There was such a lampshade

Florida’s governor, Ron DeSantis, wants a law that prohibits making White people uncomfortable in private businesses and schools when they train employees or teach students about discrimination in the nation’s past, and would allow parents to sue schools and employers if they were to do so.

His desired bill, approved by the Senate Education Committee, takes aim at critical race theory, the latest bogeyman of the conservative right even as it is a non-issue as schools do not teach CRT.

During the discussion of the bill, supporters could not provide any examples of teachers or businesses telling students or employees that they are racist because of their race.

As state Senator Shevrin Jones, pointed out,

“At no point did anyone say white people should be held responsible for what happened, but what I would ask my white counterparts is, are you an enabler of what happened or are you going to say we must talk about history?

“This bill’s not for Blacks, this bill was not for any other race. This was directed to make whites not feel bad about what happened years ago.” 

DeSantis considers critical race theory “crap”.

Critical race theory came about as a result of the lack of progress following the Civil Right legislation of the 1960s and has been dealt with in college and university law schools beginning in the 1970s and 1980s.  

It came about because, in spite of good intentions, it became obvious that racism is systemic in the nation’s institutions and that many laws had been written to favor Whites and effectively lock minorities out of full participation in the American Dream.

Most of us are familiar with how racism did limit the advancement of minorities as a matter of course. It is obvious in some cases that do not need to be pointed out, but also subtly in other examples that were not so obvious.

Lewis Templeton, a former slave, who invented the toggle harpoon that was instrumental in making New Bedford MA the richest city per capita in the U.S, at one point, died in poverty in the shadows of the mansions his invention was instrumental in making possible, and this in a city where the Abolition Movement actually began because of the Quaker belief in equality.

Just after the Civil War, in 1866, Jack Daniel’s became the first registered distillery in the United States with its whiskey subsequently becoming the top selling American whiskey in the world. The friendly “white pastor” who allegedly gave his friend, Jack, the recipe from which his family made its fortune was actually a slave named Dan who got nothing from it.

When the abundance of lumber that could be obtain in Indian Territory, now Oklahoma, was replaced with abundant petroleum, by the careful application of fuzzy laws and the creation of new ones, Whites were given ways to legally swindle Native Americans out of their land and resources so that, instead of being the richest people in the state, they are dependent on the state while those who stole their land and future are praised for their wealth.

Members of the tribes are where they are today because of the racism of the past obvious or not.

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The bill holds that,

“An individual, by virtue of his or her race or sex, does not bear responsibility for actions committed in the past by other members of the same race or sex. An individual should not be made to feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress on account of his or her race.”

The bill’s sponsor, Republican Senator Manny Diaz, defended it explaining,

“No individual is inherently racist, sexist or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously, solely by the virtue of his or her race or sex. No race is inherently superior to another race.”

This may be true, but the majority made rules that favored themselves over others, and in the United States that meant racially based laws like Jim Crow and accepted practices like Redlining.

For his part, like a Christian zealot who cherry picks Bible verses often out of context and without going on to the rest of the passage that renders the verse incorrectly applied, DeSantis thought his invoking the name of Martin Luther King would justify anything.

“You think about what MLK stood for, He said he didn’t want people judged on the color of their skin but on the content of their character. You listen to some of these people nowadays, they don’t talk about that.”

We are not necessarily talking about people doing that now but correcting the lopsided results that came from past decisions that were based on race.

DeSantis does not want to make any course correction because those he relies on for money won’t like it.

Imagine where the descendants of the Slave who gave us Jack Daniels, or Lewis Templeton, or Oklahoma’s Native-Americans could have been had they profited starting from when their ancestors should have been allowed the fruits of their labor and not cheated out of it by legal machinations supported by racist courts.

Maybe the descendants of the racists who created the laws could help undo the damage of their ancestors by taking the appropriate steps after an honest examination to at least ty to set thing straight unless they are quite happy with the results and do not want anything that might weaken that.

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