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Passages

(3,256 posts)
Thu Jul 10, 2025, 01:17 PM Jul 10

The Writer's Life : An Excerpt from American Scare: Florida's Hidden Cold War on Black and Queer Lives

Robert W. Fieseler is a journalist investigating marginalized groups and a scholar excavating forgotten histories. He was named 2019 Journalist of the Year by the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association and received a Pulitzer Traveling Fellowship. His first book, Tinderbox: The Untold Story of the Up Stairs Lounge Fire and the Rise of Gay Liberation, won seven awards, including an Edgar for Best Fact Crime. Fieseler's second book, American Scare: Florida's Hidden Cold War on Black and Queer Lives (Dutton), is a riveting examination of a state-sponsored campaign of surveillance and intimidation. The following excerpt is from the preface.

It's as if the forces of justice and karma break and break upon the shores of Florida. From the swords of colonizers to the whips of overseers to the dynamite of Klansmen to the attack dogs of police, the land has acted as a New World Eden for strivers with oppressive dreams. It's a place where power plays beyond ordinary rules and where some folks get away with everything.

SNIP
Bonnie Stark possessed something that shouldn't exist. She held the secret second set of the complete records of the Florida Legislative Investigation Committee (FLIC), also called the Johns Committee--a forgotten cabal of gerrymandered white legislators that went after Black and queer citizens in the mid‐twentieth century at the height of anti‐Communist hysteria. In the Johns Committee's path of destruction lay the freedoms of the masterminds of Florida desegregation, plus the lives and careers of more than thirty preeminent scholars, at least seventy‐one teachers, and as many as five hundred college students, whose persecution led all the way to the steps of the state supreme court and the U.S. Supreme Court. The crusades of these Florida men and their nearly decade‐long reign had all but vanished from the American story, the records sealed and then censored upon release. Names of victims were deleted by agents of the state who never had to say sorry. After all, why say sorry to a ghost?

The State of Florida, Governor Ron DeSantis's Florida, labored under the belief that it possessed the only surviving copies of FLIC records under lock and key. In a land of supposed sunshine laws, state authorities hid their histories in plain sight in the Soviet pillbox-like structure of the Florida State Archives, where the establishment could monitor who accessed them and obstruct the curious few with burdensome procedures and policies. "When you get power in Florida," state senator Lauren Book forewarned me, "you can use it to pick on anyone." In a Gulf borderland where administrations become regimes on a dime, people out of power tend to get hurt.
https://www.shelf-awareness.com/sar-issue.html?issue=1293#m26065

You must scroll down to read the excerpt, it doesn't rest on its own page....well worth your time.
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The Writer's Life : An Excerpt from American Scare: Florida's Hidden Cold War on Black and Queer Lives (Original Post) Passages Jul 10 OP
Such an important story TommyT139 Jul 10 #1
Agree, and we need more work like his but it will not be easy to get the data. Passages Jul 10 #2
K&R Solly Mack Jul 10 #3

TommyT139

(1,648 posts)
1. Such an important story
Thu Jul 10, 2025, 01:54 PM
Jul 10

Thanks for posting this article. This book is on my to-read list.

Activists these days may think we know our histories...but there's always more to uncover. Ironically, electronic data storage will make this much more difficult. The history in this book depends on the fact that someone had a "secret" hard copy of information. (Heck, I can barely access files from fifteen years ago, because most were stored on a weird external drive and I didn't have the ability to transfer them.)

The systems that were developed to oppress marginalized communities can be used to oppress any marginalized group. Those systems develop over time and become entrenched in the power structures that benefited from them. Florida's deep history of abuse of power has depended on keeping the targeted groups from allying together, but perhaps with DeathSantis promoting his "alligator" project will have been a step too far.

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