A bipartisan pair of Florida state representatives is moving to strike down controversial school standards that requires teachers to instruct students that slavery had personal benefits for enslaved people.
Florida Democratic state Rep. Christopher Benjamin and Republican Rep. Mike Beltran co-sponsored a bill introduced this week that would remove those standards, which have earned bipartisan rebuke since Gov. Ron DeSantis approved them last year. Specifically, the standards required schools to teach that enslaved people “developed skills” that “in some instances could be applied for their personal benefit.”
Check out this ReidOut Blog post on why it’s delusional and ahistorical to suggest that enslaved people extracted “personal benefits” from the horrifying experience of chattel slavery.
But I wasn’t alone in my criticism. The standards were denounced by Democrats and Republicans alike, including Vice President Kamala Harris, the Biden 2024 campaign and Republicans such as Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida and Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina.
It was a bad look for DeSantis, who presumably thought this policy would boost his right-wing bona fides in the eyes of primary voters. It’s just of a piece with his party’s crusade against accurate teaching of the United States’ history of bigotry — a crusade he’s frequently touted on the campaign trail.








