Quote
Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?
#19781
Posted 2022-May-27, 07:51
#19782
Posted 2022-May-27, 08:39
#19783
Posted 2022-May-27, 14:42
Next, I have read the Matt Yglesias articles Y posted. It will take some thought before I can say much, but I favor testing for the moment I'll say: I favor testing, but it can be overdone, both by having too many tests and by putting too much emphasis on the tests. But I do favor tests.
Winston's comment "I am still angry about Critical Math Theory, that made kids like me who are poor at math feel guilty, being taught in public schools" was meant, at least partially, in humor. But the best humor is related to some truth. I have been having some vision issues. Today I had a 45-minute eye exam, very thorough, using advanced technology. He listened to my concerns and addressed them. It was all very useful. I have no idea whether he can solve two linear equations in two unknowns. Or, going back to my youth, I read Scientific American as a youngster, my father read Popular Mechanics, there are a lot of people out there doing very useful work who would side with my father on their choice of magazines. I also read Hot Rod. This all might relate to the Yglesias comments.
#19784
Posted 2022-May-27, 16:19
kenberg, on 2022-May-27, 06:34, said:
I just don't understand this attitude. Do you have no intellectual curiosity at all at understanding the structural forces shaping the society you live in?
There is a place and time for both - for understanding how we got where we are, and for making well-tested proposals for effective scaleable implementable and verifiable change.
#19785
Posted 2022-May-27, 18:08
So I listened to podcasts for the first time. One of them was the NY Times 1619 Project. I never did hear all of it, which I suspect is my loss. What I did hear was enough to shatter some illusions.
Every society with which I’m familiar (which isn’t many in terms of personal experience but I’m reasonably well read for a layperson) teaches its children myths in addition to and often instead of actual history. I certainly grew up with a very, very different understanding of the British Empire than I now have! I remember, as a child of 13, writing an essay extolling the virtues of Clive of India, as a hero advancing the civilization of the Indian peoples. Of course, he was a deeply self-interested mix of patriot and scoundrel (the two terms tend to overlap, as per Conan Doyle’s saying that patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel) and essentially blackmailed and coerced the ‘native’ rulers into submission, becoming insanely wealthy in the process. Those aspects of his character were strangely absent from the sort of history books available to young teenagers in the UK of the early 1960s or from my main source material: my grandmother’s 1912 Encyclopedia Brittanica (I deeply regret not being able to have that today).
I refer to my English background, and my indoctrination in the myths of empire, because I don’t want to come across as anti-American. America now is roughly equivalent to late 19th century Great Britain.
Getting back to the 1619 Project, I’d always understood that Lincoln’s greatness was most manifest in his freeing of the slaves. The myth seems to be that he was not a racist.
The 1619 Project and, to some degree, the Ken Burns documentary on the Civil War reveals that to be pure myth.
Lincoln was a racist through and through.
His decision to issue limited emancipation was a calculated wartime ploy to cause problems in the slave holding states, since the proclamation would work its way into the slave population and cause unrest, at a time when the Confederates were under great stress. It would also encourage northern blacks to enlist on the Union side.
In addition, and this I had no prior knowledge of, Lincoln met leading members of the ‘negro’ community in New York and told them bluntly that he saw no place for negros in American society. Yes, they were free but he wanted them to go live in Africa!
That’s not to detract from Lincoln, the person, who seems to have been a truly remarkable person. But he was a man of his times: no white man then would be likely to think in terms of racial equality.it was ‘known’ as fact that whites were superior in all meaningful ways to non-whites, who in turn were stratified primarily by degree of colour.
After all, even the leading abolitionists, in the UK and the US were not arguing for equality: their arguments were on moral grounds…blacks were clearly inferior but they were human and humans should not be property.
I’m going on at length because, to counter Ken’s concerns and to echo Arend’s reply, my view is that knowledge of how things really were and are is essential if we are collectively or individually unlearn learned biases and prejudices. To mangle a famous saying, those who do not understand the past are doomed to repeat it. CRT is, I understand, an attempt to systematically understand not merely what happened or how things are but instead an attempt to understand why things happened and how those things cause today’s issues.
It seems to me that the teaching of mythology rather than history underlies many of the problems we see on the evening news or read in print media, including the perverse decisions coming out of the SCOTUS, and the obsession with gun rights. Not to mention the grotesque deification of the Founding Fathers.
End of rant for today. Blame Ken for prompting me to return, however temporarily, to the WC.
#19786
Posted 2022-May-27, 19:47
#19787
Posted 2022-May-27, 19:48
We can acknowledge our own good fortune and we can try to make things better for others. While doing so we should not lose sight of basic human nature. We look for the good, often it will be more complicated than it seems.
The above pessimism could lead to sensible and productive action. If Black children feel happy to be part of the US, just as I felt as a child, and then grow up to be productive adults, this will be good for everyone. I regard that as completely obvious. It's not a zero-sum game. So we can look for ways to make this happen more often than it does. If reading the 1619 Project would help, then perhaps we should. But I doubt many school kids will do so. I wrote my book report on A Tale of Two Cities based on the Classic Comics version. Same with Don Quixote, only I did that for both my Spanish class and my English class.
#19788
Posted 2022-May-28, 06:59
I am interested some in history. Becky and I were having lunch with Joan and Ginny last week. All of us over 70. The conversation hopped around but education was part of it. Joan and Becky (my wife) said they didn't much like history, Joan really didn't like it, way to much about remembering dates, Ginny (a retired high school biology teacher) ventured no opinion, I said that I liked history. So what did I mean? I took world history as a sophomore, that's age 14-15 and was very interested in learning of various civilizations, even if I have now forgotten most of it. I learned of the defeat of the Spanish Armada but I don't think I earned until later that in the late 15th century Jews had to either leave or convert to Christianity. I visited Granda as an adult and learned about Muslim history and a bit about Ferdinand and Isabella, but don't expect me to pass an exam on the subject. And so on.
As to American history, one of my complaints was that every time we started with the Pilgrims and somehow never got past Teddy Roosevelt. I was in high school in the 50s and I wanted to learn about the 20s and the 30s. In my high school class we went into some detail but we skipped the war with Mexico which the text described as a land grab. So I made sure I read that chapter. I knew little of the Second World War, I was 6 when it ended, although somewhere along the way I learned of the Manhattan project. I never much liked war movies but I read The Third Man when it came out, I missed the movie, and I found the description of post-war Vienna interesting although also confusing at whatever age I was.
So now as to 1619. I get the idea that the people that are putting it together have their own set of biases. That's ok, I can handle that, the people that wrote my high school history text had their biases, we have to work through that. As mentioned, I greatly liked reading A Choice of Weapons. I have since checked and I see in came out in 1966 so I was 27, not my early 20s as I said. But it was a personal story by Gordon Parks who, I guess, would be seen as part of the great migration. I could relate to it. no, I am not Black and I am not saying he was just like me. But somehow, the whole thing made sense to me. I have never read Beloved but my guess is that A Choice of Weapons resonated with me in ways that Beloved wouldn't.
Ok, that's a bit. I'll finish by saying that I don't think I am regarded as racist by people who know me. I am interested in history, I am interested in a lot of things, I doubt I will read the 1619 project. Make of it what you will. I think there are quite a few people out there who are a lot like me. Whether that is grounds for optimism or pessimism I am not sure.
#19789
Posted 2022-May-28, 07:40
This is part of my overall pessimism of the USA as I too lived when we could get factual information from our 3 television networks and the country could agree on the facts.
Now it requires serious individual effort to uncover facts and few are willing to put in the effort. No matter what the claim, our response should be, that’s interesting, let me find out if that is a reflection of reality.
#19790
Posted 2022-May-28, 11:14
Winstonm, on 2022-May-28, 07:40, said:
This is part of my overall pessimism of the USA as I too lived when we could get factual information from our 3 television networks and the country could agree on the facts.
Now it requires serious individual effort to uncover facts and few are willing to put in the effort. No matter what the claim, our response should be, that's interesting, let me find out if that is a reflection of reality.
I thought I might be a useful guinea pig for just the reasons you present. You said "right-wing talking points". Really? My main news sources are the PBS Newshour and WaPo, sometimes the NYT. WaPo carries op-ed pieces from some conservatives, George Will and Michael Gerson come to mind, and I don't cover my eyes and refuse to read them, but I would think that if I were simply repeating talking points it is far more likely they would be liberal talking points.
I do recall when Walter Cronkite was "the most trusted man in America". That might or might not have been the case and he might or might not have been entitled to such trust but it is true that if you accidentally watched the ABC evening news instead of the CBS evening news it is pretty likely you would hear the largely same account of the day's news.
Consider this: If the left regards me as speaking with conservative talking points then this could be an explanation of why the Dems are in serious danger of losing both the House and the Senate. I do think that there are a great many people out there who think along the same general lines as I do. I continue to leave it open whether this is a reason for optimism or a reason for pessimism.
#19791
Posted 2022-May-28, 14:06
kenberg, on 2022-May-28, 11:14, said:
I do recall when Walter Cronkite was "the most trusted man in America". That might or might not have been the case and he might or might not have been entitled to such trust but it is true that if you accidentally watched the ABC evening news instead of the CBS evening news it is pretty likely you would hear the largely same account of the day's news.
Consider this: If the left regards me as speaking with conservative talking points then this could be an explanation of why the Dems are in serious danger of losing both the House and the Senate. I do think that there are a great many people out there who think along the same general lines as I do. I continue to leave it open whether this is a reason for optimism or a reason for pessimism.
Thanks for the reply. One of the points I am trying to make-apparently unsuccessfully-is that virtual all of our news sources have become little more than stenographers, each repeating what the other said, which comes first from whomever has access to someone to quote. Hence, those sources in the past we used to believe unbiased or left-leaning are not doing the necessary digging to report facts; everyone is doing the he said/she said reporting that doesn't challenge to determine accuracy; hence, we get the same basic inaccuracy from both sides.
This is not a left/right problem. This is a problem. Without agreed upon reality, we're in Oceana.
#19792
Posted 2022-May-28, 15:59
The Murdoch family have been doing exactly the same thing for more than 100 years.
In WW1 Rupert's dad tried to denigrate and destroy John Monash.
When Rupert took over we endured two decades of conservative rule and then climate change denialism.
The ironically named "News corporation" is the fifth horseman of the apocalypse, nourishing itself on war, famine, pestilence and death.
#19793
Posted 2022-May-29, 05:39
Here in Tulsa, we are being inundated by political ads, and one Republican’s ad states that Democrats want boys and girls in sports to compete against each other. This is obviously BS, a gross exaggeration, but the instant we respond to it then that “controversy “ between his claim and our counter is the “news”. Whether there is truth to the original lie becomes irrelevant.
#19794
Posted 2022-May-29, 07:10
The aide was horrified - "Nobody will believe it!" he said.
LBJ replied "Yeah but he'll have to deny it."
#19795
Posted 2022-May-29, 10:38
pilowsky, on 2022-May-29, 07:10, said:
The aide was horrified - "Nobody will believe it!" he said.
LBJ replied "Yeah but he'll have to deny it."
I haven't really decided if I believe LBJ really said that, but I would not rule it out. And the story definitely has a point!
#19796
Posted 2022-May-29, 11:53
List several topics. The students would be told to pick one of those topics, do some research on the topic that they choose, and write a paper, maybe 4 or 5 pages, maybe more, on what they discovered. There could be suggested resources, but the student would choose what to read and choose what to write. The grade would be based on how well he (ok, how well they) researched the topic and how well they wrote it up, it would not be based on whether their conclusion agreed with the teacher's viewpoint. Or with anyone else's viewpoint.
I found such assignments, not on race but on a variety of other matters, very useful when I was in high school. Independent thinking is very valuable.
#19797
Posted 2022-May-29, 13:38
kenberg, on 2022-May-29, 11:53, said:
List several topics. The students would be told to pick one of those topics, do some research on the topic that they choose, and write a paper, maybe 4 or 5 pages, maybe more, on what they discovered. There could be suggested resources, but the student would choose what to read and choose what to write. The grade would be based on how well he (ok, how well they) researched the topic and how well they wrote it up, it would not be based on whether their conclusion agreed with the teacher's viewpoint. Or with anyone else's viewpoint.
I found such assignments, not on race but on a variety of other matters, very useful when I was in high school. Independent thinking is very valuable.
Given the horror stories one can find online, very easily, about how some ‘science’ teachers in the US teach creationism, I’d be astounded if this sort of bias could somehow be eliminated.
And even from the perspective of a committed atheist and someone who is ok with being called ‘woke’ (although I suspect my definition of the term would be far different from those bigots who consider it to be an insult), I’d be very leery of how some secular, non racist teachers might view what amounts to ‘proper’ or ‘reliable’ sources.
Not to mention the chances that any republican controlled state or local educational authority would ever approve of such a proposal
As an outsider to the US, but as someone who reads a lot and has had extensive discussions with two friends, one of whom attended high school in Texas for a couple of years and the other was on an athletic scholarship for four years at firstly UCLA and latterly an Ivy League eastern school, what I’ve learned is that the general level of secondary education in the US is abysmal. That’s not surprising because of the equally abysmal salaries paid to teachers, the intentional starving by republican states of the public educational system, and the horrific approach to funding, which in many places means that people who live in low income areas can forget about access for their children to anything approaching a decent education. In fairness, we have a similar approach in many parts of Canada, where property taxes are used to fund school districts.
#19798
Posted 2022-May-29, 18:50
mikeh, on 2022-May-29, 13:38, said:
And even from the perspective of a committed atheist and someone who is ok with being called 'woke' (although I suspect my definition of the term would be far different from those bigots who consider it to be an insult), I'd be very leery of how some secular, non racist teachers might view what amounts to 'proper' or 'reliable' sources.
Not to mention the chances that any republican controlled state or local educational authority would ever approve of such a proposal
As an outsider to the US, but as someone who reads a lot and has had extensive discussions with two friends, one of whom attended high school in Texas for a couple of years and the other was on an athletic scholarship for four years at firstly UCLA and latterly an Ivy League eastern school, what I've learned is that the general level of secondary education in the US is abysmal. That's not surprising because of the equally abysmal salaries paid to teachers, the intentional starving by republican states of the public educational system, and the horrific approach to funding, which in many places means that people who live in low income areas can forget about access for their children to anything approaching a decent education. In fairness, we have a similar approach in many parts of Canada, where property taxes are used to fund school districts.
The public high school I went to (graduating in 1956) was far inferior to the good ones of today and far superior to the bad ones of today. By the time I was a senior most of my friends were students at a better one, but the gap between the good and the bad was not remotely like what it is today..
But one thing we did was to write many term papers, pretty much in the style I have described. I found it very useful. I am tired right now but I might come back and say more later. I could easily find good things, and easily find bad things, to say about my school, but I also had a few things to work out, let's just say that I sometimes did a really good job of being an adolescent, and maybe the school would have a few things to say about me as well. I look back with pleasure on those term papers.
#19799
Posted 2022-May-30, 01:05
#19800
Posted 2022-May-30, 05:12
I believe that a similar phenomenon happened in Australia at the last election with many Labor voters backing in 'moderate' independent candidates (Liberal = Conservative - just to confuse non-Australians).
You will be delighted to know that the main reason the Conservative government was booted was because large numbers of Conservatives were concerned about climate change.
Is tactical voting a common in the USA? Could it be the way forward for de-Trumping of the Republican party?
137 User(s) are reading this topic
1 members, 136 guests, 0 anonymous users
- Google,
- StevenG