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ウィスパリング同時通訳研究会コミュのGov. DeSantis speaks in Sarasota

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Ron DeSantis: (00:20)
Hello, Sarasota. Aren’t you glad that we live in a free state? Are you guys going to make sure we keep it that way this November? Well, I’m excited to be here. I’m excited for you all to be here, because, yes, November is going to be important but we’ve got some work to do this Tuesday, because I think we’ve seen around the country and, unfortunately, even here in Florida, that if you elect these leftists to these school boards, they can do a lot of damage. They want to impose an ideology on our school children. We believe in education, not indoctrination. We believe that parents have a fundamental role in the education and upbringing of their children. We support schools, both charter schools, school districts, private schools, home school, we support everything in Florida but a school or a district does not supersede the rights of parents.
(01:38)
The role is to support parents and support students, and we just need to make sure that we continue that here in the state of Florida. The candidates that we have from Sarasota, in particular, [inaudible 00:01:51] here, very important. How many of you have voted in the primary so far? Okay. How many of you are going to vote on Tuesday?
(02:05)
I think that was everybody but if you didn’t raise your hand, you better show up on Tuesday. The thing is it’s not just … I mean, it’s a primary election but it’s open to everybody and it doesn’t even matter, because I’ll tell you, the things that we’ve done, that the media didn’t like, like parents’ rights in education, it’s not a partisan issue to look after our kids, so you’re going to be able to get, of course, Republicans, Independents, you are going to be able to get Democrats that are going to want to vote for school board candidates who understand parents’ rights and who understand that we need education, not indoctrination.
(02:42)
It’s important that we all show up. It’s important that we vote. You’ve got Bridget, who I just saw, who is doing a remarkable job. Tim Enos and Robyn Marinelli, where are they at? Are they here? Yup. We need you guys to come out and support our Sarasota candidates. I think it’s very, very important. We also have folks from Manatee. Are they here? Cindy Spray, Chad Choate, and Colonel Richard Tatem. Are you guys here? All right. Okay. Good. Manatee County, very, very important.
(03:20)
Then we have from Hillsborough, Patty Rendon and [inaudible 00:03:25]. Where are they at? Are they here? Okay. Then finally, from down in Lee County, Sam Fisher and Armor Persons. They should be here as well, right? Okay.

Speaker 1: (03:36)All here.

Ron DeSantis: (03:39)
Good. Hopefully, you all win. We want to see you win. You know, in the state of Florida, one of the things that no one can dispute is I promised I would do things and I have delivered on those promises. We said, we promised, that we would eliminate Common Core, and we did. We promised that we would eliminate the FSA, and we did. We promised to take Florida from one of the bottom 25 states in workforce education and make it by the end of the decade the number one state for workforce education, and we are ahead of schedule on accomplishing that. It’s very important, because, look, I am fine …
(04:50)
In fact, one of the things we’ve been able to do in higher education here in the state of Florida, since I’ve been governor, there have been zero tuition increases at our state universities. You can actually afford to go as a Florida resident. It’s not something that’s going to cost you $100,000 in debt. Tuition is about $6000 to $6400, depending on the institution and we’ve basically drawn that and said, “Okay, deliver it” because when they raise tuition, all they do is expand the bureaucracy and expand the bloat and we don’t need that.
(05:25)
Now our higher education is ranked number one in the country, public, by US News and World Report. We’re working hard to do better. We just signed legislation this year that starting now, all tenured professors must undergo review every five years. They can be let go.
(05:51)
You know, we’re proud of that pathway, we’re proud it’s affordable, we’re proud it’s high quality but we’ve also been very clear that a four year brick and ivy education is not the only pathway to success. We’ve embraced vocational, career education, and all you got to do is look around the economy now and see how much they’ll pay new truck drivers, see how much they’ll pay people for welding and HVAC and electrical, particularly, in a state that’s growing and continues to need all this stuff, it’s very, very important.
(06:23)
What we’ve done is we’ve expanded pathways, apprentices. A lot of students can get credentialed in high school now in the state of Florida and have job offers right after that. We’re not saying you have to do that. We’re not saying you have to do the other but you’re not better than anyone just because you have a four year degree. Okay? There’s a lot of other good ways to go.
(06:49)
I will say, in my generation, people would always say, “You will not be successful unless you get a college degree” and that was not true for them to say but what it caused people to do is it caused people that may not have had a real clear vision about what they wanted to do with their career to just go to a university, sometimes take five or six years to get a bachelor’s degree, go $100,000 in debt, your degree is in zombie studies and then what? The sea doesn’t part for you and a lot of people ended up in jobs they could have had out of high school.
(07:24)
All we’re saying is just there’s more than one pathway for success, don’t think that just that piece of paper means so much. It’s what’s behind that piece of paper. Look, if you go $100,000 in debt and you get an engineering degree from MIT, you’re going to be okay. I’m not going to sit here and say otherwise. But some of these fourth tier universities that charge an arm and a leg and are producing a really poor product, people should just know there’s other ways to succeed.
(07:52)
We’re proud of what we’ve done in workforce. We’re going to continue working hard on workforce. We’re not going to let them say that somehow this is not something that we need in this state, because we do.
(08:03)
We also promised that we would lead in increased pay for teachers. You know, the Democrats always talk about it, they never do it, so we just did the largest teacher compensation increase in Florida history in this most recent budget. What we’re doing, especially, is focusing a lot of that on increasing the average minimum pay because if you want to recruit new people to come in, particularly, talented college graduates, you’ve got to do better. I think we went statewide average was like $40,000. Now it’s going to be over $48,000 and Sarasota, it’s a lot higher than that.
(08:45)
You know, this is part of what we’re doing to make sure that we can attract the best and brightest. We’re also doing aggressive on teacher recruitment. They’re talking about how nationwide, there’s a shortage of teachers and we have positions that need to be filled. We have less on a per capita basis than states like California and a lot of these other places for sure.
(09:05)
But nevertheless, this is something that we’ve been sensitive to for a number of years. Well, we just signed legislation that was passed unanimously by the Florida legislature that said if you are a military veteran who has served four years on active duty, you have an honorable discharge, you have at least 60 credit hours of credit under your belt, 2.5 GPA or better, and you pass the subject matter exam, we want you to be eligible to be able to teach in our schools. That will allow them to have a probationary certification, obviously, they’ll work to get the four year degree but, you know, sitting in a classroom and listening to some professor bloviate is not necessarily making people good teachers.
(09:58)
You know, a lot of what being a good teacher is having the heart for it, but also life experience. These Marines who’ve seen a lot, our soldiers, our sailors, I think it’s important for young kids, and as the father of young kids, I think my kids and your kids, you have a veteran in the classroom, that’s someone they can look up to, that’s someone that they can learn from.
(10:27)
We’re proud of that. As I said, everyone in the legislature voted for it. The media has lately been trying to act like this is a bad thing. There’s actually someone here in I think it was Sarasota, somebody with a union that said, “Oh, this is bad. You can’t just put anyone, some warm body in front of the class.” Our veterans aren’t just some warm body. They’re people that have served this country and they’ve done well.
(11:02)
We’ve also expanded parental choice, school choice for people all throughout the state of Florida. You now have … We have 1.3 million students that are in some type of choice program, whether a private scholarship, whether a charter school or whether choice within a school district. That’s a massive number of people. When I was growing up in Florida, wherever you lived, you went to the neighborhood school and that was that, even if that school wasn’t meeting your needs or wasn’t what the parent wanted.
(11:34)
Well, now we’ve empowered parents and what has the result of that been? When you empower parents, when you expand opportunity, the most recent NAEP scores, which is the only one that everyone takes nationwide, ranked Florida, according to the Urban Institute, which is a left-leaning group, if you control for demographics, it ranked Florida number on in the country for fourth grade reading and fourth grade math. And the most …
(12:03)
And the most recent rankings from Education Week for K-12 achievement, ranked Florida number three in the nation for K-12 achievement. So that speaks for itself. And we want to continue on that progress. Unfortunately, and COVID exposed a lot of this, parents started to have to be more involved in the kind of the little nitty-gritty of the curriculum. And a lot of parents were very concerned about what they saw all throughout this country. Parents, and I think students, and I think Floridians want our school system to be about educating kids, not indoctrinating kids.
(12:51)
And we’ve been happy to lead this fight. Of course, we were the ones… I mean, if you go back two years, we were the only one of the few states that had kids in school at all. We said more than two years ago, we needed to have kids in school. Every parent had the right to send their kid in-person five days a week. We were not going to shut the schoolhouse door on particularly our vulnerable kids. Because you know what they would do in places like California, they locked the kids out of school, but the politicians and the bureaucrats who were locking down would send their kids to private school in-person. You know, I don’t begrudge them making the best decisions that they want for their kids. But how do you do that on one hand and then drop the hammer on many working class parents on the other? The destruction that they did, because what they did was they subcontracted out their responsibility to lead to special interests like unions. They didn’t want to be in school. And so they bowed down to those special interests. And the consequences, they didn’t give a damn about the consequences. I said from the very beginning, first of all, the data was very clear. Schools were needed to be open. But second of all, the damage that would happen by not having kids in-person instruction, activity, athletics, all these different things was going to set us back years. And that’s exactly what you’re seeing in places like California and Chicago and all these other places. And so when I… I just think it’s important for the record. When I came out, this was over two years ago, I think it was like June of 2020, and said, “No question, every school district is going to be open. We’re going back.” We were attacked by corporate media. We were attacked by unions. We were attacked by Democrats. I mean, even some weak Republicans were criticizing me. Sad to say.
(14:55)
Sad to say. And so we were really standing up against the tide. We were standing up against a lot of arrows. But at the end of the day my job was to look out for those students and those parents. And it wasn’t about me. And they could hit me all they want and whatever the consequences of that were, were fine. I wasn’t trying to cling to office. I was willing to put my neck out and sacrifice my standing to help those kids. And the result though, has been we were right and they were wrong. But you think about it’s obvious now, here in Florida, we don’t even think twice about it because it was just… we just approached all this much differently. I would have people tell me over the last couple years, if they visited Florida from a lockdown jurisdiction, that it was almost like coming from east to west Berlin. You were like looking, and they’re like, “Oh my gosh, people are actually living their life. They’re not all holed up and covered. People aren’t having to wear mask all the time.” Imagine that.
(16:23)
And you see though, the consequence of that, it’s still with us. They just put out some research now. If you look at things like clearly Florida, we need people coming to the state to visit and stuff, hospitality, tourism, big part of our economy. If you look at places like Naples, I think Tampa, Sarasota, Miami, for a lot of those places, restaurant reservations compared to 2019, were up like 30, 40%, a lot of these places. But you look at places like Minneapolis, down 50%. Chicago, down. New York, down. All this stuff down because they don’t respect people’s freedoms. They don’t keep their streets safe. People don’t want to go do it. And for a long time, and I think maybe some of them still have it, they wanted to do vaccine passports. I mean, you want to go and you want to go have dinner somewhere. And so in order to get some salmon, you have to show medical papers. We ban that in the state of Florida very early on.
(17:43)
And that’s why… and you know, when we did the vax passport, this was very early, I think early 2021. We said, no vax passports. And people were like, well… they’re like, “Okay. The government can’t do it, but private businesses can do it, right?” I said, “No.” I said, because first of all, I don’t want to marginalize people based off the choice of this shot. It makes no sense. But second of all, most businesses wouldn’t have done it. But one business does it. People would say, Florida has passports. And guess what? We would not have been the number one destination.
(18:17)
As it happened, we said, no passports. We said, it’s a free state. We set a domestic tourism record in 2021. And the foreign… international tourism in the United States in 2021, Florida represented 44% of all international tourism to the United States. Of course, so. Nobody wants to take a vacation to a biomedical security state. So they wanted to come to Florida. So it’s important. But here’s the thing, that you think, I mean, just when you think Faucism is dead, when you think… someone needs to take him and throw him across the Potomac River.
(19:19)
But just when you think it’s dead, he pops back up or just when you think it’s dead, someone imposes restrictions. So right now we have a smattering of school districts around the country, including Philadelphia, who have imposed mask mandates on their students. Now, there was never justification for doing this. But clearly now, if you look at all the data that we have, not only do we know it doesn’t benefit, we know it’s been harmful to their academic development. And so they’re still clinging on this. I think you’re going to see more of these leftist enclaves impose mandates and impose restrictions. And of course, you have places around the country that are banning kids from education if they don’t get an mRNA shot for COVID. And I’m happy to say, we saw this very early on. You go back to 2021, we banned schools from mandating COVID shots for students. But I bring up a lot of that just because we kind of take it for granted that we’re a free state and that’s not going on here. Let me tell you the other side wins elections here in statewide. You will no longer have that assurance. They want to bring things back. They may not want to do it right now because it’s unpopular, but they just can’t help themselves. And so the only way you can be sure that you’re going to remain free is to let people who are going to stand up for your rights and who are going to reject all restrictions and all mandates.

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