Was Writer and Philosopher George Santayana Correct

                                          “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

Was George Santayana correct, and so was Florida Gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum 2018 after the warning regarding Gov. DeSantis. Certainly Generational Z’s and Millennials do not remember the 1950s and 60s when the country was in turmoil. (please research it) As Generational Z’s and Millennials are you ready for what Gov. DeSantis is inciting. Well, history is important and never say it cannot be repeated. Except this time it could lead to no return. If he speaks this way so proudly about African American, he’s most certainly speaking the same about other marginalize groups in private conversation.

This is one of the primarily reason at President1.org we say we are here to Discuss-Organize and Voting is so important. The election results belong in the heart of Gen Z’s and Millennials at 160 million plus, if they are together strong. 

Florida gubernatorial candidates Democrat Andrew Gillum and Republican Ron DeSantis had a debate in 2018. The Country was warned about Gov. DeSantis in a debate in that debate. Is history living up to the old additive.writer and philosopher George Santayana who originally wrote, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

Here is what I found:

  Gov. Desantis and his administration have blocked the introduction of a new advanced-level high school course that teaches African American history, saying that it lacks educational value and is contrary to Florida law, desantis-says-ap-african-american-history-class-pushes-political-agenda/. They also said that the course leaves large, ambiguous gaps that can be filled with additional ideological material, which we will not allow.

  Gov. Desantis has also passed a “Stop WOKE” act that regulates how lessons on race and gender are taught in Florida schools, and has taken direct aim at the College Board’s Advanced Placement course in African American history, banning it from the state.

  Gov. Desantis has defended his decision to block the African American studies course, saying that teaching Black history is required in Florida schools, but the Advanced Placement course amounted to ‘indoctrination. He also said that some of the topics attempted to use Black history to push a political agenda.

  Some critics of Gov. Desantis have accused him of being anti-Black and of omitting or rewriting key historical facts about the Black experience. They have also pointed to his other actions, such as his strong-arming the Legislature to pass a redistricting map that eliminated two congressional districts held by Black Democrats, his push for legislation aimed at criminalizing peaceful protests, his plan to ban colleges and universities from offering diversity, equity and inclusion programs, his ban on critical race theory, his law restricting the instruction of race relations in classrooms, and his rejection of the College Board course on African American studies.

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