Florida
Read Florida’s Black history teaching standards document to get details on controversial new curriculum
The controversial Florida social studies curriculum that includes a lesson on how “slaves developed skills” that could be used for “their personal benefit” is over 200 pages long, with plans for multiple grade levels and topics included. The full document can be viewed online or you can read it at the bottom of this story.
The lesson in question can be found at the bottom of page 6 of the document, with the code “SS.68.AA.2.3.” This means it is a lesson for students in sixth to eighth grade, taught as part of the curriculum’s “African American History Strand,” or category.
The lesson asks students to “Examine the various duties and trades performed by slaves,” including agricultural work, painting, carpentry, tailoring, domestic service, blacksmithing, and transportation. That is followed by a “benchmark clarification” noting: “Instruction includes how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.”
Two members of the work group that established the standards said in a statement to CBS News that they “proudly stand behind” the language of the lessons, saying that the curriculum provides “comprehensive and rigorous instruction on African American History.”
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who is running for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, sought to distance himself from the curriculum in comments last week.
“I didn’t do it. And I wasn’t involved in it,” he said last Friday, adding, “I think that they’re probably going to show — some of the folks that eventually parlayed, you know, being a blacksmith into doing things later in life.”
The latest controversy comes after DeSantis rejected a pilot program for an Advanced Placement class in African American studies earlier this year, calling it “indoctrination.”
The line about “personal benefit” for enslaved people has drawn criticism from both sides of the political aisle. Vice President Kamala Harris called the lesson plan an attempt to “gaslight” the public, and traveled to Florida for a speech to “forcefully condemn” it.
“How is it that anyone could suggest that amidst these atrocities [of slavery], there was any ‘benefit’ to being subjected to this level of dehumanization?” Harris said Sunday.
Republican politicians have also spoken out, with South Carolina Senator Tim Scott, another presidential candidate, saying in a recent town hall that slavery had “no silver lining.”
“What slavery was really about [was] separating families, about mutilating humans and even raping their wives,” said Scott, who is the Senate’s only Black Republican. “It was just devastating. So, I would hope that every person in our country — and certainly running for president — would appreciate that.”
Read the full curriculum below:
Florida
Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin rocket launches from Florida
Why does Amazon founder Jeff Bezos want to explore space?published at 05:42 Greenwich Mean Time
For most, Jeff Bezos is best known for being the founder of the successful e-commerce company Amazon.
In under three decades, the billionaire successfully transformed the once “famously unprofitable” business to one of a handful in the world to be valued at over $2 trillion.
During that time, however, Bezos has also shown an interest in the world beyond business.
Bezos has joined a number of other tech entrepreneurs to enter what has been dubbed as the billionaire space race.
Bezos previously said his aims were to “build a road to space so our kids and their kids can build the future.”
“We need to do that to solve the problems here on Earth,” he added.
Blue Origin, the aerospace technology company founded by Bezos, says it was founded “with a vision of millions of people living and working in space for the benefit of Earth.”
However, there are plenty of critics of Bezos’ endeavour, with some describing the billionaire space race as a ‘waste of money’ that would be better spent on the climate crisis.
Florida
Florida Gators, Golden Pass Opening SEC Test
Gainesville, Fla. – The SEC is currently one of the strongest conferences in college hoops. Nine teams within it are currently ranked in the AP Top 25, and four others have received votes to be a top 25 team.
And, while the Florida Gators would’ve preferred an easy start to the year, they were handed an early test that consisted of the No. 1, No. 6 and a previously ranked top 25 team to begin their SEC slate, which they passed with flying colors.
To open SEC play, Florida was tasked with traveling to Rupp Arena in Lexington, KY., to take on the No. 6 Kentucky Wildcats. Unfortunately, for Gators head coach Todd Golden, 2025 didn’t start how he had expected. His team stumbled and lost their first game of conference play, 106-100.
A lot of the loss boils down to their poor defensive effort, especially defending the three-point line, and missed free throws. The Wildcats hit 14 triples – half of them coming from one player, Koby Brea – while the Gators missed 13 free throws. This can’t occur if they want to win the big games.
Some players or teams could’ve let this loss demoralize them and let it bleed over into the next game or two. However, that didn’t happen for the Gators. They made sure to use the agony from this loss and channel it into the next game against Tennessee.
Just a few days after this loss, they welcomed the number one team in the country to Gainesville and handed them one of the worst losses an AP No. 1 would have in a while.
Florida dismantled Tennessee 73-43 behind Alijah Martin’s 18 points, but it was the defensive effort that would be talked about after the game.
The Volunteers were held to just 21.4 percent from the field in this game, going 12-for-56 overall. Additionally, their offense was just 4-for-29 from deep. It also didn’t help that they missed 10 of their 25 free throws.
This extremely ugly offensive display from the Volunteers led to Florida’s first regular-season win over an AP No. 1-ranked team in program history and the largest win over a No. 1-ranked team in the NCAA since 1968.
“It’s hard to say when you host the No. 1 team in the country that you expect to win, but I think our program did going into this game tonight,” Golden said after the game.
Even if you expect to win, to win like that after a heartbreaking loss in the previous game is wild.
But while they may have had a night to celebrate this victory, that’s all they had because, in the SEC, games fly at you head-on one after the other and will not wait for you to be ready.
Luckily for Golden, his guys were prepared for Arkansas. Albeit a scrappy one, the Gators clawed out a 71-63 win over the Razorbacks on Saturday.
And, despite another poor outing from Walter Clayton Jr., it was sophomore Alex Condon and Martin who stepped up big time for the Gators in this one. Condon stuffed the stat sheet against the Razorbacks, ending with 12 points, 10 rebounds, four assists and three blocks. He also provided the kill shots against his opponents, dropping in a huge three-pointer and tough layup on back-to-back possessions heading into the final minutes of the game.
So, despite many thinking that the Gators’ rather easy non-conference schedule would come back to bite them and cause them to falter in their opening SEC games, they came out on top and passed it with relative ease.
Furthermore, being put to the test early and having two very difficult road games handed to them to begin 2025 will only benefit them as time goes on. Florida now has two straight home games and three of their next four games will be at home as well.
Should they come out of this next stretch of games untouched, which is definitely within the realm of possibility, then they will be one of the clear favorites for the SEC.
Florida
Florida housekeeper assaults, robs 83-year-old employer who couldn’t afford her Christmas bonus: sheriff
No, Scrooge you!
A 29-year-old Florida housekeeper robbed and assaulted her 83-year-old employer on Christmas Eve when the elderly woman said she couldn’t afford to pay her once-trusted worker a holiday bonus, authorities said this week.
Heather Nelson, 29, became irate when her request for a $500 bonus was rejected by her octogenarian boss — and decided to take what she wanted anyway, according to a press release from the Brevard County Sheriff’s Office.
“Nelson responded by physically wrenching the victim’s checkbook from her hand, stealing a check from the checkbook, and then, I guess in an effort to ruin other people’s Christmas as well, stole Christmas cards that were set to be mailed out also containing checks,” Sheriff Wayne Ivey said in the statement.
The housekeeper, whom Ivey repeatedly called a “Grinch,” allegedly grabbed the checkbook with such force that she nearly broke the woman’s wrist.
Nelson then allegedly wrote a check for $1,400 — and used the victim’s credit card to pay her rent and make other purchases, BCSO said.
“What’s next … kick her dog, too?” Ivey asked in the release.
Nelson was nabbed on Jan. 7 after the check cleared and credit card transactions were posted, Law and Crime reported.
“Since you were so worried about getting your bonus, we had some extra gifts for you, like a keepsake booking photo, a slightly used pair of shower slides and unlimited access to our world-famous one-star dining facility where you can enjoy absolutely nothing you eat,” Ivey snarked in the BCSO statement.
She faces a laundry list of charges, including aggravated battery, robbery, forgery, fraud, passing a counterfeit instrument and grand theft, according to court filings reviewed by the outlet.
She was held on a $30,000 bond and released on Jan 9, the outlet reported.
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