Can Mr. Allen make a sweeping statement that white people were responsible for enacting these [Jim Crow] laws?
• No, Mr. Allen should avoid making any statements that assign the blame for a act on any
particular race, though exploring the motives of the specific individuals that enacted such laws
would be permitted.
[...] It is important to remember that instructional aides, including news articles, movies, books, and other items may not meet the requirements of HB 7
[...] if the classroom is opened as a forum for discussion amongst students, HB 7 would prohibit the endorsement or silencing of any opinion unless you are endorsing an opinion issued by the Department of Education.
While you are still free to open a classroom for discussion, we recommend opening the discussion with a statement such as "I'm going to open this topic for discussion at this time and would ask that you listen to the opinions of your colleagues respectfully. While such discussions are important to your education, the opinions stated by your fellow students do not reflect those of the College.'
Adam Steinbaugh on Twitter: "How are Florida's public colleges handling the "Stop WOKE Act"? Here's North Florida College's warning to faculty, from slides obtained by @theFIREorg (here: https://t.co/R1iRw9O2Iz): https://t.co/leyATLTc47"
It's okay to 'endorse an opinion' only if it's been officially endorsed by the Department of Education [of Florida I'd guess], but 'silencing of any opinion' is strictly prohibited. Whether overtly racist, Nazi, QAnon... no matter whether it has any grounding in empirical reality or logic or any scholarly merit. Granted, there may be some virtue in allowing any 'opinion' to be voiced and then critiqued for flaws in the reasoning or the 'evidence'... but the people most likely to voice Neo-Nazi / QAnon / etc. beliefs are usually almost impossible to reason with.
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 23 August 2022 - 12:09 PM