Showing posts with label alt-right. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alt-right. Show all posts

Saturday, January 7, 2023

Chances are, Rufo hasn't read the Classics, and knows nothing about education, or anything else.

DeSantis seeks conservative overhaul at Florida liberal-arts college



(Images and links added by editor)

By Ana Ceballos and Jeffrey Solochek Herald/Times Tallahassee Bureau Updated January 06, 2023 2:46 PM 

Florida Gov. DeSantis has targeted public universities and their curricula on race, racism. Florida Gov. DeSantis has targeted public universities and their curricula on race, racism. Rebecca Blackwell Associated Press 

TALLAHASSEE Gov. Ron DeSantis appointed a group of hard-line conservative loyalists Friday into leadership positions at the New College of Florida, a move that comes as the Republican governor plots a remake of the state’s higher education system. 

Several of the appointees are vocal opponents of gender- and race-related education issues that have fueled the right’s culture wars in schools. They were picked as DeSantis, who is eyeing a potential 2024 White House run, vows to fight “philosophical lunacy” in the schools. 

The new appointees will now help oversee the Sarasota college, which has a reputation for being one of the most progressive higher-education institutions in the state. 

Of the six appointed by DeSantis, the marquee names are Christopher Rufo, a conservative activist who helped turn critical race theory into a conservative rallying cry, and Matthew Spalding, a government professor at Hillsdale College, a conservative Christian college in Michigan. 

Rufo and Spalding have backed DeSantis’ proposals targeting critical race theory, a 1980s academic legal concept holds that racial disparities are systemic in the United States, not just a collection of individual prejudices. 

DeSantis also appointed:

▪ Charles R. Kesler, the editor of the conservative Claremont Institute’s publication, The Claremont Review of Books;

▪ Eddie Speir, the superintendent of Inspiration Academy, a private Christian school in Bradenton that has as its mission to “cultivate, nourish and inspire students, using a mentorship model to develop an integrated life of faith from the inside out, in an environment of family, care and love.”

▪ Mark Bauerlein, a pro-Donald Trump English professor at Emory University, whose latest book, “The Dumbest Generation Grows Up,” casts a critical eye on education for giving up on the classical canon and instead allowing students to choose for themselves what they want to learn. 
 
▪ Debra Jenks, a New College alumna who currently is a securities mediation lawyer in Palm Beach County. 

These individuals were picked, in part, because New College needs a new direction, 

DeSantis spokesperson Taryn Fenske told the Herald/Times in an email. “NCF needs new leadership that sends a clear and attractive signal to students, throughout Florida and nationwide, that this is an institution intending to remain humble in size yet nation-leading in its approach to ‘innovation’ and ‘excellence,’” Fenske said. 

Rufo lives in the Pacific Northwest

Rufo celebrated the appointment by declaring: “We are recapturing higher education.” 

‘Recapturing higher education’ 

As DeSantis kicked off his second term in office on Tuesday, he made clear that he plans to focus on reshaping the state’s higher education. In particular, he said, he wants to make sure his administration eradicates “trendy ideologies” from the classroom. 

“We must ensure that our institutions of higher learning are focused on academic excellence and the pursuit of truth, not the imposition of trendy ideology,” DeSantis said during his inaugural speech at the steps of the historic Florida Capitol in Tallahassee. 

Then, DeSantis’ office made public a memo that it had sent out to state colleges and universities asking the for information about resources they are putting into activities and program related to diversity, equity and inclusion and critical race theory. 

“As the Executive Office of the Governor prepares policy and budget proposals ahead of the 2023 Legislative Session, it is important that we have a full understanding of the operational expenses of state institutions,” Chris Spencer, the director of DeSantis’ Office of Policy and Budget, wrote in a memo Dec. 28. 

The information need to be submitted by Jan. 13. It remains unclear exactly what will be done with the information once it is collected. 

Signs of a major shake-up

As word spread of DeSantis’ appointment to New College on Friday, reaction from academics came swiftly via social media. 

“Terrible news,” tweeted Ohio State University political science associate professor Benjamin McKean. “DeSantis is aiming to destroy New College.” 

Acadia University politics instructor Jeffrey Sachs wrote, “With leadership like this, how could college NOT educate freethinkers?”

Rufo lives in the Pacific Northwest with his wife and three sons, according to his website. He caught the attention of national figures, like DeSantis, during the pandemic after frequently appearing on conservative media outlets to criticize the concept of critical race theory. 

Eventually, the ire against the theory became a rallying cry for conservatives, many of them in Florida. And DeSantis tapped into those ideas to build a reputation as a warrior. He has often declared that Florida is where “woke goes to die.” 

When Rufo tweeted his enthusiasm for the appointment, he drew a barrage of congratulations from conservatives, including Erika Donalds, the wife of U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, who was nominated this week for U.S. House speaker. 

Hillsdale connection

Spalding’s appointment to marks another instance in which Hillsdale College is helping DeSantis reshape the state’s higher education system. 

“I am honored by the appointment and look forward to advancing educational excellence and focusing New College on its distinctive mission as the liberal arts honors college of the State of Florida,” Spalding said in a statement Friday. “A good liberal arts education is truly liberating and opens the minds and forms the character of good students and good citizens.” 

Hillsdale President Larry P. Arnn called DeSantis “one of the most important people living,” during the Hillsdale National Leadership Seminar in Naples last February. And the Times/Herald found that the private Christian college was among several national groups that helped the governor develop a civics education training program for teachers that some educators said was seeped in “Christian fundamentalist” overtones. 

READ MORE: DeSantis’ ‘full armor of God’ rhetoric reaches Republicans. But is he playing with fire? 

DeSantis chief of staff James Uthmeier told the National Review that the administration intends to convert the college, which has under 700 students, to a classical model akin to that of Hillsdale College. 

Twelve years ago, Hillsdale College set out to reshape public education through the growth of charter schools and in recent years has expanded its reach in Florida’s education system. 

And in Florida, Hillsdale’s influence has been seen in the state’s rejection of math textbooks over what DeSantis called “indoctrinating concepts,” the state’s push to renew the importance of civics education in public schools, and the rapid growth of Hillsdale’s network of affiliated public charter schools in Florida. 

Arnn, Hillsdale’s president, was appointed by Trump to chair the president’s Advisory 1776 Commission, which was formed to “advise the president about the core principles of the American founding and to protect those principles by promoting patriotic education,” according to Spalding, who Trump appointed as the commission’s executive director. 

Spalding is also the vice president for Washington operations and the dean of the Van Andel Graduate School of Government at Hillsdale’s Washington, D.C., extension 

Hillsdale’s digital digest, Imprimis, features the writing of conservative thinkers like Christopher Rufo, who has worked with DeSantis to combat issues like critical race theory and gender identity. The publication also includes articles with titles, like “The January 6 Insurrection Hoax,” “The Disaster at Our Southern Border,” “Gender Ideology Run Amok.” “Critical Race Theory: What it is and How to Fight it,” and “Who is in Control? The need to Rein in Big Tech.” 

This story was originally published January 6, 2023 2:30 PM.

Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/state-politics/article270852507.htm

Sunday, February 20, 2022

Anderson, Vice, and Sarasota's mysterious gaggle of alt-right conspiracists

The piece below is from the "watchdog editor" of the Herald Tribune, Josh Salmon.

St. Cassian, murdered by children
It's a handy guide to several of the incisive editorials written by HT columnist Chris Anderson. Anderson looks into the curious Sarasota County concentration of a species of high-profile extremists who believe -- with the indomitable conviction of medieval martyrs -- that former president Donald Trump is the legitimate president of the United States, notwithstanding cumulative evidence so decisive that even the most determined liar on the planet could not make the facts turn Red. 

Let's hope Mr. Anderson keeps looking.

Surely there's a good story behind the mysterious manner in which Sarasota County became the Florida base for alt-right, QAnonical, white supremacist, Proud-Boy-loving, Moms-for-Liberty-leading "influencers." 

So far, despite Vice News's claim to explain How Sarasota Became the Conspiracy Capital of the United States, much remains obscure -- as dark as the Dark Money that has throttled and twisted local elections here for many years (see Cathy Antunes' guide entitled Local Dark Money . . . Citizens United meets Main Street, which not so strangely happens to focus on Sarasota).




Here's Salmon:

This week, I'd like to highlight one Herald-Tribune journalist in particular and his dogged reporting to keep accountability on a powerful and influential group of new Sarasota County residents.

Herald-Tribune watchdog columnist Chris Anderson started with a curious post office box in Ellenton, where he found former Donald Trump national security adviser and Englewood resident Michael Flynn was chairman of a nonprofit called America's Future . The organization became notable when it was revealed it gave Cyber Ninjas Inc. a total of $976,514 for a controversial “audit” of the 2020 presidential election votes in Maricopa County, Arizona.

But his reporting did not stop there. Through a series of investigative opinion columns over several months, Anderson has beaten big national outlets on a huge story in our backyard  one he says could threaten our very democracy.

He shed light on the mysterious money behind Cyber Ninjas CEO Doug Logan, whose Sarasota computer security company was in charge of the ballot “audit” in Arizona. Anderson found that groups tied to Flynn, Sidney Powell and former Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne funded Logan’s Arizona project with nearly $6 million of privately raised money.

He also found Byrne purchased six properties in our area – four homes, a condominium and a medical building owned by a Venice gynecologist – for $10.4 million, overpaying the current market value by $6 million in the process. The columns noted that Byrne had some voter discrepancies of his own, registering to vote in Park City, Utah, listing his place of business as his residence.

Throw in Charlie Kirk, a Longboat Key resident and founder of a popular far-right group that is targeting local school boards around the country, and Anderson writes that Sarasota County has become the Conspiracy Capital of the World. 


A chart of blind PACs from Cathy Antunes' exploration of Local Dark Money:


Friday, April 21, 2017

The Public Realm is a vanishing species

Rodential devouring of public value by those who solely see the point of private gain:

Prioritizing Economics is Crippling the U.S. Economy 

- James Allworth
Up until (roughly) the end of World War 2, almost all policy were organized around a central theme: impact on democracy. The question would be asked: what was this going to mean for our democracy? From both sides of the political spectrum, there was a common commitment to strengthening and preserving democratic ideals.

But, starting around the time of the Great Depression in the 1930s, and taking full effect by roughly the end of the 1940s, that changed.

No longer was the focus on democracy. Economic growth pushed it into the background.

There was broad recognition in Congress that if anyone managed to gain complete radio dominance in a town, city, region or country, then they would have a lock on political discourse in that region. Because the policy debate focused on impact on democracy, Congress recognized this could happen. And it feared it. As a result, spectrum was retained under Government control, and was licensed out to private parties.
Click image to enlarge
 Fast forward to the 1960s, and a very different debate was happening on allocation of spectrum. It had the same technical and economic elements as in the 1920s — which, of course, is no bad thing. But the nature of the change was stark. The focus on the impact of democracy had largely disappeared. It had been crowded out entirely by the economic focus.

But, starting around the time of the Great Depression in the 1930s, and taking full effect by roughly the end of the 1940s, that changed. 
No longer was the focus on democracy. Economic growth pushed it into the background.
There was broad recognition in Congress that if anyone managed to gain complete radio dominance in a town, city, region or country, then they would have a lock on political discourse in that region. Because the policy debate focused on impact on democracy, Congress recognized this could happen. And it feared it. As a result, spectrum was retained under Government control, and was licensed out to private parties. 
Fast forward to the 1960s, and a very different debate was happening on allocation of spectrum. It had the same technical and economic elements as in the 1920s — which, of course, is no bad thing. But the nature of the change was stark. The focus on the impact of democracy had largely disappeared. It had been crowded out entirely by the economic focus.