Friday, January 16, 2026
54.5 °f
Magee
  • About Us
  • Our Team
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
MageeNews.com
Advertisement
  • Home
  • Message from the Prez
  • News
  • Happenings
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Schools
  • Videos
  • Ducks on the Pond
  • Home
  • Message from the Prez
  • News
  • Happenings
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Schools
  • Videos
  • Ducks on the Pond
No Result
View All Result
MageeNews.com
No Result
View All Result
Home News Mississippi News

DEI – when will Mississippi’s leaders lead?

Sue Honea by Sue Honea
March 18, 2024
in Mississippi News, News
0
Should male athletes be allowed to compete in female sports?
0
SHARES
94
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Please note that this post contains affiliate links and any sales made through such links will reward MageeNews.com a small commission – at no extra cost to you.

 

The University of Florida just fired all their DEI (Diversity, Equity & Inclusion) staff. The University closed the office of the Chief Diversity Officer, and terminated DEI-focused contracts.

Florida is not alone in taking decisive action against the ‘woke’ mind virus that has been running rampant on US college campuses for years. In Alabama, a bill (SB 129) to ban DEI programs in all state institutions, including colleges, was recently voted through the state legislature. The University of Arkansas has decided to eliminate its diversity, equity and inclusion division.

Related posts

SWAC Commissioner Dr. Charles McClelland was honored (Jan. 13) by the Mississippi State Senate and the City of Jackson in recognition of his contributions to the league

SWAC Commissioner Dr. Charles McClelland was honored (Jan. 13) by the Mississippi State Senate and the City of Jackson in recognition of his contributions to the league

January 15, 2026
Secretary Michael Watson Update: 2025 Report on Charitable Organizations

Lobbyist Registration Clarfication

January 15, 2026

Here in Mississippi, meanwhile, crickets…… No executive orders. No legislation. Why?

Senator Angela Hill presented a bill to eliminate DEI programs in any state-funded institution (SB2402). So, too, did Representative Becky Currie in the House (HB127). Yet both bills died in committee.

Saying that the bills “died in committee” makes it sound like they were victims of some freak accident. Neither bill, of course, was struck by lightning or afflicted by some random misfortune. The bills failed to come out of committee because those that chaired the relevant committees to which each bill had been referred decided not to allow the bills to proceed.

In the Senate, the two committees in question were Accountability, Efficiency & Transparency, and Universities, chaired by Sen David Parker and Sen Nicole Boyd respectively. I doubt that Parker or Boyd would have killed the anti DEI bill without approval from Senate leader, Delbert Hosemann.

In the House, the committee out of which the bill failed to emerge is chaired by Rep Donnie Scoggin.

“But is an anti DEI bill actually necessary?”, I hear you ask. “Is there really that much DEI here in Mississippi in the first place?”

If any member of the legislature spent more than a couple of minutes browsing the University of Mississippi’s website, they would see that it is an institution run by people 100 percent committed to DEI. Do those lawmakers that killed the anti DEI bill approve?

DEI dogma not only influences the way Ole Miss is run. DEI seeks to shape what young people are taught there. Ole Miss’s “Equity in Action” plans, for example, increasingly touch upon almost every aspect of university life.

Concealed behind innocuous jargon in the university’s “Pathways to Equity” strategic plan, Ole Miss has an active DEI program that impacts everything from teaching practices, course content and student evaluation. The way I read it, Ole Miss even seems to endorse the hiring of some faculty on the basis of race, rather than merit.

Without any action from the state Senate or the IHL, this is all being done on your tax dollar. We know this thanks to Shad White, our State Auditor.

Shad White is one of the few leaders to actually show leadership on this issue, and he has tried to calculate how much all this is costing Mississippi taxpayers.

White’s recent report showed that Mississippi universities spent over $23 million on DEI from July 2019 to June 2023. Nearly $11 million of state taxpayer funds went to DEI programs, most of which was spent on salaries for DEI employees. Without any action from our state leaders, DEI spending soared almost 50 percent since 2019.

In case anyone needs reminding why DEI needs to be rooted out of our public universities, here’s a quick reminder.

The United States is founded on the revolutionary idea that all Americans are created equal. America might have produced some laws and leaders that failed to live up to that high standard. But as a principle, it has never been bettered.

DEI overturns America’s founding principle, promoting instead the idea that each of us is defined by our immutable characteristics. This is not just profoundly un-American. DEI ideology takes us back to a pre-modern, pre-Enlightenment idea that we are defined by what we are born. It is a profoundly anti-Western ideology.

It is not a coincidence that the ‘woke’ mobs that appeared on Ivy League college campuses after the Hamas terror attacks last October seemed to side with America’s enemies. DEI proponents are hostile to America and the West.

DEI demoralizes Americans. It teaches the young to believe that their country is always in the wrong. It demands that history be rewritten to press the past into a narrative of

exploitation.

How regrettable that conservative leaders in this conservative state should do so little about it while leaders in states all around us take action.

 

Douglas Carswell is the President & CEO of the Mississippi Center for Public Policy.

 

 

MageeNews.com is the source of news and views in Simpson and surrounding counties as well as the State of Mississippi.

Tags: DEIDiversitylegislatureMageeNews.comMsCenterForPublicPolicySB129senate
Previous Post

U.S. House Ways and Means Offers Federal TANF Reform Package After Mississippi Scandal

Next Post

Means of Grace: Meet Pastor Pete

Next Post
Means of Grace:  Meet Pastor Pete

Means of Grace: Meet Pastor Pete

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Latest News

 🎶Rials Creek Church Is Looking for a Worship and Song Leader 🎵

by Sue Honea
January 15, 2026
0
 🎶Rials Creek Church Is Looking for a Worship and Song Leader 🎵

Rials Creek is a warm, welcoming non-denominational church seeking an energetic and outgoing Worship and Song Leader for our Sunday...

Read moreDetails

Wilkinson County School District Placed as a District of Transformation

by Sue Honea
January 15, 2026
0
MSD Hosts Regional Academic Bowl for Deaf, Hard of Hearing High School Students

  MageeNews.com is the online news site for Simpson and surrounding counties as well as the State of Mississippi.

Read moreDetails

SWAC Commissioner Dr. Charles McClelland was honored (Jan. 13) by the Mississippi State Senate and the City of Jackson in recognition of his contributions to the league

by Sue Honea
January 15, 2026
0
SWAC Commissioner Dr. Charles McClelland was honored (Jan. 13) by the Mississippi State Senate and the City of Jackson in recognition of his contributions to the league

Among those present were Senators Sollie B. Norwood, Hillman T. Frazier, Derrick T. Simmons, Kamesha B. Mumford, Sarita Simmons, Albert...

Read moreDetails
Facebook Twitter Youtube RSS Instagram
MageeNews.com

MageeNews.com is THE source for news and views in Simpson County, Mississippi, and beyond.

Recent News

 🎶Rials Creek Church Is Looking for a Worship and Song Leader 🎵

 🎶Rials Creek Church Is Looking for a Worship and Song Leader 🎵

January 15, 2026
MSD Hosts Regional Academic Bowl for Deaf, Hard of Hearing High School Students

Wilkinson County School District Placed as a District of Transformation

January 15, 2026
SWAC Commissioner Dr. Charles McClelland was honored (Jan. 13) by the Mississippi State Senate and the City of Jackson in recognition of his contributions to the league

SWAC Commissioner Dr. Charles McClelland was honored (Jan. 13) by the Mississippi State Senate and the City of Jackson in recognition of his contributions to the league

January 15, 2026
Magee, US
Friday, January 16, 2026
scattered clouds
54.5 ° f
45%
3.47mh
25%
66 f 45 f
Wed
68 f 40 f
Thu
71 f 44 f
Fri
75 f 46 f
Sat

© 2023 MageeNews.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Sue Stuff
  • News
  • Happenings
  • Schools
  • Sports
  • Obituaries
  • Ducks on the Pond
  • Videos

© 2023 MageeNews.com