Category Archives: indiana
Bennett’s grade-rigging lifted all charter schools
Ash Cake and Other Slave Dishes
Michael Twitty has this up on some of the food the slaves use to prepare. When I think of the poor folk now, really, it’s not that far removed. One can only do so much with food stamps, and as I’ve posted before, if you’re on a Celiac diet or try to eat organic/non-processed food, it is pretty damn difficult to stay in budget.
From my experience, I do know that all the stuff that they tell you is bad (which is wrong, btw), such as bacon, fatty pieces of meat, and the like, sure do make the cheap meat and vegetables taste oh-so-much better. There were times when I walked through the building in FW, the aromas coming from apartments was soo good, I thought there should be some rule that if you make something that smells that good, you should have to share it with the rest of the building. Heh.
I have to hand it to African American folk–there were some pretty darn good cooks in my building. They used what little they had to make tasty meals.
And I learned something today–that there wasn’t segregation with the whites on plantations. That is heartwarming to hear. Good for them for not lumping all whites together and rejecting those that came around. Poor folk is poor folk, no matter. It’s too bad that after the commonality of being poor is no longer there, that folks no longer feel that community togetherness. Why?
Boehner lies and investments in Tar Sands companies
(hat tip to fatster at FDL)
John Boehner, while constantly saying “The American people want, need, demand…” while ignoring what the American people want, need, and demand….has promoted the XL pipeline…while investing in the companies tied to it.
I’m just shocked, shocked, I tell you, that a politician who stands to benefit financially from legislation is…promoting that legislation. /snark
Where have all the good ones gone that did what was right for the country and not for their bank accounts…?
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Also from fatster~~
Related to this is a heartwarming story of a small group of folks protesting the Enbridge pipeline….unfortunately, they’re from Michigan…that will be the day when Hoosiers start protesting Enbridge…
I can’t believe they were charged with felonies. Seriously? Like a commenter said on the website, we should be concerned about the crackdown on public assemblies….you know, that First Amendment thingy?
From the comments:
Enbridge is being disingenuous. No one has come to harm from these non-violent protests. On the other hand, from the Athabasca Chippewa cancer rates to the impacts of climate change, many will be harmed if the tar sands industry achieves its goal of tripling production by 2030. Just imagine Bangladesh flooded by rising sees. That’s millions of refugees in that region alone. We should be working to stop changing the climate. We should have global peak emissions by 2020 then steadily decline. Tripling tar sands production is inconsistent with that goal. These protesters are the modern equivalent of Rosa Parks, who incidentally was hated by conservatives also. As FDR said “I welcome their hatred.” It’s a sign you’re doing something right. Go M-CATS.
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I have to admit a chuckle at the enthusiastic guy commenting on how beautiful state Michigan is…which it is…but then the conservative joker does have a point about him never being in poor Detroit, the dumping ground of the Kochs and anyone else who feels like it. But let’s say that MOST of Michigan is quite beautiful… NOT the parts that conservatives and DINO’s (Democrats in Name Only) have polluted.
It’s always interesting to me that these polluters will trash one area, and then move to a non-polluted area. It should be a rule somewhere that if you pollute an area, you must live in that area for the rest of your life…
…not only that, but your children and grandchildren must live in that area, too. Seems fair, eh?
The Uniparty
One of the commenters here called the absence of real oppositional parties the “Uniparty”. …yep.
See…the Dems really believe in the Fourth Amendment and the rights of the American public to be let alone…
bwhahahahaha *snort* bwahahahaha…
Don’t blame me. I voted for Ralph Nader in 2000. The first time in all the years that I had been voting that I wrote a candidate’s name on the ballet. Of course, now Indiana has changed to the computerized system so a voter wouldn’t be able to just write in a candidate. Supposedly, they have paper ballots at each voting station, but this voter was not told there were paper ballots available, not even when I voted early, nor were there any paper ballots visible so that one could ask for it.
They changed the law so that one had to have 2% of the general votes cast for the Secretary of State in the previous election. Note the deadlines were repeatedly pushed back in order to diminish the ability to gather signatures during summer events where crowds gather…
I found this page absolutely fascinating. I had no idea that we had other candidates to choose from, as the write in candidates were not on the electronic ballot. And being without access to media (no TV antenna in the community room at the time), nor did I have more than an hour per time from the library’s internet computers…so information was limited, as are most poor. And I would venture a guess that even with cable TV, many middle class were also ignorant of this–funny how the nooz just doesn’t seem to get around to covering important issues like this….they’d rather scare you into getting a vaccine that will likely cause as much harm to your body as any good or tell you not to take Vitamin E because some bogus *study* says it’s bad for you…pfft.
President Obama’s speech
Diane Ravitch has this up on the President’s “I could have been Trayvon” speech yesterday. Lots of passion on both sides about his thoughts. Of course, educators are up in arms that he does not address education in raising up poor black boys (and girls), and that the destruction of public schools going on will do more damage than good.
I, myself, am a jumble of feelings about it.
I understand the educator’s feelings. I also know that just because someone is better educated, doesn’t necessarily mean they will not resort to violence to get their way. Look at all the world leaders who are educated and still promote and advocate violence….
I also understand, as best I can as a white woman, President Obama’s passionate response. He has been the target of racial profiling. He knows what Trayvon Martin was experiencing in those moments of being followed by George Zimmerman. He was innocently walking home, doing nothing wrong….and yet, here was this guy, who for all Trayvon knew, was going to rob him.
But I would argue with President Obama’s assumption that white folks don’t know what it’s like to be profiled….as my recent experience in FW has proven. It’s not criminal profiling, but the effect is still the same.
Racism, by either side, is wrong. Like I said, I felt hopeless. Despair. I had treated folks as I wish to be treated. I was respectful to the elders, addressing them as “Miss” or “Mr.”, as I would my white elders. If I didn’t particularly care for someone, I wasn’t disrespectful…but I also didn’t have anything to do with them. It had nothing to do with the color of their skin, but everything to do with their personality.
You know, someone gave me some advice once that resonates here–I had been the subject of bullying after my divorce. The viciousness is really something someone has to experience in order to understand it. After being a victim, you tend to take on the victim persona and see yourself in that light. You begin to believe what others say about you.
The advice I was given was this: There is no doubt that you were victimized. But you need to break away from the victim mindset.
In other words: don’t let others define who you are. Only you get to do that. Don’t let others’ actions define your actions–rise above it and be the person you wish to be, not the person they are trying to make you out to be.
Again,speaking as a white woman, it seems to me that black folks have adopted the victim mindset and sometimes think people are being racist when a) they’re just ignorant ; or b) they don’t like someone not because they’re black, but because they’re being a jerk.
I hope this makes some sense–like I said, I’m a jumble of emotions this morning. Why is it so hard for us to cut each other some slack and try to see each other’s point of view and try to find some common ground?
A post script
A post script to this blog…what I meant when I referred to Katrina is that I told them I thought the George W. Bush administrations’ slow response to the emergency was racist. It was September, 2005, so it was only a month after the storm hit, but it was apparent to me. What really shocked me was how only the one black woman agreed with me, again, subtly, but she saw it, too. This why I probably began to think that Daniels was dismantling or weakening the Civil Rights Commission and blurted that out.
When I think about that interview and how I missed such a fabulous opportunity–a life changer- because it would have been a career I would have enjoyed with its daily change, using the creative along with the analytical, and fighting for the underdog—and all the misery that mercury has caused me, I want to cry in despair. This poison has taken so much more than can be neasured…
I give myself 24 hours to feel sorry for myself, and then move on…
Obama and the Education Fiasco?
One of the commenters on Diane Ravitch’s site has this link up . An excellent timeline on what has been going on behind the scenes with *cough* education reform.
I really, really, hope that Barack Obama has changed his mind regarding this–as Diane Ravitch did when she came to realize that education reform was actually turning schools into for-profit centers.
From the link:
“When teachers are given powerful opportunities for career advancement, ongoing professional growth and recognition for outstanding achievement, we see increased student achievement in TAP schools,” Lowell Milken said in a December 2008 press release. “Chicago TAP schools are off to a strong start in continuing efforts to achieve these goals.”
Milken, unmentioned in most accounts, has a vested financial interest in school reform efforts and “fixing failing schools.”
That’s because Milken is a major investor in K12 Inc., a corporation traded on Wall Street that sells online schooling and curriculum to state and local governments. Milken invested $10 million in K12 Inc. in 2000, a stake that is now worth over $125 million, according to a July 2008 article in Forbes.
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Milken is full of it, to put it bluntly. Nobody who knows anything about teachers and education would ever make such an idiotic statement. Most teachers are in the profession because they want to see children learn, NOT because they want “career advancement”. Their professional growth comes with experience….there is no substitute for that and no amount of money can magically *poof* experience.
Truly, to say that a student’s achievement is the teacher’s achievement is, in my view, taking away from the student’s hard work. A good teacher is only part of the student-parent-teacher equation. ALL of them play an important role in how well the student does.
When I first went to college, I wanted to be a teacher. When I discussed this with my college advisor, she discouraged me from going that route–she said the jobs wouldn’t be there. I wonder what she knew and when she knew it?? Anyway, I decided to go into Communications so that I could make documentaries and still somewhat “teach”.
However, when I was on what was supposed to be a progressive jobs website, there was Teach for America. I applied, writing in my application how I had helped my daughter overcome dyslexia and learn to read. I wanted to teach in inner city schools, I told them, so I could help the little ones with such learning hurdles.
I was turned down flat. Not even an interview.
Knowing what I know now, it is obvious they were never interested in educating kids. They didn’t want folks who were passionate and truly wanted to help kids learn.
When you couple this with the military in schools, it’s truly scary, indeed, on what is happening to our schools. God help us.
More on Fort Wayne Vouchers
Karen Francisco, of the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, made a comment on Diane Ravitch’s blog that was outstanding.
It pretty much outlines what these creeps are getting away with–robbing the public schools of funds while laughing all the way to the bank:
Bakke’s company to operate two underperforming schools. In addition, an out-of-state real estate investment trust — EPT Properties — will continue to collect about $1 million a year for the charter school lease.
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Indiana Charters: Show me the money
Diane Ravitch has a blog up on the Indiana Charter schools playing the shell game of accountability. Now you see it, now you don’t…well, you never really did see accountability…
The financial profits aspect turns my stomach to no end…
And Gates Foundation being involved….well, there’s a red flag if there ever were a red flag. My blogs on Gates here and here and here and here, on the Gates Foundation and Brookings Institute that tossed Diane Ravitch aside when she began to question what was happening to public education.
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