When Florida launched the names Monday of the 54 math textbooks it had rejected, most for allegedly together with “important race principle” or different “prohibited subjects,” I used to be struck by how the publishers had adjusted their titles to replicate the state’s singular interpretation of the subject material.
Florida
Opinion | DeSantis saves Florida kids from being indoctrinated with math
On one degree, we already understood that “Florida math” just isn’t the identical factor as “math”:
Downside 1: In an election, the Republican candidate will get 232 electoral votes and the Democratic candidate will get 306. Who received?
Observe Dana Milbank‘s opinions
ObserveDownside 2: Florida had 153 coronavirus deaths per 100,000 individuals over the previous yr whereas California had solely 58 per 100,000. How a lot greater is Florida’s dying price?
Reply: I’m going to do my very own analysis.
It’s straightforward to snigger at Florida’s declare that it rejected 28 math textbooks over “publishers’ makes an attempt to indoctrinate college students” with such “particular subjects” as CRT, “culturally responsive educating,” “social justice” and “social emotional studying.”
However then I opened the 2020 version of one of many banned textbooks, Cengage’s “Precalculus With Limits” — and was horrified by the “indoctrinating ideas” I noticed. If that is Precalculus With Limits, I’d hate to see the type with out limits.
At a time when Floridians by legislation “don’t say homosexual,” a lot much less “trans,” this banned guide openly teaches concerning the “Transitive Property of Equality.” Not solely are impressionable minds taught concerning the “transformation of capabilities,” but in addition they’re even indoctrinated in “describing transformations” and — appallingly — “sketching transformations.”
At a time when DeSantis is making an attempt to revive the standard definition of marriage as between a person and a lady, “Precalculus With Limits” has infinite references to “sin” and “polynomials” — even “multiplying polynomials.” On Web page 318, for instance, it tells youngsters to consider that “sin x takes on its full vary of values.” Valuing sin! On Web page 734, extremely, it orders youngsters to “sketch the graph of the degenerate conic.” Disgusting.
At a time when Florida is banning the acknowledgment of gender fluidity or any identification exterior female and male, this subversive textbook unabashedly tells suggestible youngsters that such issues exist as “reciprocal identities,” “cofunction identities,” “additive identification property” and even “multiplicative identification property.”
Proper now, all Floridians needs to be preventing the unconventional socialists, however “Precalculus With Limits” is inviting youngsters to search out the “easiest type of a radical equation,” and even to take a wonderfully regular equation and “rewrite with a radical.” Which radical? Saul Alinsky?
I’m not being hyperbolic. And even parabolic.
This horrible tome is full of mentions of “regression” and different types of deviancy (“outline conics when it comes to eccentricity,” it instructions); it tries to advertise forbidden teachings about sexuality in requiring younger individuals to determine “the product of conjugate pairs.”
A few of its indoctrinating ideas are merely gross (“Gaussian elimination”), whereas others are downright disgusting. “The focal chord perpendicular to the axis of the parabola known as the latus rectum,” it says on Web page 702. It goes on to inform Florida’s youngsters to “discover the size of the latus rectum.” I don’t even wish to know the way that’s finished.
As radical as it’s filthy, “Precalculus With Limits” tries to undermine parental authority. On Web page 74, it teaches youngsters how one can “write an equation for the transformation of the dad or mum operate,” even offering “plotting factors” for “translating a dad or mum operate.” Had this guide hit the school rooms, youngsters would have been graphing mother and father out of existence with a “double stem-and-leaf plot.”
The textbook sneaks important race principle into the curriculum in insidious methods. It teaches youngsters about “classifying by discriminant,” and its creator seems to be obsessive about the far-left idea of addressing inequality: “fixing linear inequalities” (p. 40), “how one can resolve a polynomial inequality” (p. 184), “fixing a system of inequalities” (p. 512). The guide blatantly and repeatedly instructions college students to “resolve the inequality” regardless that they didn’t trigger it and usually are not liable for it.
Don’t suppose that is about shade? Nicely clarify this, on Web page 512: “Utilizing a unique coloured pencil to shade the answer of every inequality in a system will make figuring out the answer of the system of inequalities simpler.”
Because of DeSantis, Florida’s youngsters won’t ever should find out about such “indoctrinating ideas.” In actual fact, they received’t should be taught a lot of something in any respect.
Florida
Who is Florida Lt. Gov Jeanette Nuñez? DeSantis might be Trump’s next pick for Pentagon
Lt. Gov Jeanette Nuñez could be 1st woman, 1st Cuban-American to be Florida governor
Trump mulls replacing Hegseth with DeSantis to run Pentagon
President-elect Donald Trump is considering dropping Pete Hegseth as his pick to lead the Pentagon, choosing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in his place.
Florida government is seeing an abrupt shakeup, with President-elect Donald Trump nominating Reps. Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz and Sen. Marco Rubio to cabinet posts and endorsing state Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis to take over Rubio’s seat.
That leaves holes in three important positions, even though Gaetz withdrew his nomination. Before that, Gaetz resigned his seat ahead of a looming House Ethics report on allegations of sexual misconduct and drug use, which the former congressman has denied.
Gov. Ron DeSantis has called for special elections to fill the two U.S. Representative seats and must name replacements for Rubio and Patronis.
Now insiders are saying Trump might name DeSantis to lead the Pentagon, replacing his current nominee, Fox News host Pete Hegseth, who is facing his own allegations of wrongdoing in his personal and professional life.
That would put Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez in charge of the Sunshine State, making her both Florida’s first woman governor and first Cuban-American governor.
Here’s what to know:
Who is Florida Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez?
Miami native Jeanette Marie Nuñez, 52, one of three daughters of Victor C. and Teresita Sánchez, went straight into politics after getting her undergraduate degree in political science and international relations from Florida International University, working as an aide to then-state Sen. Alex Diaz de la Portilla.
She went on to be vice president of government affairs at Jackson Health System, start her own company (OnPoint Strategies) and work for FIU as an adjunct professor and advisor, where she also completed her Master of Public Administration degree.
In 2010, Nuñez ran for the Florida House of Representatives to replace then-incumbent David Rivera. She ran on job creation, the economy and Medicaid reform and won, and was re-elected in 2012, 2014 and 2016.
During the last two years of her time in the state House, Nuñez served as speaker pro tempore under former House Speaker Richard Corcoran, who later became state Education Commissioner and president of the New College of Florida, the liberal arts college known for diversity and inclusiveness that the governor is remaking into a conservative institution.
During her time in the House, she advocated for a bill to let qualified Florida students pay in-state college tuition rates even if they were in the country illegally.
“Don’t hold these children responsible for something they had no control over,” she said at the time. She walked it back in 2023 as DeSantis’ second-in-command, saying the state could no longer support the number of undocumented Floridians going to college.
Nuñez also kicked off the legislation to make daylight saving time permanent in Florida, filing a bill with then-Rep. Heather Fitzenhagen, R-Fort Myers, in 2018.
She referred to it again last week when Elon Musk was publicly musing on ending “annoying time changes” in his new role as co-leader with entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy in Trump’s newly proposed advisory committee on government efficiency.
“In 2018, I made it happen in Florida,” she posted on X. “It’s time for the federal government to step up.”
When did Jeanette Nuñez become lieutenant governor of Florida?
DeSantis chose Nuñez as his running mate for what was then a longshot bid for governor in 2018, boosted by a Trump endorsement and winning a narrow victory over Democratic candidate and Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum.
She quickly became a voice for Medicaid reform and controlling health care costs and helped DeSantis promote his hard-right policies in the state on topics such as immigration, removing DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) education in colleges and universities and the state’s rejection of math textbooks over supposed “critical race theory” indoctrination.
Nuñez is the highest-ranking Hispanic woman to be elected in Florida history, and the third woman to be lieutenant governor after Toni Jennings and Jennifer Carroll.
It’s “a huge source of pride for me, for my family, but most importantly for my community,” Nuñez told NBC News.
Did Florida Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez call Trump a con man?
“Wake up Florida voters, Trump is the biggest con-man there is,” Nuñez wrote in a Twitter (now X) post in 2016 during the presidential primary, when she backed U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio’s bid against Trump. “#nosubstance #anti-Israel #supportsKKK #neverTrump VOTE @marcorubio #RUBIO”
The South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported that she deleted the tweet soon after she was named DeSantis’ running mate.
Is Florida Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez married?
Nuñez is married to Adrian Nuñez, and the couple have three children.
Ana Goñi-Lessan of the Tallahassee Democrat contributed to this story.
Florida
Chilly stretch in Central Florida coming to an end? Here’s when we warm up
ORLANDO, Fla. – After another chilly and frosty start Wednesday morning across Central Florida, temperatures will begin the gradual warming trend as high pressure continues to slide across the Southeast.
Highs are expected to remain well below average Wednesday, in the mid to upper 60s.
Later in the evening and early Thursday morning, temperatures will warm up more noticeably, with most areas seeing lows in the mid to upper 40s. However, northern Lake and inland Volusia counties could still dip into the low 40s.
Late Week
Looking ahead to Thursday and Friday, high pressure will shift further into the Atlantic, making room for another cold front to reach the Deep South. By Thursday night, the front will weaken as it reaches east-Central Florida, with minimal rain expected.
The biggest change will be the shift to westerly winds on Thursday, followed by northerly winds on Friday.
Although the warming trend will briefly slow down on Friday, temperatures will still be milder than earlier in the week, with highs returning to near-normal in the low to mid-70s on Thursday. By Friday, areas north of I-4 may not reach 70, while southern areas will still hit the low to mid-70s.
Weekend-Early Week
As the large ridge of high pressure continues to move out into the western Atlantic, temperatures will gradually warm up. Expect highs to be in the lower to mid-70s over the weekend, reaching the lower 80s by Tuesday.
Overnight lows will also rise, from the upper 40s and 50s over the weekend to the upper 50s and low 60s early next week.
It will remain mostly dry, but a mid-level trough could bring a few showers to the northern parts of the area on Tuesday.
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Florida
Women’s basketball: Gophers drill overmatched North Florida
With their Big Ten opener set for Sunday, the Gophers made quick work of an overmatched nonconference opponent on Tuesday night, beating North Florida 90-44 at Williams Arena.
Grace Grocholski and Annika Stewart led six Gophers players in double-figure scoring with 15 points apiece, and Amaya Battle added 11 points and a game-high six steals as the Gophers improved to 10-0 ahead of their conference opener against Nebraska on Sunday afternoon in Lincoln. Tipoff is set for 1 p.m.
This is the first time the Gophers have been 10-0 since 2018-19.
The Gophers put the Ospreys (2-6) away early, using a 15-0 run to take a 26-4 lead with just more than a minute to play in the first quarter. Sophie Hart’s layup, after a pass over North Florida’s zone defense from Alexsia Rose, gave Minnesota a 52-18 lead at intermission.
Battle’s steal and layup at 7:34 of the fourth quarter put the Gophers up 74-34, and McKenna Johnson’s free throw with 22 seconds left supplied the final margin of victory.
Minnesota was 12-1 to start last season but they haven’t won their first 10 games since they won their first 12 in 2018-19, Lindsay Whalen’s first year as coach.
The Gophers have been doing it the past five games without one of their best players, junior guard Mara Braun, who injured her surgically repaired right foot during a shootaround. That foot forced her to miss the last three games of Minnesota’s WNIT run to the championship game last spring.
Braun, the Gophers’ leading scorer (13.6 points a game) before she was hurt, decided before Thanksgiving to have a second surgery on the foot and is out indefinitely.
Helena Rafnsdottir led North Florida with 14 points.
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