Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

DeSantis Claims 'Woke Math' Teaches Kids That 2+2 Doesn't Equal 4 In Mind-Numbing Rant

DeSantis Claims 'Woke Math' Teaches Kids That 2+2 Doesn't Equal 4 In Mind-Numbing Rant
Octavio Jones/Getty Images

Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis claimed in a speech in Tampa to the conservative group Moms for Liberty he will stop teachers in Florida schools from teaching "woke math," his latest attack against public education.

DeSantis absurdly suggesed liberals and progressives are using math classes as an opportunity to teach children about social injustice, a nod to the conservative preoccupation with critical race theory, a body of legal and academic scholarship that aims to examine how racism and disparate racial outcomes have shaped public policy via often implicit social and institutional dynamics.


Though he never defined what "woke math" actually is, he made the baseless claim that schools are no longer teaching students that "2 plus 2 equals 4."

You can hear what DeSantis said in the video below.

He said:

"We recently had these reviews that the Department of Education was doing in Florida. In these math books they were doing woke math."
“I’m just thinking to myself, like, 2 plus 2 equals 4. It’s not 2 plus 2 equals: 'Well how do you feel about that? Is that an injustice?'”
“No. We gotta teach the kids to get the right answer, that's just the end of the day."

DeSantis's remarks were greeted with applause. He added that the Department of Education sent these "woke books" back to publishers who then “took the woke out and sent us back normal math books."

There is no such thing as "woke math."

While the Florida’s Department of Education did return thousands of textbooks to publishers, the "woke content" the agency took issue with amounted to just four pages, including one that included a bar graph showing that people over 65 and political conservatives tend to express more racial prejudice.

DeSantis's critics quickly took him to task for such a bold lie.




The pushback against public education in Florida reached a fever pitch after the passage of the Parental Rights in Education bill, or H.B. 1557, which DeSantis signed into law earlier this year. The bill, colloquially known as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, aims to “reinforce the fundamental right of parents to make decisions regarding the upbringing and control of their children in a specified manner.”

The law has received nationwide attention for forbidding “a school district from encouraging classroom discussion about sexual orientation or gender identity in primary grade levels or in a specified manner," though the law also applies to conversations about racism and social justice.

Last year, DeSantis made headlines after he announced the “Stop Woke Act,” legislation intended to stop schools from teaching critical race theory.

Critical race theory is taught in colleges, not in public schools, and certainly not to young children, but DeSantis has continued to push these falsehoods as he continues to court conservatives who’ve given in to these conspiracies at a time when efforts to reposition the consequences and legacy of slavery as elements vital to the historical narrative continue to gain traction.

DeSantis signed the legislation, officially titled the “Stop Wrongs against Our Kids and Employees Act," into law in April and it went into effect earlier this month.

The law empowers parents to file lawsuits to enforce the prohibition of critical race theory lessons in public schools, defund primary and secondary education in the event they school consultants on the theory, and bars its concepts from being included in employee training.

More from Trending

Actor and comedian, Rondell Sheridan
Momodu Mansaray/Getty Images

'That's So Raven' Star's Plea

Everyone’s favorite dad, Rondell Sheridan from That’s So Raven, shared an Instagram post asking fans for help with medical bills after a painful pancreatitis diagnosis.

Disney Channel fans know the actor and comedian as Raven-Symoné’s onscreen father, Victor Baxter, on the original show and its subsequent spinoff, Cory in the House, to the 2017 reboot of Raven’s Home that ended in 2023.

Keep Reading Show less
Wallace from 'Wallace & Gromit' with jam on toast; TikToker Joseph Herscher recreating the scene
Aardman Animations/BBC; @josephmachines/TikTok

TikToker Goes Viral For Creating Real-Life Version Of Infamous 'Wallace & Gromit' Contraption

From The Jetsons to The Pee-wee Herman Show, from Flubber and Casper to Wallace & Gromit, Gen-Xers and Millennials had endless examples of living life with ease, automation, and robotic assistance.

There were machines that could dress us, brush our teeth and hair, and make us breakfast, and we were fascinated with the possibilities behind living in such an assisted world.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshots from Fox News video of Camryn Kinsey and Jonathan Hunt
Fox News

Former Trump Official Faints And Falls Off Chair In Shocking Moment During Live Fox News Interview

It was sudden: Former Trump administration official and conservative pundit Camryn Kinsey collapsed mid-interview during a live segment on Fox News—and network host Jonathan Hunt, though horrified at first, tried to continue the segment as if nothing happened.

Hunt was interviewing Kinsey for a segment on former President Joe Biden’s recent media appearances when the incident occurred.

Keep Reading Show less
John Oliver
@LateNightSeth/YouTube

John Oliver Hilariously Explains Why Having A UK Version Of 'SNL' Is A 'Terrible Idea'

John Oliver is not buying into the hype around a British version of Saturday Night Live.

During an appearance on Late Night with Seth Meyers on Monday, the English comedian made it clear: bringing SNL across the Atlantic is, in his words, “a terrible idea.”

Keep Reading Show less
Nancy Sinatra; Frank Sinatra; Donald Trump
Dave J Hogan/Getty Images; Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images; Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

Nancy Sinatra Shuts Down MAGA Fan Who Claimed Her Famous Dad Would've Voted For Trump

It's no secret that MAGA Republican President Donald Trump hasn't been able to attract the cream of the crop when it comes to the entertainment industry. While Kid Rock, Kevin Sorbo and Scott Baio are Trump ride or dies, pretty much every other Hollywood or music legend or rising star is taking a pass on Trump.

And some outright despise the man and let everyone know. Often.

Keep Reading Show less