Readers weighed in on Gov. Stitt's signing of an order to forbid resources for college DEI.

The Public Square is a Viewpoints feature that seeks engagement from readers to questions on various issues of the day. Follow The Oklahoman on Facebook and on Twitter @TheOklahoman_ for weekly prompts for The Public Square.
The Public Square is a Viewpoints feature that seeks engagement from readers to questions on various issues of the day. Follow The Oklahoman on Facebook and on Twitter @TheOklahoman_ for weekly prompts for The Public Square.

We asked readers what they thought about Gov. Kevin Stitt signing an executive order Wednesday that forbids state agencies and colleges and universities from using funds, property or resources to grant or support diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) positions or departments.

Here are some of your responses:

As to higher education, there are governing boards that are better positioned to deal with this issue. The governor should respect the structures created by the Constitution or the Legislature. As to state agencies, he has cabinet officers that could deal with this without an executive order.

— Harold J. Pumford, Prague

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt speaks after signing an executive order on Dec. 13 in the Blue Room at the state Capitol.
Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt speaks after signing an executive order on Dec. 13 in the Blue Room at the state Capitol.

This is a prime example of Oklahoma leadership in search of a solution for a problem that doesn’t exist! Oklahoma’s education infrastructure has challenges that present real obstacles to the state’s ability to be competitive in a global economy. Instead of focusing on achieving outcomes that will have real and lasting impact on the future of our state, the Governor would rather spend time finding ways to polarize our citizens and disenfranchise our state.

Strategically, actions like this, are counterproductive to the Governors Top Ten campaign promises. Educators in Oklahoma deserve an advocate in the Governors’ office, not an adversary!

— Richard Mcpherson, Edmond

Just watching the Netflix series on WWII. The sickening, revolting consequences of autocrats and dictators. Demonizing and minimizing groups of people for their own ambition and political power.

It is just as sickening and revolting today. And ominous.

— Ron_S.

The best approach is "Equal Justice Under Law" which is what is stated on The U.S. Supreme Court.

Programs to help disadvantaged people particularly students from poor educational backgrounds and failing schools should not be based on race. Racial preferences should not be the way to encourage upward mobility.

Particularly there should be encouragement of Junior College students to be able to transfer into the larger universities.

— Jon_C.

This is just another white christian nationalist effort to try to cancel out other people in the state. If you are brown, black or gay person living in this state, the right wing nuts will use mind over matter. They don't mind, cause you don't matter.

— Wayne_P.

What’s next? State supported Nazi Youth programming?Why are Gov. Stitt and his political allies so afraid of diversity? Of Equity? Of knowledge?My parents were born before World War One, and lived through WWII, but they both embraced learning about and from people of other races and ethnicities and countries of origin.Perhaps because of them, and because I didn’t grow up in the segregated South, I just don’t have an innate fear of people who look different from me or come from different cultures.But, perhaps it’s time I develop a fear reaction to certain right-wing Republicans. I am worried about what they plan to do next to deny history and erode even the study of civil rights.

— Esther_H.

(In reply to Esther) You're exactly right, Esther. It is time for fearing 'certain right-wing Republicans'. Our country had better wake up and smell the coffee before all of our civil liberties are nothing more than memories.

— Russell_U.

Practical use of civil rights laws is not wrong, nor improper. The attempt to backwalk into a lack of civil rights laws is what we are currently seeing in the 'neo-clan' groups operating with the Trump-A-Likes.

Always a wander into the past and the Oklahoma immigrant way of a century past. As many Germanic-related immigrants wouldn't even fight in WWI and WWII, due to sympathy for Germanic mixed ancestry, those were conditioned in the hundreds of thousands as committed to the classic syndrome of hostility to non-German-Irish color and culture. A majority of numbers, still trying to filter out reality, a century later. Old Money is a hardened association as a result of attempts to reduce competition and protect properties and ownership of cash flow devices.

The same cause of war in Israel/Palestine, Russia/Ukraine, and other cultural wars. Diversity is real and requires attention to detail, and diplomacy. That is the investment in inclusion training and minority protections which are a valid college topic/subject of professional training courses.

Stitt is trying to make everyday Halloween in Oklahoma for those he thinks will be swayed by excess budget cutting as a racial and political tool used to weaken the Democratic tendency to tolerate solutions of social stressed situations. Denying U.S. and Oklahoma history will not work.

Stitt's program to cover up is not a solution for the presence of history as a subject of study, and it does not allow for recognition of protections.

— Dana_J.

It is not hard to understand why the big companies will not relocate to Oklahoma.

— kay_b.

(In reply to kay_b.)

No sidewalks, lack of adequate public transportation, so many remaining deficiencies in Oklahoma. Mostly rural, lots of interpersonal crime, lack of a core public social life.

OK though Stitt refused to even commit to sidewalks and sewer projects, a denial of development for the new 'battery factory' manufacturing offer by a major corporation. Giving the corporate welfare check deal made Stitt happy, but requiring the $200 million in small city development was too much for Stitt.

We have a glaring sold-out-to-business neo-conservative movement still trying to form in OK, hostile to humane and safe living conditions.

Until I arrived in Oklahoma,I was never attacked physically by crime violence. Once here I found no police follow-ups, no prosecutions by Republicans when crimes happen, and general creation of a scene supporting lifelong exclusion of many, causing an elbow to elbow crime standard. The solutions are education, safety resolutions for those excluded, and the allowance of work or money for those needing help such as work. MAPS helped some, but the job is less than half done in 2023.

— Dana_J.

DEI programs are an attempt at a workaround for existing civil rights laws. Shouldn’t exist in the first place.

— Terry_J.

(In response to Terry_J.) Amen. Let the whiners whine: DEI programs are racist, sexist, and bigoted.

— James_E.

Comments from Facebook

The hate flows strong in Oklahoma. Voters get what they vote for.

— Logan Hinch

A photo of a group of white men in the photo? I guess I'm comfortably set in Oklahoma. But how about Oklahomans who are not as old and white as I am?

— Jerry Stephens

This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Readers respond to Gov. Stitt's order to remove funding for college DEI

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