually about humanity, racism, and discrimination, which should be an apolitical topic and something that all decent humans should be concerned about. The sad truth though is that politicians then take and weaponize such topics for their own means and gain. It is a disgusting and totally dehumanizing tactic they use to cause rifts in populations and helps to distract many from focusing on ALL the politicians' own greed and lack of often doing any actual good for anyone, other than themselves and those they conspire with. Net54 has various people that buy into this rhetoric, and have no problem aiming and spewing it at others on here. Let me make a suggestion to you. Rather than stopping to read anything in the Water Cooler section at all, why not figure out and take advantage of the forum's IGNORE function? Trust me, the removal of seeing the crap such people spew more than offsets the pretty much little they ever really seem to actually contribute to the forum and others in regards to the hobby itself. Now if there was only some way we could get the forum to extend that IGNORE function so that it also hides what they say when someone quotes them when responding. LOL, that would be really nice. And congrats on your daughter being a librarian, that is great. Maybe you can ask her to check out this Roberto Clemente book and see what exactly it is that is apparently so bad they specifically had to pull it for further review and keep it away from school kids. |
While acknowledging Friday that critical race theory is not taught in Florida schools, DeSantis claimed its "principles" are entering into class instruction, especially in how history and social science is taught. He got the Florida Board of Education last year to specifically ban its use in schools.
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" An individual, by virtue of his or her race, color, sex, 55 or national origin, is inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, 56 whether consciously or unconsciously." If we are saying we want to teach children the opposite here and this ban is morally bad, I have to disagree. I do not think it is good to teach that a person is inherently bad because of their race, color or sex, and that this is clearly racist or sexist to do so. If critical race theory means teaching children that they are inherently bad things because of their skin color or sex, then I am strongly against it. Why would we want to teach this? " 5. An individual, by virtue of his or her race, color, sex, 64 or national origin, bears responsibility for, or should be 65 discriminated against or receive adverse treatment because of, 66 actions committed in the past by other members of the same race, 67 color, sex, or national origin." Again, are we saying this is a bad idea? Should we teach that people of a skin color should be discriminated against? I don't see anything to object too. Isn't this the opposite of racism? If critical race theory means teaching that a person is responsible for evils committed by other people they have nothing to do with on the basis of their race, color or sex I think that is is silly and by definition obviously racist. I can find no reasonable objection to the idea here. Why would we want to teach this? |
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Do you feel this way about every law and regulation determining what is and is not taught in schools? There are tons of them, and I have never seen outrage over their existence or the idea that the state determines what is taught (which I am not comfortable with personally, but that has been an idea very very few have ever shared). This is my problem with the narratives against it - almost nobody can object to the actual content in the bill, because it's very explicit in every clause about not allowing discrimination between the races and sexes. It is difficult to see what, exactly, the left is so angry about with the bill and why they will not tackle the bill itself but only their media and political narratives. This is a very liberal law banning schools from teaching racism - it just protects all races the same. EDIT: It doesn't even ban these things from being taught - it just requires that they be taught in an objective manner and not endorsed or advocated as right by the teacher. Lines 79-83. |
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We've gone from objecting to fictional book bans to to 'okay, it doesn't, but it's bad because it regulates speech', but we don't want to toss out every other law regulating what is taught in schools, so now 'it's just vague' is the argument? It was not long ago that the left would have loved this bill, because it treats the races and sexes the same and bans discrimination, while specifically stipulating that African American achievement be taught. But now, because it bans advocating racism in the classroom towards any race without a carve out for a particular race, it is wrong and terrible. I have first amendment concerns on every education bill, but if there is no actual argument against this bill specifically, I cannot see how it should be treated any different than the thousands of others on the books regulating teaching. |
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The Governor does not dictate what a bill does, the text does. When my Governor says something that is not in the bill is, it doesn't become law because he says it to his base. DeSantis sells it to his base as a much bigger conservative win than the law actually is, as every politician does. Just as the media articles in this thread twist and distort and flat out lie about it. They don't determine reality. We all know the text of the law is paramount, and while legislative intent can be looked at in edge cases and under specific circumstances, we are a nation of actual, documented laws and these laws determine what is and is not illegal, not the whim of any governor, as much as DeSantis and Newsom and 48 others might wish otherwise. |
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That you can't really find anything in the law to object too should be telling that maybe one should set aside the partisan narratives. |
i don't understand critical race theory in that way. I understand it, at a very simplified level, to be that racism is not just an individual phenomenon but an institutionalized (legal and social) phenomenon. I am not agreeing with it in any way. But I would not ban it as a matter of law, any more than I would rename a school because the person owned slaves.
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That was my original point. It’s rage bait for both sides, the actual law is pretty hard to object too because you have to endorse teaching open racism to do so. Governors lie. The media lies. Go to the source and don’t play the rage bait game. Somebody saying something doesn’t make it true. |
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139 pages, give me a minute :D
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