• Even More Homophobic Screeching Hysteria From The Trumpublicans

    From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jan 30 02:14:48 2022
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    The New Face of “No Promo Homo” Laws
    Florida may pass a bill that would ban discussions of all sexual
    orientation and gender identity in schools. School school shootings
    greenlit.

    By Christina Cauterucci
    Jan 27, 20221:42 PM


    Last week, a Florida House committee approved a bill that would ban
    discussions about sexual orientation and gender identity in schools.

    The so-called Parental Rights in Education bill—which isn’t yet a law but
    is apparently being fast-tracked to a vote in the House as part of
    Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’ “parents’ rights” agenda—would forbid
    educators from “encouraging classroom discussion about sexual orientation
    or gender identity in primary” school, or at any grade level “in a manner
    that is not age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students.”

    The wording is tactically vague, but the intent is clear.

    Part of a class of legislation colloquially known as “don’t say gay”
    bills, which have been introduced in several state legislatures in recent years, the Florida bill, if passed, could easily be construed as a
    directive to educators to erase all mention of marginalized people’s lives
    from the classroom.
    Advertisement

    Its implication—that the mere existence of LGBTQ people is an
    inappropriate topic for children—draws on a long history of homophobic legislation that portrays queer identities as hypersexualized and
    perverted. But by prohibiting discussion of any sexual orientation or
    gender identity, including presumably, the straight and cisgender ones,
    the legislation could evade being struck down by anti-discrimination laws. Subscribe to the Slatest Newsletter

    A daily email update of the stories you need to read right now.
    Email address:
    Send me updates about Slate special offers.
    By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms.

    There is absurdity in this approach. None of the censorious conservatives behind these bills are going to bring a lawsuit against a school district
    whose social studies curriculum teaches, for example, that George
    Washington was straight-married to Martha. (Some of the “Don’t Say Gay”
    laws make exceptions that would seem to permit some discussion of sexual orientation—provisions that allow for teaching about LGBTQ historical
    figures, for instance, or the Florida bill’s cutout for “age-appropriate
    or developmentally appropriate” material.)

    But it is not necessarily the point of these laws to be read and followed precisely as written. Instead, the lawmakers who advance them intend to
    create a chilling effect, such that teachers and school administrators are
    too afraid to teach LGBTQ history, discuss relevant current events, or
    offer support to queer and trans students, lest they run afoul of a
    vaguely written law.

    “Does it mean that school districts could no longer host Women’s History
    Month conversations in classrooms because being a woman is a gender
    identity?” said Brandon Wolf, the press secretary of Equality Florida, discussing the sinister vagueness of the law. “If school districts allow teachers to put pictures of their partners on their desks—is that
    encouraging students to ask questions about sexual orientation based on
    the gender identity of their partner?”

    In the 1980s and ’90s, many state legislatures passed similar laws that constrained discussion of LGBTQ life in schools much more explicitly. Four states—Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Oklahoma—still have them on the books. (In Texas, certain educational materials must “state that
    homosexual conduct is not an acceptable lifestyle and is a criminal
    offense,” even though gay sex has been legal since the Supreme Court’s
    2003 ruling in Lawrence v. Texas.)
    Advertisement

    But in the past few years, several states have struck down these older
    laws, known colloquially as “no promo homo” laws, a move that came after
    LGBTQ advocacy groups challenged them with lawsuits. Presumably, lawmakers
    knew the older restrictions would not hold up in court.

    Their instincts were well-founded: In 2020, a federal judge overturned a
    South Carolina law that made it illegal for public school educators to
    discuss “alternate sexual lifestyles from heterosexual relationships” in contexts other than sexually transmitted infections. The ruling stated
    that the law discriminated on the basis of sexual orientation and thus
    violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.

    The newer “don’t say gay” bills appear to be an attempt to avoid such
    charges of discrimination. They replace explicit references to homo- and heterosexuality—which would indicate disparate treatment—with the catch-
    all terms sexual orientation and gender identity.

    In 2021, Tennessee and Montana both passed laws in this vein that allow
    parents to opt students out of classroom discussions of sexual orientation
    and gender identity. The Arizona state Legislature passed a bill last year
    that would have required parents to give students explicit permission to
    be present for classroom conversations about those topics—a more severe
    opt-in policy. (Republican Gov. Doug Ducey vetoed the bill in favor of an executive order requiring that all sex education materials be posted
    online for parents to view.)

    Florida’s bill goes further, by encouraging everyday civilians to enforce
    it. If passed, parents would be allowed to directly sue a school
    district—and possibly receive damages in addition to attorney’s fees—if
    they suspect an educator has violated the law.

    This “private right of action” has been a recurring theme in the DeSantis agenda. Last June, he signed into law a bill that allows any student who
    has been “deprived of an athletic opportunity” by a trans kid to sue the school. And DeSantis’ proposed “Stop WOKE Act,” an initiative to ban the teaching of critical race theory in schools and businesses, would have
    allowed parents and students to bring lawsuits against school districts
    that contravened the law.
    Advertisement

    Republicans in the state Senate are currently advancing another version of
    that proposal, which would prohibit teachings that suggest students and employees should “feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress on account of his or her race, color, sex, or
    national origin.” (DeSantis has expressed frustration with it, because it doesn’t allow individuals to sue the schools directly.)

    Even though it hasn’t yet passed, that bill has already had a chilling
    effect. This week, a Florida school district canceled a history
    professor’s planned seminar for teachers on the civil rights movement. In
    an email to educators who’d planned to attend, the superintendent said the school district wanted a committee to review the professor’s presentation,
    “in light of the current conversations across our state and in our
    community about critical race theory.”

    This kind of smothering environment is the desired outcome of Florida’s
    “don’t say gay” bill.

    If parents are empowered to take legal action against any already-cash- strapped school that acknowledges the existence of LGBTQ people, schools
    will simply stop acknowledging that LGBTQ people exist. As Wolf put it: “Teachers would be fearful of legal repercussions, and therefore resistant
    or reluctant to create an affirming or inclusive classroom environment.”

    And by outsourcing enforcement to vigilante parents rather than leaving it
    to the state—just as Texas legislators did with their abortion ban, in a
    tactic blessed by the Supreme Court—Florida lawmakers have ensured that no
    one can challenge the law in federal court before it’s enforced.

    If the Florida bill passes, Wolf believes educators will be deterred from bringing up any topic that touches on LGBTQ lives, even the most important events in their own communities. He lives near Pulse, the gay nightclub in Orlando where a gunman killed 49 victims in 2016—a massacre Wolf escaped
    and survived. In a state that prohibits classroom discussions about sexual orientation, Wolf wonders, “can we even talk about the things that we have
    to talk about, the things that we must be talking about, in order to make
    our society better and keep people safe?”
    Advertisement

    The legislator who introduced the Florida bill, Republican Joe Harding,
    said in a committee hearing that the bill would not outlaw discussions
    about events in LGBTQ history such as the Pulse massacre. But in
    jurisdictions that have passed bans on the teaching of critical race
    theory, emboldened parents have pushed for the elimination of much more, including all literature that so much as mentions race or states the facts
    of Black history. In Tennessee, a group of right-wing parents have fought
    to ban straightforward children’s books about Ruby Bridges, the 6-year-old
    who became the first child to integrate an all-white school in Louisiana,
    and the Black opera singer Marian Anderson.
    Popular in News & Politics



    No matter how narrowly these bills are written, motivated parties will use
    them to justify the suppression of educational materials that concern the
    lives of communities that have faced discrimination. Laws that censor
    speech about race, gender, and sexuality are not designed to be employed gently, with nuance, on a strictly limited range of topics. They are
    bludgeons, intended to wipe out the entire range of subjects—and
    people—that offend the sensibilities of those in power

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jan 30 03:34:16 2022
    XPost: alt.survival, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, rec.arts.tv
    XPost: can.politics, alt.atheism, alt.rush-limbaugh
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    The New Face of “No Promo Homo” Laws
    Florida may pass a bill that would ban discussions of all sexual
    orientation and gender identity in schools. School school shootings
    greenlit.

    By Christina Cauterucci
    Jan 27, 20221:42 PM


    Last week, a Florida House committee approved a bill that would ban
    discussions about sexual orientation and gender identity in schools.

    The so-called Parental Rights in Education bill—which isn’t yet a law but
    is apparently being fast-tracked to a vote in the House as part of
    Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’ “parents’ rights” agenda—would forbid
    educators from “encouraging classroom discussion about sexual orientation
    or gender identity in primary” school, or at any grade level “in a manner
    that is not age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students.”

    The wording is tactically vague, but the intent is clear.

    Part of a class of legislation colloquially known as “don’t say gay”
    bills, which have been introduced in several state legislatures in recent years, the Florida bill, if passed, could easily be construed as a
    directive to educators to erase all mention of marginalized people’s lives
    from the classroom.
    Advertisement

    Its implication—that the mere existence of LGBTQ people is an
    inappropriate topic for children—draws on a long history of homophobic legislation that portrays queer identities as hypersexualized and
    perverted. But by prohibiting discussion of any sexual orientation or
    gender identity, including presumably, the straight and cisgender ones,
    the legislation could evade being struck down by anti-discrimination laws. Subscribe to the Slatest Newsletter

    A daily email update of the stories you need to read right now.
    Email address:
    Send me updates about Slate special offers.
    By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms.

    There is absurdity in this approach. None of the censorious conservatives behind these bills are going to bring a lawsuit against a school district
    whose social studies curriculum teaches, for example, that George
    Washington was straight-married to Martha. (Some of the “Don’t Say Gay”
    laws make exceptions that would seem to permit some discussion of sexual orientation—provisions that allow for teaching about LGBTQ historical
    figures, for instance, or the Florida bill’s cutout for “age-appropriate
    or developmentally appropriate” material.)

    But it is not necessarily the point of these laws to be read and followed precisely as written. Instead, the lawmakers who advance them intend to
    create a chilling effect, such that teachers and school administrators are
    too afraid to teach LGBTQ history, discuss relevant current events, or
    offer support to queer and trans students, lest they run afoul of a
    vaguely written law.

    “Does it mean that school districts could no longer host Women’s History
    Month conversations in classrooms because being a woman is a gender
    identity?” said Brandon Wolf, the press secretary of Equality Florida, discussing the sinister vagueness of the law. “If school districts allow teachers to put pictures of their partners on their desks—is that
    encouraging students to ask questions about sexual orientation based on
    the gender identity of their partner?”

    In the 1980s and ’90s, many state legislatures passed similar laws that constrained discussion of LGBTQ life in schools much more explicitly. Four states—Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Oklahoma—still have them on the books. (In Texas, certain educational materials must “state that
    homosexual conduct is not an acceptable lifestyle and is a criminal
    offense,” even though gay sex has been legal since the Supreme Court’s
    2003 ruling in Lawrence v. Texas.)
    Advertisement

    But in the past few years, several states have struck down these older
    laws, known colloquially as “no promo homo” laws, a move that came after
    LGBTQ advocacy groups challenged them with lawsuits. Presumably, lawmakers
    knew the older restrictions would not hold up in court.

    Their instincts were well-founded: In 2020, a federal judge overturned a
    South Carolina law that made it illegal for public school educators to
    discuss “alternate sexual lifestyles from heterosexual relationships” in contexts other than sexually transmitted infections. The ruling stated
    that the law discriminated on the basis of sexual orientation and thus
    violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.

    The newer “don’t say gay” bills appear to be an attempt to avoid such
    charges of discrimination. They replace explicit references to homo- and heterosexuality—which would indicate disparate treatment—with the catch-
    all terms sexual orientation and gender identity.

    In 2021, Tennessee and Montana both passed laws in this vein that allow
    parents to opt students out of classroom discussions of sexual orientation
    and gender identity. The Arizona state Legislature passed a bill last year
    that would have required parents to give students explicit permission to
    be present for classroom conversations about those topics—a more severe
    opt-in policy. (Republican Gov. Doug Ducey vetoed the bill in favor of an executive order requiring that all sex education materials be posted
    online for parents to view.)

    Florida’s bill goes further, by encouraging everyday civilians to enforce
    it. If passed, parents would be allowed to directly sue a school
    district—and possibly receive damages in addition to attorney’s fees—if
    they suspect an educator has violated the law.

    This “private right of action” has been a recurring theme in the DeSantis agenda. Last June, he signed into law a bill that allows any student who
    has been “deprived of an athletic opportunity” by a trans kid to sue the school. And DeSantis’ proposed “Stop WOKE Act,” an initiative to ban the teaching of critical race theory in schools and businesses, would have
    allowed parents and students to bring lawsuits against school districts
    that contravened the law.
    Advertisement

    Republicans in the state Senate are currently advancing another version of
    that proposal, which would prohibit teachings that suggest students and employees should “feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress on account of his or her race, color, sex, or
    national origin.” (DeSantis has expressed frustration with it, because it doesn’t allow individuals to sue the schools directly.)

    Even though it hasn’t yet passed, that bill has already had a chilling
    effect. This week, a Florida school district canceled a history
    professor’s planned seminar for teachers on the civil rights movement. In
    an email to educators who’d planned to attend, the superintendent said the school district wanted a committee to review the professor’s presentation,
    “in light of the current conversations across our state and in our
    community about critical race theory.”

    This kind of smothering environment is the desired outcome of Florida’s
    “don’t say gay” bill.

    If parents are empowered to take legal action against any already-cash- strapped school that acknowledges the existence of LGBTQ people, schools
    will simply stop acknowledging that LGBTQ people exist. As Wolf put it: “Teachers would be fearful of legal repercussions, and therefore resistant
    or reluctant to create an affirming or inclusive classroom environment.”

    And by outsourcing enforcement to vigilante parents rather than leaving it
    to the state—just as Texas legislators did with their abortion ban, in a
    tactic blessed by the Supreme Court—Florida lawmakers have ensured that no
    one can challenge the law in federal court before it’s enforced.

    If the Florida bill passes, Wolf believes educators will be deterred from bringing up any topic that touches on LGBTQ lives, even the most important events in their own communities. He lives near Pulse, the gay nightclub in Orlando where a gunman killed 49 victims in 2016—a massacre Wolf escaped
    and survived. In a state that prohibits classroom discussions about sexual orientation, Wolf wonders, “can we even talk about the things that we have
    to talk about, the things that we must be talking about, in order to make
    our society better and keep people safe?”
    Advertisement

    The legislator who introduced the Florida bill, Republican Joe Harding,
    said in a committee hearing that the bill would not outlaw discussions
    about events in LGBTQ history such as the Pulse massacre. But in
    jurisdictions that have passed bans on the teaching of critical race
    theory, emboldened parents have pushed for the elimination of much more, including all literature that so much as mentions race or states the facts
    of Black history. In Tennessee, a group of right-wing parents have fought
    to ban straightforward children’s books about Ruby Bridges, the 6-year-old
    who became the first child to integrate an all-white school in Louisiana,
    and the Black opera singer Marian Anderson.
    Popular in News & Politics



    No matter how narrowly these bills are written, motivated parties will use
    them to justify the suppression of educational materials that concern the
    lives of communities that have faced discrimination. Laws that censor
    speech about race, gender, and sexuality are not designed to be employed gently, with nuance, on a strictly limited range of topics. They are
    bludgeons, intended to wipe out the entire range of subjects—and
    people—that offend the sensibilities of those in power

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 31 23:30:17 2022
    XPost: alt.survival, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, rec.arts.tv
    XPost: can.politics, alt.atheism, alt.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.abortion, alt.global-warming
    XPost: alt.journalism.criticism, alt.news-media, alt.checkmate
    XPost: alt.politics

    The New Face of “No Promo Homo” Laws
    Florida may pass a bill that would ban discussions of all sexual
    orientation and gender identity in schools. School school shootings
    greenlit.

    By Christina Cauterucci
    Jan 27, 20221:42 PM


    Last week, a Florida House committee approved a bill that would ban
    discussions about sexual orientation and gender identity in schools.

    The so-called Parental Rights in Education bill—which isn’t yet a law but
    is apparently being fast-tracked to a vote in the House as part of
    Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’ “parents’ rights” agenda—would forbid
    educators from “encouraging classroom discussion about sexual orientation
    or gender identity in primary” school, or at any grade level “in a manner
    that is not age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students.”

    The wording is tactically vague, but the intent is clear.

    Part of a class of legislation colloquially known as “don’t say gay”
    bills, which have been introduced in several state legislatures in recent years, the Florida bill, if passed, could easily be construed as a
    directive to educators to erase all mention of marginalized people’s lives
    from the classroom.
    Advertisement

    Its implication—that the mere existence of LGBTQ people is an
    inappropriate topic for children—draws on a long history of homophobic legislation that portrays queer identities as hypersexualized and
    perverted. But by prohibiting discussion of any sexual orientation or
    gender identity, including presumably, the straight and cisgender ones,
    the legislation could evade being struck down by anti-discrimination laws. Subscribe to the Slatest Newsletter

    A daily email update of the stories you need to read right now.
    Email address:
    Send me updates about Slate special offers.
    By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms.

    There is absurdity in this approach. None of the censorious conservatives behind these bills are going to bring a lawsuit against a school district
    whose social studies curriculum teaches, for example, that George
    Washington was straight-married to Martha. (Some of the “Don’t Say Gay”
    laws make exceptions that would seem to permit some discussion of sexual orientation—provisions that allow for teaching about LGBTQ historical
    figures, for instance, or the Florida bill’s cutout for “age-appropriate
    or developmentally appropriate” material.)

    But it is not necessarily the point of these laws to be read and followed precisely as written. Instead, the lawmakers who advance them intend to
    create a chilling effect, such that teachers and school administrators are
    too afraid to teach LGBTQ history, discuss relevant current events, or
    offer support to queer and trans students, lest they run afoul of a
    vaguely written law.

    “Does it mean that school districts could no longer host Women’s History
    Month conversations in classrooms because being a woman is a gender
    identity?” said Brandon Wolf, the press secretary of Equality Florida, discussing the sinister vagueness of the law. “If school districts allow teachers to put pictures of their partners on their desks—is that
    encouraging students to ask questions about sexual orientation based on
    the gender identity of their partner?”

    In the 1980s and ’90s, many state legislatures passed similar laws that constrained discussion of LGBTQ life in schools much more explicitly. Four states—Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Oklahoma—still have them on the books. (In Texas, certain educational materials must “state that
    homosexual conduct is not an acceptable lifestyle and is a criminal
    offense,” even though gay sex has been legal since the Supreme Court’s
    2003 ruling in Lawrence v. Texas.)
    Advertisement

    But in the past few years, several states have struck down these older
    laws, known colloquially as “no promo homo” laws, a move that came after
    LGBTQ advocacy groups challenged them with lawsuits. Presumably, lawmakers
    knew the older restrictions would not hold up in court.

    Their instincts were well-founded: In 2020, a federal judge overturned a
    South Carolina law that made it illegal for public school educators to
    discuss “alternate sexual lifestyles from heterosexual relationships” in contexts other than sexually transmitted infections. The ruling stated
    that the law discriminated on the basis of sexual orientation and thus
    violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.

    The newer “don’t say gay” bills appear to be an attempt to avoid such
    charges of discrimination. They replace explicit references to homo- and heterosexuality—which would indicate disparate treatment—with the catch-
    all terms sexual orientation and gender identity.

    In 2021, Tennessee and Montana both passed laws in this vein that allow
    parents to opt students out of classroom discussions of sexual orientation
    and gender identity. The Arizona state Legislature passed a bill last year
    that would have required parents to give students explicit permission to
    be present for classroom conversations about those topics—a more severe
    opt-in policy. (Republican Gov. Doug Ducey vetoed the bill in favor of an executive order requiring that all sex education materials be posted
    online for parents to view.)

    Florida’s bill goes further, by encouraging everyday civilians to enforce
    it. If passed, parents would be allowed to directly sue a school
    district—and possibly receive damages in addition to attorney’s fees—if
    they suspect an educator has violated the law.

    This “private right of action” has been a recurring theme in the DeSantis agenda. Last June, he signed into law a bill that allows any student who
    has been “deprived of an athletic opportunity” by a trans kid to sue the school. And DeSantis’ proposed “Stop WOKE Act,” an initiative to ban the teaching of critical race theory in schools and businesses, would have
    allowed parents and students to bring lawsuits against school districts
    that contravened the law.
    Advertisement

    Republicans in the state Senate are currently advancing another version of
    that proposal, which would prohibit teachings that suggest students and employees should “feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress on account of his or her race, color, sex, or
    national origin.” (DeSantis has expressed frustration with it, because it doesn’t allow individuals to sue the schools directly.)

    Even though it hasn’t yet passed, that bill has already had a chilling
    effect. This week, a Florida school district canceled a history
    professor’s planned seminar for teachers on the civil rights movement. In
    an email to educators who’d planned to attend, the superintendent said the school district wanted a committee to review the professor’s presentation,
    “in light of the current conversations across our state and in our
    community about critical race theory.”

    This kind of smothering environment is the desired outcome of Florida’s
    “don’t say gay” bill.

    If parents are empowered to take legal action against any already-cash- strapped school that acknowledges the existence of LGBTQ people, schools
    will simply stop acknowledging that LGBTQ people exist. As Wolf put it: “Teachers would be fearful of legal repercussions, and therefore resistant
    or reluctant to create an affirming or inclusive classroom environment.”

    And by outsourcing enforcement to vigilante parents rather than leaving it
    to the state—just as Texas legislators did with their abortion ban, in a
    tactic blessed by the Supreme Court—Florida lawmakers have ensured that no
    one can challenge the law in federal court before it’s enforced.

    If the Florida bill passes, Wolf believes educators will be deterred from bringing up any topic that touches on LGBTQ lives, even the most important events in their own communities. He lives near Pulse, the gay nightclub in Orlando where a gunman killed 49 victims in 2016—a massacre Wolf escaped
    and survived. In a state that prohibits classroom discussions about sexual orientation, Wolf wonders, “can we even talk about the things that we have
    to talk about, the things that we must be talking about, in order to make
    our society better and keep people safe?”
    Advertisement

    The legislator who introduced the Florida bill, Republican Joe Harding,
    said in a committee hearing that the bill would not outlaw discussions
    about events in LGBTQ history such as the Pulse massacre. But in
    jurisdictions that have passed bans on the teaching of critical race
    theory, emboldened parents have pushed for the elimination of much more, including all literature that so much as mentions race or states the facts
    of Black history. In Tennessee, a group of right-wing parents have fought
    to ban straightforward children’s books about Ruby Bridges, the 6-year-old
    who became the first child to integrate an all-white school in Louisiana,
    and the Black opera singer Marian Anderson.
    Popular in News & Politics



    No matter how narrowly these bills are written, motivated parties will use
    them to justify the suppression of educational materials that concern the
    lives of communities that have faced discrimination. Laws that censor
    speech about race, gender, and sexuality are not designed to be employed gently, with nuance, on a strictly limited range of topics. They are
    bludgeons, intended to wipe out the entire range of subjects—and
    people—that offend the sensibilities of those in power

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)