holohoax "education" enforcement in Florida

Started by yankeedoodle, July 09, 2019, 12:53:29 PM

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yankeedoodle

A high school principle in Florida, named Willam Latson, has been given the administrative equivalent of 1,000 lashes for saying this:
Quote"I can't say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school district employee,"
[...]
"Not everyone believes the Holocaust happened. And you have your thoughts, but we are a public school and not all of our parents have the same beliefs."

A high school principal is reassigned after writing that he couldn't say the Holocaust was 'a factual, historical event'
https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/08/us/principal-holocaust-letter-trnd/index.html

The principal at a Florida high school is being reassigned to a position with the school district after revelations that he wrote emails to a parent that seemed to cast doubt on the historical veracity of the Holocaust.

"It is out of an abundance of concern and respect for the students and staff of Spanish River Community High School that School District Administration has decided to reassign Principal William Latson effective immediately," the School District of Palm Beach County wrote in a statement.

In April 2018, a parent reached out to William Latson, the principal at Spanish River Community High School in Boca Raton, with a question about how the school handles the Holocaust in its curriculum.

"I can't say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school district employee," Latson responded, according to the school district.

The Palm Beach Post published the excerpts from the emails on Friday after obtaining them via an open records request.

According to the paper, Latson went on to write, "Not everyone believes the Holocaust happened. And you have your thoughts, but we are a public school and not all of our parents have the same beliefs."

However, the school district said Latson's email wasn't just "offensive," it was totally out of step with its education efforts, adding that the system is and always has been "working diligently to be a leader in mandatory Holocaust education for students in grades K-12."

"The District's curriculum is based on historical fact," the statement added.

CNN has filed a public information request and reached out to Latson as well as the district for further comment.

In a statement to the Palm Beach Post, Latson said, "I regret that the verbiage that I used when responding to an email message from a parent, one year ago, did not accurately reflect my professional and personal commitment to educating all students about the atrocities of the Holocaust."

The school district said it "counseled" Latson "about the choices he made in responding" to the parent's emails and instructed him to "further expand" his school's Holocaust curriculum.

Latson traveled to Washington to visit the US Holocaust Museum and learn more about the mass genocide perpetrated by the Nazi regime that took the lives of 6 million Jews in Europe.

But district officials still felt that Latson's words were causing a "major distraction for the school community," and they moved to place him in a new role.

"Every generation must recognize, and learn from, the atrocities of the Holocaust's incomprehensible suffering and the enduring stain that it left on humankind," Palm Beach County school board Chairman Frank Barbieri Jr. said in a statement.




yankeedoodle

Wow, the holohoax is really in control in Florida.  Even the black people have fallen for the bullshit.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3e5hppdCKSY&feature=youtu.be

Florida principal could lose job over email defending Holocaust deniers
https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/07/11/florida-principal-could-lose-job-over-email-defending-holocaust-deniers/23767942/

A Florida high school principal, now reassigned to a school district office, may lose his job completely for telling a parent in a shocking email that "not everyone believes the Holocaust happened." The email, sent in 2018, was made public this week after the Palm Beach Post reported on its public records request for the email.

In a filmed statement on Wednesday, Palm Beach County Superintendent Donald Fennoy said he recommended the school board not renew the contract of William Latson, who was principal of Spanish River Community High School in Boca Raton.

The school district reassigned Latson on Monday after his 2018 email was uncovered, but he still has 11 months left on his contract, according to The Associated Press.

Fennoy said on Wednesday that Latson's remarks caused "real distress" at his school and said that people in Boca Raton and beyond are deeply concerned by them.

"Our children need to be taught the facts of our history, period," Fennoy said.

He also reaffirmed that "all students are taught about the Holocaust as an established fact."

"Our schools can never be fact-neutral environments," Fennoy added. "It's our job as educators that our students learn the facts and know our history. This is non-negotiable for a strong society."

In 2018, a parent sent an email to Latson asking if the school made lessons about the Holocaust "a priority" for its students, the Palm Beach Post reported.

Latson replied that the school offered a one-day lesson to 10th-graders but noted that the lesson wasn't mandatory since some parents wouldn't want their children to participate, according to the Post.

When the parent countered Latson's email, saying the Holocaust is a "factual, historical event" and "not a right or belief," Latson disagreed, the emails show.

"Not everyone believes the Holocaust happened and you have your thoughts but we are a public school and not all of our parents have the same beliefs so they will react differently," the principal wrote back, according to the Post. "I can't say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school district employee."

Latson offered an apology in a statement to the Post this week, saying he regretted "the verbiage" used in the emails. He also claimed that his emails "did not accurately reflect my professional and personal commitment to educating all students about the atrocities of the Holocaust."

yankeedoodle

From Phil Giraldi:

Teaching Holocaust
Don't know much about history
http://www.unz.com/pgiraldi/teaching-holocaust/

A friend of mine recently commented that if the current trend to reduce the study of history in schools to easily digestible politically correct soundbites that are being successfully pushed by social justice warriors continues, we will soon be limited to discussing how horrible slavery was, the Stonewall Inn riots and the so-called holocaust. Indeed, it seems that those who complain the loudest are the only ones listened to and no one complains more often or at greater volume than American Jewish groups intent on preserving the benefits that are derived from always being able to claim their perpetual victimhood.

Recent media accounts from Florida detail how low pandering to Israeli and Jewish interests can go. A high school principal identified as Dr. Willian Latson was removed from his position after he revealed to a parent that he considered the holocaust to be a belief and not a demonstrated fact. According to statement made by the school district, the action was taken "out of an abundance of concern" for students and staff after Latson had "made a grave error in judgment." It added that "In addition to being offensive, the principal's statement is not supported by either the School District Administration or the School Board."

The story took place in the School District of Palm Beach County. Latson, now the ex-principal of Spanish River High School in West Palm Beach, presided over his school in a heavily Jewish district that includes Boca Raton. Latson is currently being considered for reassignment by the school district though there are have also been recurring calls from county and state legislators to fire him, which will undoubtedly occur.

The tale is somewhat convoluted and there are some disagreements about what actually took place, but it goes basically like this: roughly one year ago a high school parent, unidentified but presumably Jewish, emailed Latson asking him to confirm that holocaust education was a top priority in Spanish River H.S. He responded by email that the school has a "variety of activities" for holocaust education but "Not everyone believes the Holocaust happened. And you have your thoughts, but we are a public school and not all of our parents have the same beliefs." He added that an educator has "the role to be politically neutral but support all groups in the school... I can't say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school district employee."

After the emails were revealed to school officials, presumably by the parent, a year-long investigation commenced in which Latson apologized for having caused offense, saying his emails "did not accurately reflect my professional and personal commitment to educating all students about the atrocities of the Holocaust." The school board initially ruled that he had not done anything meriting disciplinary action or a reprimand, but the story did not end there. Simultaneously, an online petition which eventually included 6,000 signatures was initiated demanding Latson's replacement and he was subsequently removed from his position. The school board officials justified their change of course by citing his apparent unwillingness to comply with instructions, stating that they previously had ordered him to "expand the Holocaust curriculum at Spanish River and ordered him to spend 'several days at the United States Holocaust Museum to increase his personal knowledge.'"

Latson responded that his emails and comments were not "accurately relayed" to the media: "I have been reassigned to the district office due to a statement that was not accurately relayed to the newspaper by one of our parents. It is unfortunate that someone can make a false statement and do so anonymously and it holds credibility but that is the world we live in."

His statement implicitly blaming a school parent generated new problems for Latson with two Palm Beach County state lawmakers and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) calling for his firing because he had not groveled sufficiently. ADL stated that "ADL had hoped his apology was sincere and Latson could learn from his mistakes. Given that he cannot take responsibility for his actions, Latson should resign, and if not we believe the district should end his employment."

The two state officials, Senator Kevin Rader and Representative Tina Polsky issued a statement saying "By his latest email, Dr. Latson has shown no remorse for his actions and we call on the district to immediately terminate him."

The publication of Latson's comments also unleashed heavy criticism from a broad range of other Florida public officials. Governor Ron DeSantis, who calls himself the most pro-Israel governor in American, joined in with "Look, to act like the Holocaust is a matter of debate, I mean, is just absurd."

Senator Rick Scott called Latson's comments anti-Semitism and tweeted that the "fact that someone charged with educating children would be unable to speak unequivocally on the realities & horrors of the holocaust is incredibly concerning." Jewish State Representative Randy Fine, who recently introduced legislation officially banning "anti-Semitism" in Florida public schools, said "the law does not allow a Holocaust-denier to serve as a public school principal." In a publish statement he expanded on that point, writing that "anti-Semitism by public employees in our K-20 public education system must be treated the same as racism."

The controversy inadvertently revealed the extent to which state law now requires the holocaust to be taught in all Florida public schools. Ironically, Spanish River High has one of the country's most rigorous holocaust education programs with the subject being taught both in ninth- and 10th-grade English classes as well as a component of both U.S. and world history. There is also an elective course as well regular holocaust assemblies for the entire school featuring keynote speakers. After the Latson controversy started, the school district required all 10th graders to read "Night" by Elie Wiesel. There are now plans to add multiple annual assemblies for students in every grade in the school district this year.

So, if you go to school in Florida your English and history courses will be about the holocaust and you will have to attend holocaust assemblies just in case some alleged atrocity has not been described extensively enough in class. Well, when does it end? When does the almost incessant pandering to Zionists and Jewish groups become too much for the deliberately kept-in-ignorance American public to tolerate?

The so-called holocaust was an historical event that took place in Europe seventy-five years ago. It has an established but very debatable narrative that pretty much has been contrived over the past fifty years for political reasons, see Professor Norman Finkelstein's brilliant deconstruction of it in his book "The Holocaust Industry: Reflections on the Exploitation of Jewish Suffering." Those inconsistencies in the holocaust story and its general lack of credibility may have been what Latson was referring to.

The imposed holocaust narrative is full of holes and contradictions in terms of who was killed and how, but it is impossible for genuine academics to critique it if they want to stay employed. Books like Wiesel's "Night" are largely works of fiction. The narrative exists to perpetuate the belief in Jewish suffering, which brings with it a number of practical advantages. First, it is regularly deployed to excuse the horrific treatment of the Palestinian people by Israel – Jewish suffering means that the creation of a homeland is a debt that all the world owes to the Jews without regard to what has been done to the area's other inhabitants. Second, guilt over the alleged holocaust means that reparations from countries involved must be continued indefinitely. Currently the Poles are resisting new Jewish claims while the Germans have been paying for years. It is now being asserted that the descendants of so-called holocaust survivors have been genetically psychologically damaged, in the womb as it were, so reparations will presumably continue forever.

Third, holocaust guilt is used in the United States to counter any criticism of what Israel and Jewish groups are up to, as they use their wealth and access to power to corrupt America's institutions and drive the country to needless wars. One might well ask, when confronted by the taxpayer funded holocaust museums that appear to spring up like mushrooms, why so much interest in a possible crime that has nothing to do with the United States? Where are the museums and courses in Florida schools discussing the mass killing that happened on our own shores, the genocide of the native Americans?

Lest we forget, the holocaust industry operates everywhere in America, particularly in the education system. Eight states already have laws mandating holocaust education (California, New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Florida, Illinois, Indiana and Michigan) and there is considerable pressure to make it universal in the United States. An alarmed World Jewish Congress (WJC) is urging required holocaust education for everyone everywhere "citing statistics from a 2018 poll revealing half of millennials can't name a single Nazi concentration camp."

A currently circulating WJC petition in Congress expresses concern over the rise in anti-Semitism, with a warning that "the horrors of the Holocaust are fading from our collective memory..." A bill to brainwash students so they will not forget, 'The Never Again Education Act', is currently making the rounds in the House of Representatives. It would make holocaust study mandatory in public schools and set up a Department of Education program that would train teachers to properly instruct students about the story of Jewish suffering.

Yes, the "Never Again Education Act" will soon be sucking up taxpayer money like an enormous vacuum cleaner and creating lots of new jobs for holocaust instructors, who will, of course, all be Jewish. Public schools will be teaching the next generation about what a great place Israel is and how the holocaust justifies vigilant groups like AIPAC and ADL, though it will not mention how they have corrupted the U.S. government and turned America's foreign policy into an Israeli wag-the-dog. But who's complaining? It's good for the Jews, isn't it?

So Dr. William Latson will be unemployed and possibly unemployable because he spoke the truth, a lesson to all of us that one must never cross the red lines established by the wielders of Jewish power in America. One might reasonably currently expect that serial pedophile Jeffrey Epstein will use the holocaust get-out-of-jail-free card in his defense, claiming that his recollection of the event has so traumatized him that he did bad things that he would not have otherwise considered. Poor Jeffrey. He has suffered so much.





yankeedoodle


yankeedoodle

Guess what?  The evil jews got this honest, decent school principal fired.  Who would have thunk it?

Of course, it was "white supremacists" that did it, not jewish supremacists.

Watch this fat degenerate kike talk about "facts."   <:^0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eGauoHKirDg

yankeedoodle

Looks like he might actually get his job back, but only fter he apologized, saying: "I regret that the verbiage that I used when responding to an email message from a parent...did not accurately reflect my professional and personal commitment to educating all students about the atrocities of the Holocaust."

Holocaust Denying School Principal in Boca Raton, FL Could Be Rehired
https://www.stopantisemitism.org/antisemitic-incidents-50/holocaust-denying-school-principal-in-boca-raton-fl-could-be-rehired

A Florida high school principal who was fired last November for telling the mother of a student that "not everyone believes the Holocaust happened" could be rehired this week.

Palm Beach County School Board members will meet on Wednesday to consider a proposal to rehire the former principal of Spanish River High School , William Latson, in the wake of an administrative judge's ruling that he was improperly terminated.

Schools Superintendent Donald Fennoy has recommended that Latson be reinstated and given $152,000 in back pay.

At its meeting last November, the board explained that Latson was being fired for having "violated" school-board policies and ethics codes, according to the meeting minutes.

In April 2018, Latson told the mother of a student who sought to ensure that Holocaust education was "a priority" that "not everyone believes the Holocaust happened" in an email.

"And you have your thoughts, but we are a public school, and not all of our parents have the same beliefs," he continued.

Latson added that educators had "the role to be politically neutral, but support all groups in the school."

"I can't say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school-district employee," he wrote.

The Palm Beach County School District said in a statement in July 2019 that Latson had "made a grave error in judgment in the verbiage he wrote in an email stating, 'I can't say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school-district employee.' In addition to being offensive, the principal's statement is not supported by either the School District Administration or the School Board."

Latson personally apologized, saying: "I regret that the verbiage that I used when responding to an email message from a parent...did not accurately reflect my professional and personal commitment to educating all students about the atrocities of the Holocaust."

Latson's appeal received a boost in August when the judge at his appeal ruled that his offense was not serious enough to warrant termination.

"These acts of poor judgment on Dr. Latson's part should result in a verbal or written reprimand, the lowest rungs on the ladder of progressive discipline," Administrative Law Judge Robert Cohen wrote.