What Terri Missed

I was struck by the dates on the Tony Auth cartoon today:

I knew it had been 15 years since Terri Schiavo had been able to experience life as most of us would define it, so I thought to look back at what was happening then to try to remember those times…

February 25, 1990

Terri Schiavo suffers cardiac arrest, apparently caused by a potassium imbalance and leading to brain damage due to lack of oxygen.

Click extended copy to read what was going on back then…

Poltics/Government:

A month earlier, Noreiga surrendered in Panama.

Earlier that month, the Communist Party reliquinshed sole power in the USSR, and
Nelson Mandela was freed from prison in South Africa.

Six months later, Saddam Hussein invades Kuwait in the middle of the lone term of George W. Bush.

Later that year: Gorbachev assumed emergency powers (Nov. 17),  Margaret Thatcher resigned as British prime minister (Nov. 22); Lech Walesa won Poland’s runoff presidential election (Dec. 9) and  Haiti elected leftist priest as president in first democratic election (Dec. 17).

Most Americans had never heard of Bill Clinton, let alone Hillary, Gennifer Flowers, and Monica Lewinsky. Only political geeks (outside of Tennessee) probably knew that Al Gore existed.

In Space:

The Hubble Space Telescope was originally due to be launched in 1986, but the explosion

of the Space Shuttle Challenger delayed the launch until April of 1990. The twelve-ton telescope was equipped with a ninety-four inch mirror and was sent into orbit by the astronauts aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery. Within two months, a flaw in the mirror was discovered, placing in jeopardy the largest investment ever in astronomy. Three years later, the defect was finally repaired by specialists aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavor who restored the telescope to its full optical capabilities.

In computers:

Microsoft Corporation introduced their new operating system Windows 3.0 which featured a graphical user interface similar to the Macintosh platform from Apple. The PC version of the software was geared towards the novice home user and forever changed the world of personal computers. Some of the new features included the use of a mouse, which allowed the user to navigate the screen with a pointer and manipulate data with one hand.

Most Americans didn’t have email at that point. Or know about computer viruses, blogs, etc.

In TV:


America’s favorite dysfunctional cartoon family, The Simpsons debuted as a half hour-comedy on the FOX Network. Created by Matt Groening in 1987, the characters of Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa and Maggie were featured as thirty-second spots on The Tracey Ullman Show before going solo in 1990. Also, Seinfeld debuts on NBC.

Top Ten Shows that season:

1 Roseanne  

2 The Cosby Show

3 Cheers

4 A Different World

5 America’s Funniest Home Videos

6 The Golden Girls

7 60 Minutes

8 The Wonder Years

9 Empty Nest

10 NFL Monday Night Football


At The Movies:


A month later, the Academy Awards were given out:

Best Picture: Driving Miss Daisy

Best Actor: Daniel Day Lewis, My Left Foot

Best Actress: Jessica Tandy, Driving Miss Daisy

Best Supporting Actor:  Denzel Washington, Glory

Best Supporting Actress: Brenda Fricker, My Left Foot

Best Director: Oliver Stone, Born On the Fourth Of July

Best Song: Under the Sea, The Little Mermaid

Other movies with nominations or awards: When Harry Met Sally, Field of Dreams, Dead Poets Society, The Abyss, Parenthood, The Fabulous Baker Boys, Batman, Do the Right Thing.

The X rating is replaced by NC-17 (no children under 17).


In Music:


Commercially the big story was the multi-platinum breakthrough of Garth Brooks, who singlehandedly took country music mainstream with sensitive James Taylor smoothness and crowd-pleasing arena-rock antics. Hip hop had a great year, with Salt-N-Pepa’s feminist Black’s Magic the year’s best record, and LL Cool J and Public Enemy also releasing outstanding efforts. Meanwhile, R&B was a wasteland – Mariah Carey’s multiplatinum debut was the best of a bad lot.

Euro dance band Milli Vanilli admits to lip-synching hits such as “Girl You Know Its True,” and has its Grammy award revoked.

1990 was also the year Entertainment Weekly hit newsstands.

Sports:


A month or so later, UNLV with Larry Johnson,

would beat Duke for the National Championship of college basketball.

Cecil Fielder would lead the AL in HRs that season with 51, Ryne Sandberg the NL with 40.

Bob Welch would win 27 games for the A’s, Doug Drabek led the NL with 22 wins for the Pirates.

Nine no hitters would be thrown that season, including Nolan Ryan’s sixth.

Ken Griffeys Jr. and Sr. played together.

On April 20, 1990, Pete Rose, the all-time hit king, plead guilty to two felony counts of filing false income tax returns.

Barry Bonds had 84 career HRS, after slugging 19 in 1989. He’d hit 33 in 1990.

A month earlier, San Francisco Giants had defeated the Denver Broncos 55-10 in the Super Bowl.

Notable Deaths:


BF Skinner

Jim Henson

Greta Garbo

Sammy Davis Jr.

Announcing: Growing Up Red (Now Available!)

Surprise! After learning (with shock) that I was not telling a tall tale about going on Air America on Wednesday night, my publisher has “rushed” the publication of my first book, Growing Up Red: Outing Red America From the Inside.  It is available today, in hardcover, paperback and eBook formats.

To buy a copy, click to my website, http://www.growingupred.com and click to iUniverse from the front page.

Or buy directly at iUniverse:

Hardcover
($31.95)

Paperback
($21.95)

eBook
($6.00)
I will be taking out an ad banner on the Booman Tribune next week. But in the meantime, read about my book.

Growing up in suburban Milwaukee, Wisconsin, author Tim Schilke knew that his concerns about some generally accepted suburban truths were often left unanswered. He later learned that a carefully crafted Red-suburban version of reality isolated him from nearly everything real.

“Red truth” was a strange morph of God, Patriotism, and Republicans. When this uniquely Red-suburban mentality played a role in winning President George W. Bush a second term in late 2004, Schilke began an investigation into the driving factors behind his Red upbringing, which still persist and thrive today in suburban and rural America.

From carefully-guarded moral relativism, to the Army’s questionable recruiting techniques; from Major League Baseball’s tainted home run records, to the myth of the Ownership Society; Schilke maps these current events back into the perspective of his Red upbringing.

Why does Red-suburban middle-America consistently vote against its own interests in election after election? Growing Up Red attempts to show that, in Red America, it is simply the patriotic thing to do. In Red America, raw Faith trumps Knowledge. Carefully-tweaked irrational fear drives never-ending consumption. A Republican President marches arm-in-arm with God down Main Street every Fourth of July.

What happens when actual reality starts to bleed through the carefully-protected fences of suburbia? Find out in Growing Up Red.

Table of Contents
Introduction: An American Shade of Red

Chapter 1: Born on the 16th of January
   Flip Flopping Evolutionary Creationism
   God, Country and Republicans
   Tossing Babies from their Incubators
   “Give Peace a Chance”

Chapter 2: Growing up Red
   Tears over Jimmy
   Red House Values
   The Reagan Revolution

Chapter 3: Facing Red House Ghosts
   Moral Relativism in Suburban America
   The Intercessor’s Elephant Gun
   It’s Not Torture Unless We Say It’s Torture
   Sodomy of the Mind
   Real American Values
   The New Morality

Chapter 4: War and Country and The American Media
   Media Complicity
   Rescuing Jessica
   Deducing a Draft
   Saving Private Face
   Armstrong Williams and Pay for Play
   Sinclair Broadcasting: A Liberal Media Case Study
   Seeking Out Varied Opinions

Chapter 5: America On a Bumper
   Bumper Sticker Politics
   Safe from the Evildoers
   Who’s Your Daddy?
   Doomed to Repeat
   Educating to Comply
   You Have the Right to Go Back to Class
   Teaching Directly to the Tests
   Don’t Challenge Me, Please!

Chapter 6: The Reality-Based Chapter
   Marketing America’s Army
   Long Term Avoidance
   Hard-Coding Saddam to the PTSD
   Homers and Pills and Shots in the Ass
   Have Faith Young Man
   Finding Truth on a Turkey Farm
   The Fallback Reality
   Blame the Trial Lawyers

Chapter 7: The Dawn of Fear
   Pilfering Playboys
   Learning to Fear
   Sunday Drivers on a Beautiful Tuesday Morning
   No Really, You Will Never Forget
   Don’t Mess with Texas
   The War On Mud Huts Continues, News at 11
   Puppets and Their Pipelines

Chapter 8: Fear’s Agenda Takes Hold
   Waves of Fear
   Safe and Warm In the Suburbs
   Winning over the Security Moms
   Legislating Patriotism
   The Anti-Patriots Proliferate
   Affronting the Real Patriots
   You Don’t Need These Anymore Do You?
   Freedoms Lost – Patriot Act Case Studies
   Loyalty Oaths and the Republican National Convention
   The Next Generation of Patriots
   Sitting in the Family Section

Chapter 9:  Most of History’s Lessons are Never Learned
   Napping Through History Class
   The Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798
   Espionage and Sedition Acts of WWI
   Temporary Insanity for Temporary Safety
   Fascism in the United States?
   Looking Back at the Present Day

Chapter 10: On the Front Lines of Class Warfare
   Thriving in Middle America
   Tax Breaks for the Middle Class!
   Following in Reagan’s Footsteps
   George Bailey Democrats
   Off-shoring the American Dream
   Denouncing My “Fiscal Conservativism”
   My “Free Market” Coworkers
   The Nicest Buildings in Every Small Town

Epilogue: Bigger Than You Can Imagine
   The Castle on the Hill
   About the Election
   Letter to the Red States
   Blueness is a State of Mind
   America the Beautiful
   Notes and References

Sample from Chapter 1: “Born on the 16th of January”

On the evening of January 16, 1991, I heard hoots and hollers from a room down the hall. With each red flash from a Coalition for Peace bomb hitting Baghdad there was clapping and cheering, and boisterous “Oohs” and “Aahs”. This was shock and awe at work in the Heartland, even before it had been given the official moniker. Even now, most people remember where they watched the first night of bombing of Baghdad. It was certainly memorable. Even the news anchors on the major networks were simply giddy – beside themselves with glee.

    The guys in the room down the hall actually had the lights turned off and the sound cranked up through the stereo speakers, just like they had watched the movie “Terminator” the night before. Each bomb flash lit up the walls with reddish orange colors, and the colors flickered in and out like a demented Fourth of July fireworks show.

    It was 1991, and I was just eighteen years old. I had really never spoken out against (or for) anything in my life, because I never wanted to cause any trouble. It was at that precise moment that I realized I was different from the other guys in the room, the others on the floor, and most others in the dormitory. Instead of cheering, I was literally overcome by rage against the country for that I had waved the flag with so much pride for my first eighteen years of life. For the first time in my life, I was questioning my country, and it was a truly horrible feeling for a Red-tinted kid. It was as though I had grabbed my own heart, torn it out, and it was beating right there in my hand in front of me.

    I walked into the room. There were at least eight guys sitting and standing, crowded around the television, still making a ruckus. I did not even like these fucking guys. I mean, what kind of sick bastards would cheer for war and death? I was nothing like these guys, and I could not wait to prove it. At that moment I instinctively said the first negative thing I ever said about my country.

    “You know, there are innocent people dying,” I said. “And I’m not really sure why the hell we are there anyway. I don’t think it’s very cool to be cheering right now.”

    I was shaking uncontrollably as I said it. I hated saying it. It was the proudest and yet the most miserable moment of my life. What had I just done? Would God strike me down? The Redness oozed out of me and onto the carpet, where it just lay there, rotting and stinking.

    In the summer of 1990, I had seen the movie version of Ron Kovac’s story, called Born on the Fourth of July. I was a train wreck after watching that movie, which portrayed life in America for a soldier returning from Vietnam. Like most Red house kids in the 1980s, my previous exposure to war was entirely from history books. In the official version, there were heroes and there were evildoers. The school book accounts contained no gray areas. The official factual version did not mention soldiers returning from war with catheters and flashbacks, and missing limbs. This event now unfolding in Iraq was real. It was not on the screen and not on the pages. The bombs were falling on real buildings, real people were dying, and there I was with my racing heart in my hand.

    The silence in the room was palpable as the bombs continued to fall and the walls continued to flicker red and orange. After a long uncomfortable silence, one of the guys in the room stood up, picked me up by my shirt, and threw me up against the wall. He held me up there, our faces bathed in reddish orange light, for at least thirty seconds. He was breathing heavily, the anger and testosterone and Christian values dripping in and out with each breath. I swear I could hear his thoughts. “God and country and Republicans, you Liberal Fuck. God and country and Republicans, you Liberal Fuck. Did you forget to pray for our troops?” I thought he was going to kill me.

    Finally he spoke. “You are going to support your country and the troops that are over there, or you are going to leave this room.” He put me down, still breathing venomously. A few others came and grabbed him and pulled him back away from me. They were staring at me like I had leprosy. I could swear that I saw fear in their faces.

    On that winter evening in 1991, I left the room with my tail between my legs. And I regret it to this day. If I had it to do over again, I would fight back – until I had no fight left in me. My brain was finally awake to the reality of war, and there was no turning back.

Thanks for your help!

(This will be my last diary promoting this book.  Sorry for the shameless advertising.)

Religious Charities in 10 States Get $1B

AP via Yahoo!:

Religious charities in 10 states got 40 percent of the $2 billion in taxpayer money available to groups deemed ‘faith-based’ by the White House in 2004, according to figures the White House provided Thursday to The Associated Press.

That’s only slightly more than the money awarded under President Bush’s initiative to international groups, which snared a third of the total funding. Organizations in the other 40 states and three U.S. territories shared the remaining funds.

I’ve got the day job to contend with at the moment, but I’ll try to track down some of the exact groups receiving this money. I’m predicting more than one surprise in there.

Mind. Blown.

I’ve been mostly avoiding the cable news circus for the last couple of weeks. But, yesterday evening I was folding laundry and turned on the Abrams Report on MSNBS. In between showing a CAT scan of Schiavo’s brain that looked like a Rorschach ink blot fringed by a thin line of gray matter — while allowing some idiot to suggest she retained higher brain functions — the show cut away to a memorial service in Florida. And there was Randall Terry playing keyboard and singing a song he wrote about God, The Father, caressing him and running his fingers thru his hair. I thought, satire is dead, just before my mind disassociated from my body slightly and hovered over its left shoulder.

Hardball passed in a blur as I waited for Keith Olbermann to come on and restore my connection to reality. Now I admit that I was literally NOT in my right mind but it seemed that Countdown was seriously whacked last night and I need some feedback from others who saw the show. I mean, did Keith, or did he not, swerve back and forth between Schiavo and the Pope drawing connections between diverse dots? I mean, was Keith, or was he not, borderline unhinged last night? And why was he so angry? I couldn’t concentrate, couldn’t focus on his position, couldn’t get Randall Terry’s erotic hymn to god out of my mind long enough to figure out what the heck was wrong with Keith.

Help me out, folks.

Strange juxtaposition

A strange juxtaposition yesterday from dubya, but then again, we shouldn’t be surprised anymore.

For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
March 31, 2005

President Discusses Schiavo, WMD Commission Report
Room 450
Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building
11:31 A.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT: Today millions of Americans are saddened by the death of Terri Schiavo. Laura and I extend our condolences to Terri Schiavo’s families. I appreciate the example of grace and dignity they have displayed at a difficult time. I urge all those who honor Terri Schiavo to continue to work to build a culture of life, where all Americans are welcomed and valued and protected, especially those who live at the mercy of others. The essence of civilization is that the strong have a duty to protect the weak. In cases where there are serious doubts and questions, the presumption should be in the favor of life.

The most solemn duty of the American President is to protect the American people. Since September the 11th, 2001, we’ve taken bold and vigorous steps to prevent further attacks and overcome emerging threats. We face a new and different kind of enemy. The threats today are unprecedented. The lives of our citizens are at stake. To protect them, we need the best intelligence possible, and we must stay ahead of constantly changing intelligence challenges….

….To win the war on terror, we will correct what needs to be fixed, and build on what the commission calls solid intelligence successes. These include the uncovering of Libya’s nuclear and missile programs. In Pakistan, our intelligence helped expose and shut down the world’s most dangerous nuclear proliferation network. Where we have had success, the commission reports we have seen innovative collection techniques and a fusion of interagency intelligence capabilities. We must work to replicate these successes in other areas.

The men and women of our intelligence community work hard. And the sacrifices they have made have helped protect America, and our nation is grateful for their hard work. The work they’re doing is critical. We need to prevent terrorists from getting their hands on the weapons of mass murder they would like to use against our citizens.

The work of our intelligence community is extremely difficult work. Every day, dangerous regimes are working to prevent us from uncovering their programs and their possible relationships with terrorists. And the work our intelligence men and women do is, by nature, secret, which is why the American people never hear about many of their successes. I’m proud of the efforts of our intelligence workers and I’m proud of their commitment to the security of our country, and the American people should be proud, too.

And that’s why this report is important. It will enable these fine men and women to do their jobs in better fashion, to be able to more likely accomplish their mission, which is to protect the American people, and that’s why I’m grateful to the commission for this hard work….

President Discusses Schiavo, WMD Commission Report

It is hard work. Or, as the inimitable Juan Cole put it:

….It is like a parody of himself. He stresses that intelligence work is a) hard and b) secret.

That is supposed to make it all right that we sent a high-tech army into a poor, weak country and turned it into a failed state, killing 40,000 innocent Iraqis and suffering over 1500 coalition troops dead and over 10,000 US troops wounded, many maimed for life, and spending $300 billion on it? For no reason? When the poor weak state did not in fact have the weapons of mass destruction that Bush and Cheney and Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz insisted it had? When they bullied anyone who questioned their evidence for all this, and got their billionnaire buddies who own the media to have their anchors and editorialists also bully any dissidents?

Because intelligence work is hard and secret?

How does Bush square all the violence he has unleashed in the world with his praise of “life?” What is the link between war-mongering and being “pro-life?”….

We’ll never get that answer from dubya, his administration, or our incompetent army of media enablers.

Saving Public Education – Saving Democracy

READERS:  —  I write most often on issues of education because I believe it is ground zero of the political battles for the future of this country.  Recently I encountered elsewhere a statement which says this more clearly than anything I have written.  I have received the permission of the authors, E. Wayne Ross, Kathleen Kesson, David Gabbard, Sandra Mathison, & Kevin D. Vinson, to distribute their statement more widely.

PLEASE take the time to read and consider this.  OF EQUAL IMPORTANCE I ask that you RECOMMEND this diary to keep it more visible for others to see.  I think it is that important.

Saving Public Education – Saving Democracy

E. Wayne Ross, Kathleen Kesson, David Gabbard, Sandra Mathison, & Kevin D. Vinson

The Washington Post’s recent mea culpa over its participation in the broader media’s complicity in the Bush administration’s reckless revival of naked imperialism in Iraq belies the fact that investigative journalism in the mainstream press died  in the 1970s.  The corporatization of the media that reduced “reporting” to “regurgitating” the official statements of politicians and their trained handlers, of course, began much earlier.  While Robert Greenwald’s Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch’s War on Journalism reveals the extremes to which private and state power will go in colluding to control the public mind, many of us on the left have always been aware of the corporate  media’s propaganda role in advancing the interests of the state and private power.

That elements of the broader public have grown more sensitized to these issues should not surprise us, given just how brazenly and consistently the Bush administration has lied.  Even after Bush declared “mission accomplished” in his flight suit on board the USS Abraham Lincoln, when Paul Wolfowitz smugly told Vanity Fair that  the administration had used Weapons of Mass Destruction as the “bureaucratic reason” for invading Iraq, the mainstream media scarcely reported his statement.  Understanding the standards of American journalism, Washington BBC correspondent Ian Pannell correctly predicted that Wolfowitz’s remarks would not likely have any political consequences in the US.  

The public, of course, has good reasons to be concerned about the press and the  role it plays in a democratic society.  Though the enforced, two-party system of “representation” goes a long way toward making democracy meaningless, access to information and ideas remains crucial to the public’s capacity to organize and resist. The internet, along with the boost it has given to a resurgent independent media, has greatly expanded that access.  Hence, the level of popular dissidence may be greater now than at any other time in US history.  The growing influence of the  internet and independent media may also be responsible for what limited questioning of official power we’ve seen in the mainstream news  rrganizations.

As Thomas Jefferson observed, the health of democracy depends on an educated and informed citizenry.  While the internet and independent media sources deserve much credit for helping to mobilize significant levels of organized popular protest in recent years, we should recognize that these outlets are essentially reactive.  That is, they respond to issues and events in the immediate present.  In this regard, they differ little from the mainstream media or even their right-wing counterparts. There is, however, an institution that plays a more formative role in shaping the public mind – our system of public schools.  Though children today grow-up in a  media-saturated world, we should not underestimate the potential of schools to help young people grow into adulthood with a discerning mind that will enable them to more critically evaluate the messages they receive from whatever news outlet.  And yet, with so much media attention focused on the horrors of the Bush administration’s “war on terror” and the surrounding scandals, the press – including  progressive groups – has virtually ignored how the state and private power have colluded over the past twenty years to strip public schools of their democratizing potential.  In the twenty-one years since the Reagan administration’s National Commission for Excellence in Education released A Nation At Risk, no high-minded bastion of journalist integrity in the mainstream press has recanted its parroting reportage of the Commission’s claims.  Numerous books and professional articles have appeared in the interim to discredit those claims, but none of them have received any serious or sustained  attention from the media.  Neither has the media reported the miserable failure of educational privatization pioneers such as  Christopher Whittle (CEO of the Edison Project) to rescue troubled schools through the wondrous powers of the business model of management.  

The strongly bi-partisan No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) has similarly received no scrutiny that would alert the public to its insidious policy implications.  In the first place, this legislation set ridiculously high standards that simply defied common sense.  NCLB requires schools and teachers to insure that all students perform at or above grade level within a three year-period.  This outrageous requirement includes children with learning disabilities and behavioral disorders no matter how profound.  By definition, then – getting these kids to perform at grade level, NCLB holds teachers accountable for doing what medical science has never accomplished; namely, curing mental retardation.  

NCLB also holds teachers accountable for bringing the performance of children from the most poverty-stricken homes up to grade level.  While Rod Paige, Bush’s homebred (former superintendent of Houston’s public schools) Secretary of Education, chastises anyone who dares to criticize these “high expectations” and “rigorous standards” as “racists,” one must pause to wonder when policy makers discovered their new faith in the remedial powers of schools.  After all, the prison industry has long used third-grade reading scores to project how many new cells they will have to construct over the next twenty-year period.

While the policies of NCLB never receive any attention in the press, there has been some considerable recent outcry by Democrats and others because of the Bush administration’s refusal to fund this legislation at its originally planned levels.  No one stops; however, to examine the policies themselves, or to listen to teachers’ complaints concerning how this high-stakes-testing model of school/teacher accountability pressures teachers to adopt the most intellectually stultifying (drill and kill) teaching methods that remove the joy of teaching from them and any potential joy of learning from their students.

Beyond the fact, as revealed for us by Michael Moore’s treatment of the Patriot Act in Fahrenheit 9-11, that the vast majority of our representatives in Congress

never bother reading the legislation that they sign into law (What does this imply in terms of accountability?), the truth about NCLB goes beyond any ineptitude on the part of its architects. NCLB sets impossible standards for a reason. Public  access to institutions of learning helps promote the levels of critical civic activism witnessed during the 1960s and 70s that challenged the power of the state and the corporations that it primarily serves. The current reform environment creates conditions where public schools can only fail, thus providing “statistical evidence” for an alleged need to turn education over to private companies in the name of “freedom of choice.” In combination with the growing corporate monopolization of the media, these reforms are part of a longer-range plan to consolidate private power’s control over the total information system, thus eliminating avenues for the articulation of honest inquiry and dissent. In the end, as evidenced by Secretary of Education Rod Paige’s recent characterization of the National Education Association, anyone who contests state-corporatism will be labeled a “terrorist” or, in more Orwellian terms, a “thought-criminal.”

While the progressive press and media are perfectly legitimate in pushing their  corporate counterparts for greater integrity in their coverage of issues and events, we believe that progressive news and cultural organizations of all varieties owe the public an even greater responsibility to report on the corporate and state assault to privatize public education.  We ground this belief in recognition of one very important distinction between the corporate-owned media that progressives have grown so fond of critiquing and public schools.  While both the media and schools function as major institutions in the dissemination of knowledge, information, and ideas, the mainstream media will continue to be privately owned and operated.  Therefore, the public will always find it extremely difficult, if not impossible, to influence their editorial policies.  Public schools, on the other hand, are public.  That  is, insofar as they continue to be operated under public control, the public can wield considerably more influence over the policies that impact the educational  practices within public education than it can ever hope to wield over the corporate media.   This, in our view, offers the best explanation for the growing movement to privatize schools.  Privatization would effectively transfer the control of schools from public hands to corporate hands.

We want to believe that public schools serve us, the public, “We, the people.” We want to believe that schools strengthen our democracy, our ability to meaningfully participate in the decision-making processes that impact our communities and our lives. Educational resources need to be directed towards increasing people’s awareness of the relevant facts about their lives, and to increase people’s abilities to act upon these facts in their own true interests.  For the past twenty years, however, significant efforts have been made to resurrect a statist view of schools that treats teachers as mere appendages to the machinery of the state and seeks to hold them accountable to serving the interests of state and corporate power. Linked as it  is to the interests of private wealth, this view defines children’s value in life as human resources and future consumers.  In order to combat this movement, progressive media outlets must begin doing more to alert the public to the disastrous consequences it holds for our schools, our children, and our democracy.  Progressives everywhere must begin doing more to demand that our institutions of public education foster critical citizenship skills to advance a more viable and vibrant democratic society.  They must push for schools to become organized around preparing young people for active, democratic citizenship through engagement with real-world issues, problem-solving, and critical thinking, and through active participation in civic and political processes. Informed citizenship in a broad-based, grassroots democracy must be based on principles of cooperation with others, non-violent conflict resolution, dialogue, inquiry and rational debate, environmental activism, and the preservation and expansion of human rights. These skills, capacities, and dispositions need to be taught and practiced in our nation’s schools.

Progressives must also push harder to ensure that all schools are funded equally and fully, eliminating the dependence on private corporate funds and on the property tax, which creates a two-tiered educational system by distributing educational monies inequitably. Promoting greater equality in educational opportunity must also include demands for universal pre-k and tuition-free higher education for all qualified students in state universities. The past two decades have witnessed the increasing involvement of corporations in education in terms of supplementing public spending in exchange for school-based marketing (including advertising space in schools and textbooks, junk fast food and vending machines, and commercial-laden “free” TV). We believe that students should not be thought of as a potential market or as consumers, but as future citizens. We must call for the elimination of advertising in schools and curricula and of the marketing of unhealthy products on school grounds.

As suggested above, the current system uses “carrots and sticks” to coerce compliance with an alienating system of schooling aimed at inducing conformity among teachers and students through high stakes testing and accountability. This system alienates teachers from their work by stripping it of all creative endeavor and  reduces it to following scripted lesson plans. We believe that teaching is a matter of the heart, that place where intellect meets up with emotion and spirit in constant dialogue with the world around us. Advancing a more democratic vision of education requires us to work toward the elimination of high stakes standardized tests, and the institution of more fair, equitable, and meaningful systems of  accountability and assessment of both students and schools.

The current system also alienates students by stripping learning from its engagement with the world in all of its complexity. It reduces learning to test preparation as part of a larger rat race where students are situated within a larger economic competition for dwindling numbers of jobs. We believe that excellence needs to be defined in terms of teachers’ abilities to inspire children to engage the world, for it is through such critical engagement that true learning (as opposed to rote memorization) actually occurs. Students living in the 21st century are going to  have to deal with a host of problems created by their predecessors: global warming and other ecological disasters, global  conflicts, human rights abuses, loss of civil liberties, etc. The curriculum needs to address what students need to know and be able to do in the 21st century to tackle these problems- and it needs to be relevant to students’ current interests and concerns.

Progressives must also work diligently to enlist broader and deeper levels of public support for teachers.  Teachers matter. Teaching is a public act that bears directly on our collective future.  A broader movement in support of democratic and egalitarian reforms in education must include a commitment to ensure that teachers  begin receiving salaries commensurate with other professions.  At the same time, we must restore and expand teachers’ control, in collaboration with students and communities, over decision-making about issues of curriculum and instruction in the classroom – no more scripted teaching, no more mandated outcomes, no more “teacher-proof” curricula. Local control of education rests at the heart of democracy; state and nationally mandated curriculum and assessment are a prescription for totalitarianism.

Children of immigrants make up approximately 20 percent of the children in the United States, bringing linguistic and cultural differences to many classrooms. Added to this are 2.4 million children who speak a language other than English at home. Those of us struggling to defend the public’s welfare in public schools need the support of the wider progressive movement to ensure that the learning needs of English language learners are met through caring, multicultural, multi-lingual education.  Citizens in a pluralistic democracy, after all, need to value difference and interact with people of differing abilities, orientations, ethnicities, cultures, and dispositions. Our nation as a whole needs to discard outmoded notions of a hypothetical norm,  and either describe ALL students as different, or none of them.  All classrooms  should be inclusive, meeting the needs of all students, together, in a way that  is just, caring, challenging, and meaningful.

Because they do not increase the market value of children, arts programs have never been funded at sufficient levels.  Under pressure to increase student achievement rates (test scores), school districts in many areas of the country have eliminated art and music classes from their curricula to give students more time to spend preparing for standardized tests.  Progressive elements in our society have always supported these programs. We must, however, do more in order to reverse these economically-driven assaults on the arts in schools, hopefully expanding students’ opportunities to  learn and excel in the fine and performing arts, physical education and sports,  and extra-curricular clubs and activities, in order to develop the skills of interaction and responsibility necessary for participation in a robust civil society.

In the end, whether the savage inequalities of neoliberalism–which define current social and national relations as well as approaches to school reform– will be overcome depends on how people organize, respond, learn, and teach in schools.  With the  help of the progressive press and other media outlets, those engaged in the larger struggle for social, political, and environmental justice can, and must, renew their commitment to educational justice and a democratic vision to guide the functioning of our nation’s schools. Concurrently, teachers and educational leaders need to link their own interests in the improvement of teaching and learning to a broad-based movement for social, political, and economic justice, and work together for the  democratic renewal of public life and public education in America.  Collectively, we must make these commitments and act upon them soon, while public control still exists over the public schools.  That control will not last unless we do.

E. Wayne Ross (University of British Columbia), Kathleen Kesson (Long Island University), David Gabbard (East Carolina University), Sandra Mathison (University of British Columbia), and Kevin D, Vinson (University of Arizona) are co-editors of Defending Public Schools (published by Praeger).

NOTE  the authors have requested that any distribution of the above statement include the final paragraph which identifies their editorial role for that one work

The Schiavo fracas was good news for the world

This came to me as a comment from a less newsjunky friend of mine, who basically said – “hey, Bush has not done anything crazy lately”.

I then went on to explain that this was not really true, as the Schiavo story clearly reached pretty high levels of craziness, despite the high standards we’ve grown accustomed to from the Bush administration. But, for once, the craziness was directed internally and not towards the hapless outside world.

Maybe it’s a good thing…

If you read what little has been written in the European press about the Schiavo case, it is described as a “normal” heart-wrenching right-to-die story, i.e. it is about a difficult medical/ethical decision and a torn family, some hotly debated legal decisions, and some attempts at political posturing around it.

A good example is this BBC story: Anger growing over Schiavo death

A French story can be found here: L’Américaine Terri Schiavo est morte

So, it has been mentioned, and obviously the interventions by Congress and Bush have been noted, and the strong mobilisation of the religious conservatives.

But a lot of that is fairly reminiscent of the debates that take place once in a while in our countries when a tragic case comes to light, with superficially similar roles: someone in the family wanting to pull the plug, the legal battles that go with it, debate about what the doctors may or may not do, religious authorities weighing in, conservative groups opposing any “right to die” and so forth (The most recent debate in France was around the case of Vincent Humbert, a young man terribly injured in an accident and who requested himself the right to die. It’s not exactly the same situation as for Schiavo, but it broaches similar themes). However, these debates never triggered 24/7 coverage, death threats or middle-of-the-night bills.

The coverage of the Schiavo case by European media, similarly, does not reflect the difference in intensity in the debate. De Lay is simply presented as a Majority Leader, with little background on his other current travails; there is little mention made of the blanket coverage of the story in the US. Superficially, it appears as a “normal” debate on a tough issue, and it gets some coverage but that’s it.

What we do notice is that, in the meantime, there is less belligerant talk about Iran, North Korea, Venezuela or elsewhere.

So, maybe, as a suggestion to you guys: keep the wingnuts busy with domestic social issues, it will help keep the world a little bit safer…