Oklahoma on Tuesday became the second state, after Florida, to approve the use of materials from the right-wing propaganda outfit PragerU in the state’s public schools.
The organization, which isn’t an actual university despite what its name suggests, came under fire in August after one of its videos went viral for all the wrong reasons. The video used a cartoon version of abolitionist Frederick Douglass to downplay the devastation caused by slavery — and the United States’ role in perpetuating it.
The civil rights watchdog Southern Poverty Law Center has in-depth reporting on PragerU’s influence, finding that it has promoted videos with hosts who denounce immigration, dispute the existence of systemic racism, and deny ties between violent right-wing extremists and the conservative movement. The SPLC also found that some of PragerU’s presenters have connections with white nationalists.
PragerU co-founder Dennis Prager is a former conservative radio host who has openly admitted that his organization tries to indoctrinate children with conservative ideology.
But Oklahoma’s superintendent of public instruction, Ryan Walters, said he’s “excited” about partnering with PragerU. “These additional resources will help ensure quality instruction in American history and values, and will enrich educational opportunities for our students,” he tweeted Tuesday.
I'm excited to announce this initiative with PragerU Kids today. These additional resources will help ensure quality instruction in American history and values, and will enrich educational opportunities for our students pic.twitter.com/aSrI3CqOpz
— Ryan Walters (@RyanWalters_) September 5, 2023
Walters has developed a reputation for right-wing positions. In a viral video earlier this year, he was seen arguing with an event attendee after Walters suggested that the Tulsa Race Massacre — one of the worst incidents of racist violence in U.S. history — wasn’t about race. (He later tried to walk back those remarks.)
More recently, he’s been accused of stoking bomb threats against an Oklahoma librarian whom he and a popular right-wing conspiracy theorist accused of pushing “woke ideology” in schools.
The librarian’s so-called misconduct, according to Walters, was a caption she posted on one of her TikTok videos: “My radical liberal agenda is teaching kids to love books and be kind — hbu??”








