Ariz. Trying to Ban Social-Justice Courses in State Schools. Guess Who This Targets?

Let’s start this off by reminding folks that Arizona was one of the last states in the nation to recognize the Martin Luther King Jr. national holiday (and lest we forget, Republican Sen. John McCain voted against its recognition, too). Suggested Reading Spades? What Diddy Will Be Doing In Prison This Fourth Of July A…

Let’s start this off by reminding folks that Arizona was one of the last states in the nation to recognize the Martin Luther King Jr. national holiday (and lest we forget, Republican Sen. John McCain voted against its recognition, too).

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

Living up to that lovely legacy, Republican lawmakers in the state are now advocating legislation to prohibit school courses and events that promote β€œethnic studies and social justice”—obviously targeting black and brown citizens of the Copper State.

The Guardian reports that the newly introduced bill, H.B. 2120, which builds on an existing GOP-backed law that banned a Mexican-American-studies class, would prohibit β€œcourses, classes, events and activities” in public schools that promote β€œsocial justice toward a race, gender, religion, political affiliation, social class or other class of people.”

According to the Arizona Daily Star, Republican state Rep. Bob Thorpe of Flagstaff, who introduced the bill, said that the 2010 law that targeted β€œethnic studies” courses at some public schools, including those in the Tucson Unified School District, does not go far enough with its prohibition against teaching anything that promotes resentment toward another race.

Thorpe reportedly wants to ban not just classes but also any events or activities that β€œnegatively target specific nationalities or countries,” and would extend the new restrictions to community colleges and universities.

The new bill also gives the state attorney general the power to withhold up to 10 percent of state aid if he or she determines that a college or university is in violation.

This move is the latest shot in the recently revived culture wars, in which campus conservative groups and state legislators have railed against professors, groups and courses that challenge conservative views on race, gender and sexuality. State legislatures seem to be the latest battlegrounds.

β€œBy attempting to legislate against certain types of activities that focus on people of color, women or social justice issues,” said Rashad Shabazz, head faculty in the program of justice and social inquiry at Arizona State University, β€œit really undermines the ability of the university to function as a space of intellectual engagement and debate.”

The Guardian reports that in Wisconsin, a Republican senator recently attacked an undergraduate program focused on β€œunpacking masculinity,” which the lawmaker called a β€œwar on men.” Lawmakers there have also threatened to cut funding over a race-relations course called β€œThe Problem of Whiteness” and a reading assignment about gay men’s sexual preferences that a legislator said was β€œoffensive.”

The University of California, Berkeley, last year canceled a course examining Palestine β€œthrough the lens of settler colonialism” following an outcry from pro-Israel groups, but later reinstated the class.

Arizona’s 2010 law banning a specific Mexican-American-studies program in Tucson continues to be the subject of lengthy litigation.

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