On my way to Target to buy some of the new remastered Beatles CDs (buy two, get a $5 gift card - whatta deal), I noticed work being done to convert the now-shuttered Sendik's to a Pick n' Save, and that the parking lot is being resurfaced - a welcome development after the buckling and heaving that occurred soon after the first impervious surface tried in vain to conquer a former rain-absorbing wetlands area.
The parking lot resurfacing must be a TOP SECRET project. See that guy in the vest and hard hat on the left side of the photo? He's walking all the way across the parking lot to ask me why I'm taking pictures.
I should have suggested they use a giant camouflaged tarp if they're concerned. Ferch's customers: Avert your eyes.
Missing the President's education address: Another blow to the concept of community
Yesterday the President of the United States gave a speech which he hoped would inspire the youth of America to seize their educational opportunities and aim high.
And who better to look to as an example? You could do much, much worse than to emulate the work ethic and accomplishments of Barack Obama. To have a person of his accomplishment speak to our nation’s youth as a group is precisely the sort of event that has the power to change lives for the better.
How wonderful to have as our president man with the background to credibly say the following:
That is powerful stuff to hear as a child, especially in the company of your peers - - as a community. It is deeply meaningful to look around yourself and see others like yourself absorbing the same advice from the man holding our nation's highest office.
For schools that took advantage of the opportunity, it was a great success.
Unfortunately, my children did not get to see the president's address at their school and share an uplifting community moment. Insane as it may seem (and it will certainly be labeled thus when recalled in future history texts), school officials in many districts were bullied by parents who take seriously the paycheck demagoguery of the likes of Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck.
They feared "indoctrination." Parents actually threatened to keep their kids at home if their school showed a speech about the importance of working hard at school.
They feared the idea of the president of the United States addressing the nation's children on the subject of doing well in school?
Par for the course, I'm afraid, in the ongoing disintegration of the concept of community in the post-Proposition 13, partisan-above-all world.
Could it be that the drumbeat of fear-mongering against a message extolling the importance of education and personal responsibility is rooted in the rising spirit of naked self-interest encouraged by the rantings of radio wingnuts? Combine the ongoing marginalization of school district funding as a result of "taxpayer revolts," haphazardly applied TIF districts that rob the educational coffers while enriching corporate swells, and paid-for-their-ideology conservatives who libel and smear school officials and without bothering to attend the meetings they describe, and you get a pretty "low achievement" atmosphere.
To be more specific about the instance above: Wisconsin state senator Mary Lazich's aide, Kevin Fischer, recently called Franklin School District business manager "a true crook" and "shyster" in a posting on his blog that discusses the local tax levy (a blog which is hosted by the parent company of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel). Fischer, who aspires to talk radio as a fill-in for WISN right wing talker Mark Belling, also has names for the citizens who bothered to attend the school board meeting and voted for an increase in the tax levy: "mindless robots"; "blind sheep, like lemmings"; and "the 25 potted plants at the annual meeting." He then tastefully invoked forced sodomy ("...we’re bending over quite a bit. Please tax us some more.")
Not exactly an education booster, but a true suburbanite in his fixated self-interest. I have no idea if Fischer attended or graduated from college (it took me months just to get him and the editor at FranklinNow to finally admit on his blog he is a paid aide to a Republican state senator), but I do know that Limbaugh, Hannity, and Beck do not have a single college degree among them: Limbaugh lasted a year in college and dropped out; Hannity dropped out of two universities; Beck was provided a special nontraditional program at Yale, where he took a single theology course and dropped out.
What does education -- and public investment in education -- mean to the likes of Limbaugh, Hannity, and Beck?
For that matter, what use do they have for communities, where people can share ideas without resorting to the FOX playsheet?
Consider as well the bar-lowering knee-slapper George W. Bush trotted out regularly while president:
And, at the Naval Academy:
This works if your father and grandfather "encourage" their political and business associates to rescue you regularly, of course; you tend not to "fail upward" without that safety net. That's a different kind of community -- one that not all of us have access to. And it's not an attitude I want my kids to adopt.
Given an opportunity to harness the inspirational story of our president and infuse a pro-education, pro-achievement ethos at the community level, we dropped the ball. "Watch him at home if you'd like," many were advised.
Not a proud moment for America - - but a quintessentially suburban moment, I submit.
Posted at 11:58 AM in Absurdity, Bad news, Commentary, Community Concepts, Current Affairs, Politics | Permalink | Comments (8) | TrackBack (0)
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